MAS, the Modern Architecture Symposia, 1962-1966 : a critical edition / edited by Rosemarie Haag Bletter and Joan Ockman, with Nancy Eklund Later.
Τύπος υλικού: ΚείμενοΛεπτομέρειες δημοσίευσης: New York : Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture, 2014Περιγραφή: ix, 339 σ. : εικ. ; 26 εκISBN:- 9780300209952
- Modern architecture symposia, 1962-1966
- 720.973 090 4 23
Τύπος τεκμηρίου | Τρέχουσα βιβλιοθήκη | Ταξιθετικός αριθμός | Αριθμός αντιτύπου | Κατάσταση | Ημερομηνία λήξης | Ραβδοκώδικας |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book [21] | Αρχιτεκτονική Βασική Συλλογή | 720.973 090 4 MAS (Περιήγηση στο ράφι(Άνοιγμα παρακάτω)) | 1 | Διαθέσιμο | 025000203436 |
Περιλαμβάνει βιβλιογραφικές αναφορές και ευρετήριο.
ntroduction / Rosemarie Haag Blette -- Looking back at the 1960s looking back : history and historiography at the Modern Architecture Symposia / Joan Ockman -- MAS participants -- Selected buildings -- MAS 1962 : the decade 1918-1928 -- MAS 1964 : the decade 1929-1939 -- MAS 1966 : the decade 1907-1917. Identifier
In a series of three symposia at Columbia University in the 1960s, leading scholars and critics gathered to re-examine the architecture of the 1910s, 1920s, and 1930s and assess its scope and significance anew. Chaired by Henry-Russell Hitchcock with the support of Philip Johnson, the Modern Architecture Symposia marked a pivotal moment in the reappraisal of early modern architecture and its historiography during the late modern period. This book contains the symposia's formal papers and informal conversations, the majority unpublished and presented for the first time as a group, and offers new insight into the architects, ideologies, stylistic influences, and geographic variation that informed modern architectural production in the early 20th century. Additionally, the discussions it captures between symposia participants--many of whom were considered to be foremost among European and American architectural historians of the period--reveal emerging methodological debates that would reshape the dominant narrative during the late modern and postmodern period. Language