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King Rudolph; Paul Rudolph: the late work.


PAUL RUDOLPH Rudolph: see Raoul, king of France.: THE LATE WORK

By Roberto de Alba alba /al·ba/ (al´bah) [L.] white.

al·ba (lb)
n.
. London: Princeton Architectural Press. 2003. [pounds sterling]30

For an America bracketed by the International Style

International style, in architecture

International style, in architecture, the phase of the modern movement that emerged in Europe and the United States during the 1920s. The term was first used by Philip Johnson in connection with a 1932 architectural exhibition held at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City.
 and then the faux historicity of Postmodernism postmodernism, term used to designate a multitude of trends—in the arts, philosophy, religion, technology, and many other areas—that come after and deviate from the many 20th-cent. movements that constituted modernism. The term has become ubiquitous in contemporary discourse and has been employed as a catchall for various aspects of society, theory, and art., Paul Rudolph (1918-1997) was a master architect. Rudolph's career, however, peaked in 1962 with the Yale School of Art & Architecture, a building that both looked back to Frank Lloyd Wright's Larkin Building and forward to Richard Rogers & Partners' Lloyd's of London. But a fire (arson?) at Yale in 1969 forcefully suggested a rejection of Rudolph's architecture. It signals, in retrospect, three subsequent decades of professional twilight--a lonely furrow with occasional obeisance from New York's avant-garde--but also of consistently dedicated, little-known work.

This compact book is Volume Three in a tripartite series (Volume One--on his light, and light-filled, structures in postwar Florida--revealed both Rudolph's Baroque tendencies and a proto-Critical Regionalism). It was compiled by Roberto de Alba, one of a cadre of 1980s Yale students who began to reassess (often to their professors' bafflement) Rudolph's legacy. Dividing the post-1969 work into the categories 'Houses', 'Towers', and 'Housing, Institutions and the City', de Alba also adds a welcome preface from Mildred Schmertz, a long--but dry--essay by Robert Bruegmann, and a characteristically waspish conversation between Rudolph and Peter Blake.

De Alba has sensibly emphasized Rudolph's remarkable drawings, both his black and white perspectives and his Scarpa Antonio 1752-1832.
Italian anatomist and surgeon known for his studies of the ear and nerves and for his description of atherosclerosis.
-like sketches. At times, as with the vast Bass Residence in Fort Worth, there are some discrepancies between interim and final design drawings. Rudolph's late projects were often located in South-East Asia, complex towers built in Hong Kong, Singapore and Jakarta with--again--suggestions of Frank Lloyd Wright (the plan of Fallingwater Fallingwater, Bear Run, Pa., house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Fallingwater (1936–39) is an architectural tour de force of Wright's organic philosophy, whereby a building should be completely integrated with its environment. Seen from below, the house is boldly cantilevered over a waterfall, with its powerful balconies and terraces seemingly suspended in midair. stacked Metabolistically) and Critical Regionalism. Nevertheless his own multi-storey penthouse in Manhattan (AR August 1999) is the obvious gem in this collection.
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Title Annotation:Reviews
Author:Ryan, Raymund
Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Dec 1, 2003
Words:296
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