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Published byBruce Doyle Modified over 9 years ago
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Evolving Modernism and the response
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Modern typologies Screen Mirror Brutalist and Arrested Rust Sheathing Geometric Sculptural Hi-Tech
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First Unitarian Church, Rochester, NY, 1959-64 (Louis I. Kahn) Screen: Open screening to facades and walls to add richness and disguise structure
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United States Embassy, New Delhi, India, 1957-59 (Edward Durrell Stone)
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Lever House, New York, NY, 1951- 52.(Skidmore, Owings & Merrill) Mirror: Making whole walls of reflective materials. The mirror was perceived to be ornamental. They are presaging post- modernism because they reflect other buildings.
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Crystal Cathedral, Garden Grove, California, 1980 Philip Johnson
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Hancock Place, Boston, MA, 1977. I. M. Pei
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Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, N.Y. Architect: Marcel Breuer and Hamilton Smith (1963-1966). Brutalist and Arrested Rust Sheathing: An attempt to recall the frankness of established modernism. Rust was popular in the 1960s and 1970s as an imitation of ruin
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Yale Art and Architecture Building, P. Rudolph 1964
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Broadcasting Place Leeds, England, 1964
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Weisman Art Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, Frank Gehry, 1993
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East Wing, National Gallery, Washington, DC, 1974-78. I. M. Pei (triangular planning grid)
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Chapel at U.S. Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, CO, 1956-62 (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill)
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Kresge Auditorium and Chapel, MIT, Cambridge, MA, 1955 (Eero Saarinen & Assoc.)
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College Life Insurance Company, Indianapolis, IN, 1967-71 (R:1972) (Roche & Dinkeloo)
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Hirshorn Gallery, Washington, D.C. 1974 (Skidmore Owens, and Merrill)
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Knights of Columbus Building, New Haven, CT, 1965-69 (Roche & Dinkeloo) Sculptural: Three dimension character is emphasized
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Ingalls Hockey Rink, Yale U., New Haven, CT, 1956-58 (Eero Saarinen & Assoc.)
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Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY, 1943-59 (Frank Lloyd Wright added gallery in 1959)
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John Hancock Center, Chicago, IL, 1966-68 (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill) Hi-Tech: Exaggeration of the technological infrastructure of buildings. With water pipes and heat ducts placed on the exterior of the building.
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U.S. Pavilion, Montreal Expo, Montreal, Canada, 1967 (R. Buckminster Fuller)
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