Modernist
A style that arose in Europe as early as the 1920s as part of an avant-garde response to what artists and designers perceived as the cultural irrelevance of "styles," as well as the socio-political authoritarianism represented in the formal, rigid geometry of Beaux Arts neoclassicism. In the United States, this sense of irrelevance also extended to the nineteenth-century Picturesque, as neither style adequately addressed the massive social and economic changes brought on by urbanization, suburbanization, and ultimately by the Great Depression. Modernism embraced a diverse palette of contemporary and often experimental materials as well as using familiar materials in unconventional ways, and, in the absence of teams of gardeners, it strived for low maintenance. It also focused on clients’ desire to link house and garden to extend the living space outdoors. The Modernist garden frequently used irregular forms and asymmetry. Japanese gardens provided an inspiration, as did movements such as Dada in painting and sculpture. American practitioners James Rose, Dan Kiley, Garrett Eckbo, and others expressed their theories and concerns in articles published in Pencil Points magazine. Although Modernist design had largely fallen from favor by the Bicentennial, in recent years it has enjoyed a significant resurgence.
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NorthPark Center
Dallas, TX -
Christian Theological Seminary
Indianapolis, IN -
601 Lexington Avenue
New York, NY -
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA -
Snohomish County Campus
Everett, WA -
Harima Science Garden City
Sayo-cho, Hyogo -
Saitama-Shintoshin Station "Sky Forest" Plaza
Shintoshin, Saitama -
Grand Valley State University
Allendale, MI -
Woodlake Condominiums
San Mateo, CA -
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Jerusalem, -
Westbeth Artists’ Housing
New York, NY -
Lake Vista
New Orleans, LA -
Ellis Island
New York, NY -
Loyola University
New Orleans, LA -
Capitol Towers Apartments
Sacramento, CA -
Cecil B. Moore Station Plaza
Philadelphia, PA