|
Showing 1 - 18 of
18 matches in All Departments
Three Cultural Ecologies reverses common conceptions of modern
architecture. It reveals how selected works of two modern
architects, Le Corbusier and Frank Lloyd Wright, embraced
environmental and cultural conditions as reciprocal and
complementary. A basic premise of this book's arguments is that
cultural patterns cannot be adequately conceptualized in the terms
that typically define ecology today. Instead, studies based on the
natural sciences must be complemented by descriptions and
interpretations of historical narratives, cultural norms, and
individual expressions. Previously unpublished images and new
interpretations will allow readers to rediscover works they thought
they knew; Villa Savoye, Taliesin, La Tourette, and Ocatilla; as
well as projects that are less well known: by Wright, the House on
the Mesa and the City Residential Plan, and by Le Corbusier, the
Immeuble-villas and Ilot Insalubre projects. More broadly, this
study of cultural ecology at three scales - domestic, monastic, and
urban - reconsiders the history of modern architecture. The
conditions brought about by societal and technological
modernization and confronted by modern architecture have not
disappeared in our time, but have intensified, making the task of
imagining how some measure of equilibrium between culture and
ecology might be achieved even more pressing.
Richard Wesley was witness to a revolution. As both a celebrated
participant and eager student of the Black Theater Movement in the
late 1960s, he became part of a seismic force in American culture,
breaking down barriers and helping to disrupt the cultural
landscape. It's Always Loud in the Balcony: A Life in Black
Theater, from Harlem to Hollywood and Back is both history and
memoir, tracing Wesley's roots from riot-torn Newark, New Jersey,
across the rocky terrain of Harlem, and finally to Hollywood, where
he became partners with Sidney Poitier, writing several successful
films before returning to New York and the theater world-a trip
that Wesley has wryly characterized as "black power to black
establishment." Wesley unfolds the history of black theater with
love and precision, from the emergence of Amiri Baraka, and his own
debut, the fiercely militant Black Terror-which landed him a deal
with the legendary producer Joseph Papp-through his moviemaking
experience in Los Angeles, working with Bill Cosby and Richard
Pryor, among others. Wesley lands on solid ground in the
twenty-first century as an elder statesman, a happy witness to the
great success of a new breed of black theater that includes the
widespread success of Tyler Perry and Lin-Manuel Miranda's
Hamilton, which brought hip-hop to Broadway. It's Always Loud in
the Balcony is the passionate, firsthand account of a crucial
American art movement whose effects will be felt for generations to
come.
|
You may like...
Hoe Ek Dit Onthou
Francois Van Coke, Annie Klopper
Paperback
R300
R219
Discovery Miles 2 190
|