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Full Description
Thematically focused analysis of modern architecture throughout Texas with gorgeous photographs illustrating works by famous and lesser-known architects.
In the mid-twentieth century, dramatic social and political change coincided with the ascendance and evolution of architectural modernism in Texas. Between the 1930s and 1980s, a state known for cowboys and cotton fields rapidly urbanized and became a hub of global trade and a heavyweight in national politics. Relentless ambition and a strong sense of place combined to make Texans particularly receptive to modern architecture's implication of newness, forward-looking attitude, and capacity to reinterpret historical forms in novel ways. As money and people poured in, architects and their clients used modern buildings to define themselves and the state.
Illustrated with stunning photographs by architect Ben Koush, Home, Heat, Money, God analyzes buildings in big cities and small towns by world-famous architects, Texas titans, and lesser-known designers. Architectural historian Kathryn O'Rourke describes the forces that influenced architects as they addressed basic needs-such as staying cool in a warming climate and living in up-to-date housing-and responded to a culture driven by potent religiosity, by the countervailing pressures of pluralism and homogenization, and by the myth of Texan exceptionalism.
Contents
Introduction: History and Mythology in Texas Architecture
Part I: Priorities
1. Home
2. Heat
3. Money
Part II: Preoccupations
4. God
5. Government
6. Care
Part III: R&R and R&D
7. Sports and Leisure
8. On the Road
9. Knowledge and Power
Part IV: Assemblage
10. Precious Objects
11. Hearts and Minds
12. Contact Zones
Coda: What We Save and Why
Acknowledgments
Notes
Further Reading
Address List
Index