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Reyner Banham was a pioneer in arguing that technology, human
needs, and environmental concerns must be considered an integral
part of architecture. No historian before him had so systematically
explored the impact of environmental engineering on the design of
buildings and on the minds of architects. In this revision of his
classic work, Banham has added considerable new material on the use
of energy, particularly solar energy, in human environments.
Included in the new material are discussions of Indian pueblos and
solar architecture, the Centre Pompidou and other high-tech
buildings, and the environmental wisdom of many current
architectural vernaculars.
Reyner Banham examined the built environment of Los Angeles in a
way no architectural historian before him had done, looking with
fresh eyes at its manifestations of popular taste and industrial
ingenuity, as well as its more traditional modes of residential and
commercial building. His construct of "four ecologies" examined the
ways Angelenos relate to the beach, the freeways, the flatlands,
and the foothills. Banham delighted in this mobile city and
identified it as an exemplar of the posturban future. In a
spectacular new foreword, architect and scholar Joe Day explores
how the structure of Los Angeles, the concept of "ecology," and the
relevance of Banham's ideas have changed over the past thirty-five
years.
The Catalogue Raisonne of the Paintings of Ed Ruscha is a
six-volume series of books co-published by Steidl and Gagosian
Gallery. This is the second volume, which contains entries on 178
paintings completed between 1971 and 1982--from the artist's crisis
at the onset of the 70s, when he "quits painting pictures," to his
first major museum retrospective, which opened in March 1982 at the
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. The catalogue includes a
comprehensive exhibition history, bibliography and biographical
chronology, as well as a preface by the editor Robert Dean, an
essay by UCLA film historian Peter Wollen examining Ruscha's use of
color as it relates to his use of language, and an essay by the
late Reyner Banham.
Few twentieth-century writers on architecture and design have
enjoyed the renown of Reyner Banham. Born and trained in England
and a U.S. resident starting in 1976, Banham wrote incisively about
American and European buildings and culture. Now readers can enjoy
a chronological cross-section of essays, polemics, and reviews
drawn from more than three decades of Banham's writings. The
volume, which includes discussions of Italian Futurism, Adolf Loos,
Paul Scheerbart, and the Bauhaus as well as explorations of
contemporary architecture by Frank Gehry, James Stirling, and
Norman Foster, conveys the full range of Banham's belief in
industrial and technological development as the motor of
architectural evolution. Banham's interests and passions ranged
from architecture and the culture of pop art to urban and
industrial design. In brilliant analyses of automobile styling,
mobile homes, science fiction films, and the American predilection
for gadgets, he anticipated many of the preoccupations of
contemporary cultural studies. Los Angeles, the city that Banham
commemorated in a book and a film, receives extensive attention in
essays on the Santa Monica Pier, the Getty Museum, Forest Lawn
cemetery, and the ubiquitous freeway system. Eminently readable,
provocative, and entertaining, this book is certain to consolidate
Banham's reputation among architects and students of contemporary
culture. For those acquainted with his writing, it offers welcome
surprises as well as familiar delights. For those encountering
Banham for the first time, it comprises the perfect introduction.
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