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Sandfuture

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An account of the life and work of the architect Minoru Yamasaki that leads the author to consider how (and for whom) architectural history is written.
Sandfuture is a book about the life of the architect Minoru Yamasaki (1912–1986), who remains on the margins of history despite the enormous influence of his work on American architecture and society. That Yamasaki’s most famous projects—the Pruitt-Igoe apartments in St. Louis and the original World Trade Center in New York—were both destroyed on national television, thirty years apart, makes his relative obscurity all the more remarkable.
 
Sandfuture is also a book about an artist interrogating art and architecture’s role in culture as New York changes drastically after a decade bracketed by terrorism and natural disaster. From the central thread of Yamasaki’s life, Sandfuture spirals outward to include reflections on a wide range of subjects, from the figure of the architect in literature and film and transformations in the contemporary art market to the perils of sick buildings and the broader social and political implications of how, and for whom, cities are built. The result is at once sophisticated in its understanding of material culture and novelistic in its telling of a good story.
 
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    • Library Journal

      December 17, 2021

      Artist Beal's first book, nominally a biography of American modernist architect Minoru Yamasaki (1912-86), combines the art historical with the personal. Yamasaki's most famous buildings were both destroyed on live TV--the Pruitt--Igoe public housing complex in St. Louis and New York's World Trade Center towers. Beal draws on Yamasaki's archives to reveal the architect's personal struggles and conflicted sentiment for the United States; the Seattle-born son of Japanese immigrants faced World War II-era anti-Japanese hostility but also designed a number of U.S. military structures in the 1930s and '40s, plus the U.S. consulate in Kobe, Japan, in the 1950s. Yamasaki bucked the dogma of austere modernism by adding ornament, tactility, and human scale to his buildings--for instance, the exterior columns of the WTC towers formed subtle Gothic arches and made narrow windows, meant to assuage acrophobia. Beal looks at the WTC and other Yamasaki works in the context of late-20th-century urban renewal, interwoven with accounts of the author's evolving sculpture and architecture practices and his becoming a father. While not a reference book, the volume would have benefitted from a clearer structure for the black-and-white plates section, especially in-text plate references. (Beal enumerates the sources of his research in a five-page note at the book's end.) VERDICT The subject matter might have narrow appeal, but general readers can gather inspiration or motivation from reading about Yamasaki's and Beal's rigorous work; in this way, this book recalls art historian Douglas Crimp's Before Pictures, another m�lange of memoir and theory.--Sarah Wolberg, Library Journal

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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