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Soon after 1900 in both North America and Europe the evolution
from the tradition of Mediterranean and Gallic architectural styles
to modernism began. This phenomenon was due, in part, to American
industrial architecture and the work of Frank Lloyd Wright.
Wright's building and architectural treatises of 1898-1908, with
the additional help of Dutch propaganda on his behalf,
significantly influenced European practitioners and theorists.
European architecture within and outside of Holland reflects an
adaptation of Wright's theories along with the structural
determinism of American industrial buildings. With new evidence and
fresh analysis culled from Dutch and American archives, personal
correspondence, and professional material, this study examines the
weight of Wright's works and words and those of the Dutchmen H.P.
Berlage, Theo van Doesburg, Jan Wils, J.J.P. Oud, William Dudok,
and Hendrik Theodor Wijdeveld.
This new insight on the effects of Wright's architectural
theories and designs, coupled with an extensive guide for further
research, will attract art and architecture scholars and historians
on both sides of the Atlantic and will also be of interest to
social historians, artists, and architects. Events and new
theories, including the assertion that Hendrik Theodor Wijdeveld
was the catalytic source behind Wright's Taliesin Fellowship
established in 1932, are presented in clear accessible language.
Tied to the text are numerous visual presentations of significant
designs and buildings.
The most influential 20th century architects espousing modernism
are brought together in critical discussion and independent
profiles. This is accomplished through a short but discriminating
examination of each architect's design work, an essay outlining the
historical course and events that confirms his or her vital
position, and a substantial bibliography at the completion of each
profile. This sourcebook examines the life and creative activities
of such founding architects as Wright, Eisenman, Van der Rohe, and
Kahn, as well as their disciples. This volume will be of interest
to social and cultural historians, scholars, students of all ages,
architects, and the appreciative lay audience.
The architects and or firms chosen for the sourcebook were
selected as a result of many years of research that required
extensive reading of materials by respected experts. From such
research, the editors were able to determine the individuals or
groups who have been most influential in charting the course of a
Westernized modern architecture. From evidence of their productive
activities--proof in timber--there is a consensus that each made a
unique contribution. The nature and measure of the contribution is
discussed within each profile. Those whose reputations are based on
paper only, with few buildings to prove their worth, are not
included. The editors believe that architecture is an experiential
art: all the senses must participate, and that requires the actual
built product.
"Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We
didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be
fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or
one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our
children's children what it was once like in the United States
where men were free."
Ronald Reagan
This is a story of how such a conversation might sound.
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