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All American: Innovation in American Architecture. (US Arises).


By Brian Carter and Annette LeCuyer. London: Thames & Hudson, 2002. [pounds sterling]24.95

Flanked by two pertinent, if unduly short essays entitled 'The Critical Edge' and 'Altered States', this is a compendium of independent American architecture. Such practice is neither subsumed within real estate and the corporate profession nor exposed -- yet -- to the vagaries of international design stardom. Little to see therefore of Edge City shopping malls or PoMo office buildings; little to read of the important cultural influence of, say, Meier and Eisenman or of Holl, Williams & Tsien, Morphosis morphosis /mor·pho·sis/ (mor-fo´sis) the process of formation of a part or organ.morphot´ic

mor·pho·sis
n. pl.
 and Moss. All American is an illustrated journey across the United States between the inevitable poles of Manhattan and West Los Angeles
  • West Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, a neighborhood of Los Angeles
  • West Los Angeles (region), a popularly identified region of Los Angeles, incorporating the neighborhood above
, a visit to 20 practices and 84 projects, mostly realized.

In fact this architecture -- and the authors' agenda -- is very much about realization. The chosen designers (average age 44) might be characterized as Builder Architects, many of them -- especially between the coasts -- as Framptonian Critical Regionalists. Thus we have poetic but pragmatic projects in Arizona from both Wendell Burnette and Rick Joy (The School of Bruder?); beautiful-looking houses in Minnesota and Wisconsin by Vincent James; and prismatic pris·mat·ic   also pris·mat·i·cal
adj.
1. Of, relating to, resembling, or being a prism.

2. Formed by refraction of light through a prism. Used of a spectrum of light.

3. Brilliantly colored; iridescent.
 timber structures in Wyoming, Florida and Washington State by Boston-based Charles Rose. Even less likely firms chosen for inclusion, such as FORM and the generally ubiquitous Greg Lynn, focus on construction, albeit through the interpolation interpolation

In mathematics, estimation of a value between two known data points. A simple example is calculating the mean (see mean, median, and mode) of two population counts made 10 years apart to estimate the population in the fifth year.
 of computer technology. At whom is this book aimed? Uncaptioned photographs tend to cover three-quarters of each double-page spread, with the descriptive text, in a thin blue typeface, typically reduced to an eighth-page white square. ipso facto [Latin, By the fact itself; by the mere fact.]


ipso facto (ip-soh-fact-toe) prep. Latin for "by the fact itself." An expression more popular with comedians imitating lawyers than with lawyers themselves.
, plans or other drawings are relegated to the remaining one-eighth approx imate square, printed white-on-blue with so little information as to be merely iconographic. Positioning architecture in a 'conceptual territory of the real and virtual' are Liz Diller and Rick Scofidio (born 1935, and so destabilizing the group age profile). Here images of Daly Genik's factory refurbishment in Santa Monica (traffic lights, stalled cars, palm tree fragments) or Doug Garofalo's Markow Residence, Illinois (speculator Speculator

A person who trades (i.e. derivatives, commodities, bonds, equities or currencies) with a higher-than-average risk, in return for a higher-than-average profit potential.
 suburbia visible to edge of frame) aid contextualization Contextualization of language use
Contextualization is a word first used in sociolinguistics to refer to the use of language and discourse to signal relevant aspects of an interactional or communicative situation.
.

Ultimately, Carter and LeCuyer identify the term 'landscape urbanism' as a strategy to effect fabrication fabrication (fab´rikā´shn),
n the construction or making of a restoration.
 and the environment in America today.
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Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Ryan, Raymund
Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Book Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2003
Words:365
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