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From the genteel elegance of Christ Lutheran Church in Minneapolis
to the lowbrow wonder of Porky's Drive-in in St. Paul, the Twin
Cities and other Minnesota communities are nothing short of a
living museum of midcentury modernism, the new style of
architecture that swept through much of America from 1945 to the
mid-1960s. Renowned Minnesota architecture critic and historian
Larry Millett conducts an eye-opening, spectacularly illustrated
tour of this rich and varied landscape. A history lesson as
entertaining as it is enlightening, Minnesota Modern provides a
close-up view of a style that penetrated the social, political, and
cultural machinery of the times. Extending from modest suburban
ramblers and ranch houses to the grandest public and commercial
structures, midcentury modernism expressed new ways of thinking
about how to live, work, and play in communities that sprang up as
thousands of military members returned from World War II. Millett
describes the style's sources in the work of European masters like
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Walter Gropius, as well as the
midwestern innovations of Frank Lloyd Wright, and its refinement at
the University of Minnesota under the guidance of Ralph Rapson and
other modernists. He shows us its applications in twelve midcentury
homes in Minnesota and takes us through its many permutations in
sites as different as Barry Byrne's St. Columba Catholic Church in
St. Paul and Eero Saarinen's sprawling IBM complex in Rochester.
This is Minnesota modern at its historic best, a firsthand,
in-depth history of a singularly American sensibility and aesthetic
writ large on the midwestern region.
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