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Lewis Mumford, Henry-Russell Hitchcock and the Rise of “Bay” Regionalism

dc.contributor.authorPARRA-MARTINEZ, Jose
dc.contributor.authorCROSSE, John
dc.date.accessioned2018-10-30T11:03:40Z
dc.date.available2018-10-30T11:03:40Z
dc.date.issued2018-10-25
dc.descriptionWe are indebted to Peggy Tran-Le, archivist and records manager at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, who has provided a great deal of assistance to our research. We are also grateful to Henriette Kets de Vries, manager of the Cunningham Center for Prints, Drawings and Photographs at the Smith College Museum of Art, and to Courtney Tkacz, archivist at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. All of them have facilitated our investigation by guiding us through the extraordinary archives of their museums. This chapter has also benefited from the help of Jennifer Tobias, librarian at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, whose comments on Elizabeth Mock have been of the greatest importance to us.pt_PT
dc.description.abstractIn the fall of 1949, the San Francisco Museum of Art held Domestic Architecture of the San Francisco Bay Region. As an illustrated manifesto of Lewis Mumford’s regional stance, the exhibition epitomised one of the major turning points in the postwar debates surrounding the question of the autonomy of a truly American modern tradition. Unlike Mumford’s 1941 first sight appreciation of the complex reality of Northern California –resulting in an enduring love affair with several generations of its architects, urban planners and social reformers, from William Wurster to his Telesis protégés–, Henry-Russell Hitchcock’s evaluation of West Coast architecture was not very high, and his early elucidation evolved through ambivalent considerations. However, as this study tries to demonstrate, the 1949 show would contribute to mellowing the Eastern critic’s strict formal and visual criteria delimiting his and Philip Johnson’s International Style definitions, which ultimately led him chair the 1962-66 Modern Architecture Symposia at Columbia University to reassess the American reception of European modernism. Conversely, this paper aims to examine the extent to which the conflict of perceptions and interests between the two Coasts brought about the 1949 show as part of a well-orchestrated campaign that had begun around a decade before Mumford wrote his renowned 1947 New Yorker piece triggering a controversy on the existence of a ‘Bay Region style’. Contrary to prevailing assumptions that this exhibition was a delayed reaction to the 1948 MoMA symposium organised by Johnson to refute Mumford’s opinions, or that it merely tried to make the most of the national polemic, the exhibition was part of a coherent regionalist agenda whose main success was, precisely, that Mumford, Hitchcock and other influential actors in the United States were exposed, indoctrinated and/or seduced by the so-called Bay Area School and its emphasis on social, political and environmental concerns.pt_PT
dc.description.versioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionpt_PT
dc.identifier.citationPARRA-MARTINEZ, Jose; CROSSE, John – Lewis Mumford, Henry-Russell Hitchcock and the Rise of “Bay” Regionalism in REGIONALISM, NATIONALISM & MODERN ARCHITECTURE. Proceedings. Porto: CEAA, 2018, p. 296-316pt_PT
dc.identifier.isbn978-972-8784-82-9
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10400.26/24599
dc.language.isoengpt_PT
dc.peerreviewedyespt_PT
dc.publisherCEAA/ESAP-CESAPpt_PT
dc.relation.publisherversionhttp://hdl.handle.net/10400.26/24574pt_PT
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/pt_PT
dc.subjectBay Area Schoolpt_PT
dc.subjectCalifornia regionalismpt_PT
dc.subjectLewis Mumfordpt_PT
dc.subjectHenry-Russell Hitchcockpt_PT
dc.subjectpostwar debates on architectural identitypt_PT
dc.titleLewis Mumford, Henry-Russell Hitchcock and the Rise of “Bay” Regionalismpt_PT
dc.typeconference object
dspace.entity.typePublication
oaire.citation.conferencePlacePortopt_PT
oaire.citation.endPage316pt_PT
oaire.citation.issue1pt_PT
oaire.citation.startPage296pt_PT
oaire.citation.titleREGIONALISM, NATIONALISM & MODERN ARCHITECTUREpt_PT
rcaap.rightsopenAccesspt_PT
rcaap.typeconferenceObjectpt_PT

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