Product Details
A Field Guide to Contemporary American Architecture

A Field Guide to Contemporary American Architecture
By Carole Rifkind

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


34 new or used available from $0.61

Average customer review:

Product Description

Incisive, jargon-free and a pleasure to read, A Field Guide To American Architecture presents an exceptionally comprehensive view of American architecture from the 1940s to the present. Plentiful photographs and graphic representations, carefully interwoven with succint text and informative captions, make this volume ideal for browsing as well as serious study. Like Carole Rifkind's earlier book, this one investigates buildings by type, taking a fresh vantage point for each--houses, housing projects, public buildings, art museums, churches and synagogues, schools and colleges, tall office buildings, and shopping centers. Encompassing the works of two hundred architects, from the little known to the famous, it builds a diverse and fascinating panorama of recent American architecture.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2431075 in Books
  • Published on: 1998-10-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 384 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
With her unconditional love for architecture in all its forms, she refuses to overlook a particular style or movement on purely esthetic grounds or merely because it has become unfashionable. Thus, if readers will be astonished by some of her more deservedly obscure examples, few will doubt her passion or immense skill in digesting and summarizing the most perplexing half-century in American architectural history. -- The New York Times Book Review, Martin Filler

About the Author
Carole Rifkind, teacher and curator, is a member of the Society of Architectural Historians, the Architectural League of New York, and the Municipal Art Society. She is the author of A Field Guide to American Architecture, Main Street: Face of Urban America, and Mansions, Mills, and Main Streets.


Customer Reviews

Poor illustrations2
I don't know what book the other reviewers saw, but the copy I have has illustrations that rank with those in high school texts of the 60s. All black-and-white, or rather darkish gray and white, no snap, very bland, on low quality (for reproduction) paper. An office inkjet printer could do much better. With the importance of color in contemporary architecture this is ridiculous (especially for the price). I think that books on visual matters should look good themselves --- otherwise, how do we get excited? How do we begin to want to read it?

An outstanding work on contemporary arcvhitecture!5
A Field Guide to Contemporary American Architecture picks up where every other book I've looked at leaves off. It not only tells about the building styles of the last 50 years, but it also lets you know that contemporary american architecture is defined by much more than style. Rifkind makes a large and complex subject easy to take. I enjoyed reading about shopping malls, public housing, and school and college buildings -- which most books don't touch. I appreciated the many clear and informative photographs. Kudos to the author for making sense and speaking clearly -- the same qualities that I enjoyed in her earlier book on historic buildings, A Field Guide to American Architecture.

Path Breaking Field Guide5
Most field guides to American archiecture end with buildings from the 1950's. It is a rare field guide that goes forward to the Twenty First Century. Yet, most of the nation's buildings were constructed in the past fifty years. There is a real reluctance to identify and catalog contemporary American architecture.

Carole Rifkind and her Field Guide to Contemporay American Architecture boldly goes where other field guides dare to tread. What makes this book so interesting is that she is prepared to define styles and give these new styles names. As an example she has chapters on "Abstract, Technical and Regional" and "Expressionist, Organic, Manipulated Space and Deconstructivist." In the staid world of architectural field guides, this is pretty bold stuff. Rifkind is defining a path that future field guides will probably follow.

The illustrations and floor plans in this book are good but nothing to write home about. All of these homes and buildings are still to new to receive the close attention of the Survey of Historic American Buildings. It is going to take a few more decades for these buildings to enter into the realm of historic.

This is a book for all those who already feel comfortable with being able to identify Tudors and Bungalows and who now want to enter into something just a bit more daring. Highly recommended.