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The houses of Philip Johnson Stover Jenkins and David Mohney ; afterword by Neil Levine ; photographs by Steven Brooke

Catalog Data

Author:
Jenkins, Stover  Search this
Johnson, Philip 1906-2005  Search this
Mohney, David 1953-  Search this
Physical description:
288 pages illustrations (some color) 29 cm
Type:
Books
Catalogs
Catalogues
Quotations (texts)
catalogs (documents)
Criticism, interpretation, etc
Date:
2001
Notes:
Gift of Christina and Norman Diekman
Contents:
Introduction -- Architect in training -- Starting a practice -- The Glass House -- Progeny of the Glass House -- A conscious shift -- The sixties: historicism and eclecticism -- Occasional houses -- The Glass House compound -- Afterword: Philip Johnson's Glass House: when modernism became history / Neil Levine
Summary:
"For almost three-quarters of a century, as a critic and curator beginning in the 1930s, and as a practicing architect since the 1940s, Philip Johnson has been at the center of modern architecture's development. His celebrated Glass House, built in 1949 in New Canaan, Connecticut - a crystallization of Johnson's commitment to the high modernism of his mentor Mies van der Rohe - is perhaps the single most famous house of the twentieth century. Until now, however, that house has not been looked at in the context of Johnson's many other house projects. This book, the first to comprehensively survey Johnson's residential work, not only brings to light a largely neglected side of Johnson's achievement, but freshly illuminates his entire career."--Jacket
Topic:
Architect-designed houses  Search this
Maisons conc̀§ues par des architectes  Search this
Architektur  Search this
Bildband  Search this
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_1111735