HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE EXAM 2

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Deutsche Werkbund Exposition

Cologne, Germany 1914

E-1027 House

Eileen Grey Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France 1929

Wassily Chair

Marcel Breuer 1925

Pre-Fabricated Housing

Marcel Breuer 1942

Frankfurt Kitchen

Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky Frankfurt, Germany 1926 -domestic -functional (materials) -low cost

Teapot

Marianne Brandt 1924

Piamo Tuberculosis Sanatorium

Alvar Aalto Paimio, Finland 1929-1933 -influenced by Walter Gropius's Bauhaus, principles of LeCo, and The Finnish National Romantic Movement -Aalto & his wife crafted all furniture -successful macro-scale (site organization) and micro-scale (patient rooms) design

Influencers of FLW

-19th century domestic architecture -residential buildings by H.H Richardson, Mckim, Mead & White, and more -ideas of Louis Sullivan

Wrightʼs Abstraction of The Traditional House vs. The Cubist Painterʼs Abstraction of The Body.

-both involve the radical restructuring of visual signs (FLW took the traditional house, then dissected it, pulled apart is plan, freed its spaces, and added ambiguity to its appearance - cubist artists do the same w objects) -both use lines as a conveyor of spatial ideas

De Stijl

-neo-plasticism -dutch artistic movement -reacts against early 20th century dutch traditional architecture -pure abstraction and universality by the reduction of essential form and color -practical aesthetic based on science -buildings conceived from objective and technical solutions

Organic Architecture

-promotes harmony between architecture and the natural world -buildings, furnishings, and surroundings unite -materials and ordering principles repeat throughout the building to unite entire building -everything relates to one another -form and function are one -building is a product of site and time, not style -relationship of human scale to nature -interior spaces should flow freely

Charectaristics of The Prairie House

-reduced number of parts within the house to create a unified plan -connected to site by extended horizontal elements (concrete, overhanging eaves, slender brick) -interior and exterior coexist -human proportions are essential to expression of each room -ornament derives from the nature of the materials -geometric and horizontal forms dominate -systems are another component of organic architecture

Idea of The Prairie House

-represents nature -represents the traditions, material culture, and landscape of the Midwest -creates symbolic geometries, internal rules, and formal systems for the house -breaks the eclecticism of the Anglo-American house and pursues the birth of a new style -it is both traditional and avant-garde (modernize the traditional house in plan and construction) -possesses the kind of coherent symbolism that Sullivan had given the skyscraper

Bauhaus Movement

-response to arts and crafts movement (revolt against poor craft resulting from mass production) -wanted to embrace cheaper materials and limited factory process to make great design -form reflects function -unite creativity & manufacturing, unite art & craft

Louis Henri Sullivan

1856-1924 -"father of skyscrapers" -form follows function -organic architecture -inspired FLW

Ornament & Crime

Adolf Loos -written at height of art noveau movement -critizes ornament in art - he wanted "smooth and precious surfaces" -ornamentation can cause objects to go out of style and thus become obsolete -fundamental to the bauhaus and modernism of architecture

Glass Pavillon

Bruno Taut Werkbund Exposition - Cologne, Germany 1914

Dormitory Room

Charlotte Perriand & Le Corbusier Maison du Bresil, Paris 1956-59

Charnley House

Frank Lloyd Wright Chicago, Illinois 1891 -influenced by and collaborated with Louis Sullivan

The Robie House

Frank Lloyd Wright Chicago, Illinois 1907-1909

Willits House

Frank Lloyd Wright Highland Park, Illinois 1901-1903

Falling Water

Frank Lloyd Wright Mill Run, Pennsylvania 1936

The Wright House & Studio

Frank Lloyd Wright Oak Park, Illinois 1889-1911

Laura Gale House

Frank Lloyd Wright Oak Park, Illinois 1909 -stucco & wood

Coonley House

Frank Lloyd Wright Riverside, Illinois 1907

Schroder House

Gerrit Reitveld Utrecht, Netherlands 1924 -demonstrates de stijl -functional and economical -antidecorative -anticubic -flexible plan -intersecting planes

Red Blue Chair

Gerrit Reitveld 1917

Buffalo State Asylum for the Insane

H.H Richardson Buffalo, New York 1870-1890 -landscape by Frederick Law Olmsted & Calvert Vaux

Friedrichstadt District Project

Ludwig Karl Hilberseimer Berlin, Germany 1928

House 18

Ludwig Karl Hilberseimer Weissenhof, Stuttgart, Germany 1927

Zonnestraal Sanatorium

Jan Duiker & Bernard Bijvoet Hilversum, Netherlands 1926-1931 -Nieuwe Bouwen (new building) movement in the Netherlands

Hommage to a Square

Josef Albers 1962

Stoclet House

Josef Hoffman Brussels, Belgium 1905 -influenced by Otto Wagner & Vienna Secession

Purkersdorf Sanatorium

Josef Hoffman Purserdorf, Austria 1904-1905

Maison Du Bresil

Le Corbusier 1959 Paris, France

Houses 14 & 15

Le Corbusier & Pierre Jeanneret Weissenhof, Stuttgart, Germany 1927

The De Stijl Journal

Leiden 1917-1923

The Velvet & Silk Cafe

Lily Reich & Mies Van Der Rohe Berlin, Germany 1927

Houses 1-4

Mies Van Der Rohe Weissenhof, Stuttgart, Germany 1927

Weissenhof Seidlung

Mies Van Der Rohe, Ludwig Hilberseimer & Le Corbusier Stuttgart, Germany 1927 -homes 1-4, Mies -homes 13-15, LeCo -house 18, Ludwig

Phillip Johnson Apartment

Mies Van der Rohe & Lily Reich New York, NY 1931

Les Desmoiselles D'Avignon

Pablo Picasso 1907 -synthetic cubism

Composition with Red, Yellow, and Blue

Piet Mondrian 1921

Composition with Oval

Piet Mondrian 1914

Composition in Black, Grey, Yellow, and Blue

Piet Mondrian 1921

Steel House

Richard Paulick & Georg Muche Dessau, Germany 1926-1927

Henny House

Robert Van't Hoff Villa at Huis-ter-Heide Utrecht, Netherlands 1916 -influenced by wright -reinforced concrete -overhanging flat roofs -linear horizontal lines

Maison Particuliere

Theo Van Doesburg 1923 -"Private House" -no ornament -no hierarchy -de stijl

Cafe L'Aubrette

Van Doesburg Strasbourg, France 1927-1928

Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction

Walter Benjamin -quality of artwork is devalued by reproduction -reproductions lack original time, space, and cultural context

Program of the Saatiliches Bauhaus in Weimar

Walter Gropius -describes the aims, principles, instruction, and admission of the Bauhaus

Bauhaus Building

Walter Gropius Dessau, Germany 1926 -first compelling masterpiece of the modern movement -unrivaled in size and quality until 1930

Masters' Houses

Walter Gropius Dessau, Germany 1926 -three idenical houses for Bauhaus masters

Torten Housing Estate

Walter Gropius Dessau, Germany 1926-1928

Dammerstock Housing

Walter Gropius Karlsruhe, Germany 1929-1931

Bauhaus School

Walter Gropius Weimar - Dessau - Berlin 1919-1933 -German school combining all arts - wanted to provide a new, affordable and simple design that could be used by every kind of person and in every area

Model Factory

Walter Gropius Werkbund Exposition - Cologne, Germany 1914

Hilversum Town Hall

Willem Marinus Dudok Hilversum, Netherlands 1924-1931


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