Twentieth-Century American Architecture
The Buildings and Their Makers
20 September 2000
Territory Rights — Worldwide.
Description
An authoritative and richly illustrated narrative history of the buildings that shaped the American century and the architects who gave them form.
Carter Wiseman presents an original, readable, and literate overview of the major figures, influential movements, and landmark buildings that have defined American architecture over the past hundred years. In a survey that is "as good…as anyone is likely to write…accurate in its facts, wise and fair in its judgments" (New York Times Book Review), he focuses to a large extent on architecture's makers—the commanding figures who by force of personality and sheer artistic ability indelibly influenced its progress: Louis Sullivan, Frank Lloyd Wright, Philip Johnson, I. M. Pei, Robert Venturi, Louis Kahn, Frank Gehry. The triumph of modernism; the growth of architectural preservation; the eclipse of the practical arts by money, theory, and abstraction; and the uncertain future of architecture in a country that celebrates both individualism and community are just some of the issues addressed in this highly praised work. Originally published in hardcover under the title Shaping a Nation.
Reviews
"This book is about as good a summary of American architecture of this century as anyone is likely to write. It is full and accurate in its facts, wise and fair in its judgments." — Robert Campbell, New York Times Book Review
"Writing with depth and good humor, Wiseman deftly chronicles one of the most dramatic and spectacular periods of this country's architectural history." — Architectural Record
"[A] compelling argument for the importance of architecture to our current culture…a desirable addition to the shelves of readers even with only a passing interest in architecture, and an essential book for the more serious." — Publishers Weekly
Also By: Carter Wiseman