AC06600383
WRIGHT STARTED IT, CORBU GAVE IT FORM, MIES ADDED CONTROL (EERO SAARINEN)
Eero Saarinen died just aged 51, at the height of his creative powers. His career was jump-started early with the General Motors Technical Center, lauded as the industrial Versailles. He went on to design an array of distinctly different buildings, including the Gateway Arch in St. Louis and the TWA Terminal at JFK Airport, New York, each reflecting the philosophy he shared with Corbusier that every building has within it its own solution.

This talk, one of a series conducted by the architectural publisher John Peter, was recorded in 1956 at Saarinen's remodelled Victorian house in Bloomfield, Michigan. Here he discusses the three great Modernist influences: Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier and Mies Van der Rohe; the rise of the automobile and the resulting atomisation of the city; and the great body of advice and wisdom passed on to him from his father, not least that architecture must be approached as an art.
CD-ROM
53 minutes
1956
 
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