"A Choice Outstanding Academic Title of the Year"

A new look at the interrelationship of architecture and sculpture during one of the richest periods of American modern design

Alloys looks at a unique period of synergy and exchange in the postwar United States, when sculpture profoundly shaped architecture, and vice versa. Leading architects such as Gordon Bunshaft and Eero Saarinen turned to sculptors including Harry Bertoia, Alexander Calder, Richard Lippold, and Isamu Noguchi to produce site-determined, large-scale sculptures tailored for their buildings’ highly visible and well-traversed threshold spaces. The parameters of these spaces—atriums, lobbies, plazas, and entryways—led to various designs like sculptural walls, ceilings, and screens that not only embraced new industrial materials and processes, but also demonstrated art’s ability to merge with lived architectural spaces.

Marin Sullivan argues that these sculptural commissions represent an alternate history of midcentury American art. Rather than singular masterworks by lone geniuses, some of the era’s most notable spaces—Philip Johnson’s Four Seasons Restaurant in Mies van der Rohe’s Seagram Building, Max Abramovitz’s Philharmonic Hall at Lincoln Center, and Pietro Belluschi and Walter Gropius’s Pan Am Building—would be diminished without the collaborative efforts of architects and artists. At the same time, the artistic creations within these spaces could not exist anywhere else. Sullivan shows that the principle of synergy provides an ideal framework to assess this pronounced relationship between sculpture and architecture. She also explores the afterlives of these postwar commissions in the decades since their construction.

A fresh consideration of sculpture’s relationship to architectural design and functionality following World War II, Alloys highlights the affinities between the two fields and the ways their connections remain with us today.

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Alloys offers a rich and compelling account of a significant tradition of modern sculpture that has been largely overlooked. Focusing on the work of Harry Bertoia, Alexander Calder, Richard Lippold, and Isamu Noguchi, the book presents an important reconsideration of these artists, and, more generally, sculpture’s complex relationship to functional and commercial realms of practice such as design and architecture.”—Robert Slifkin, author of The New Monuments and the End of Man: U.S. Sculpture between War and Peace, 19451975

“Through fascinating research, illuminating analysis, and engaging prose, Alloys pushes our understanding of midcentury modernism further toward embracing the decorative and the role of art in daily life.”K. L. H. Wells, author of Weaving Modernism: Postwar Tapestry between Paris and New York
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780691215778
Publisert
2022-03-22
Utgiver
Princeton University Press; Princeton University Press
Høyde
267 mm
Bredde
203 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
272

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Marin R. Sullivan is an art historian and curator who consults at numerous museums and arts nonprofits. She is director of the Harry Bertoia Catalogue Raisonné project. Her books include Sculptural Materiality in the Age of Conceptualism and Harry Bertoia: Sculpting Mid-Century Modern Life. She lives in Chicago. Twitter @MarinRSullivan Instagram @sculpturalthings