Modern Architectural Landscape
By (Author) Caroline Constant
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
1st May 2012
United States
General
Non Fiction
History of architecture
712.50904
Paperback
344
Width 178mm, Height 229mm, Spine 20mm
In The Modern Architectural Landscape Caroline Constant examines diverse approaches to landscape in the work of architects practicing in Europe and the United States between 1915 and the mid-1980s. Case studies highlight landscapes in the public realm rather than the private garden, which had been a primary focus of much Western landscape theory and practice during the early decades of the century. These landscapes do more than accommodate the functional needs of the evolving mass society in parks, playgrounds, and places of assembly; they give formal expression to Modern Movement social and political ideologies, engaging the symbolic potential of the modern landscapeparticularly in its ability to take on new, more democratic forms of social organization.
Constant probes the cultural significance of specific landscapes designed by architects, understanding them as ways of interpreting the world and the place of humankind in the world.
"This is a book which architect aficionados of landscape design have long been waiting for, written by a critical scholar who has devoted the best part of the last twenty years to a progressive analysis of the interplay between modern architectural form and the landscape by which it has been invariably amplified."Kenneth Frampton, author of Modern Architecture: A Critical History
Caroline Constant is professor of architecture at the University of Michigan and a fellow of the American Academy in Rome.