LATEST DISCOUNTS & SALES: PROMOTIONS

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

Tremaine Houses

One Family's Patronage of Domestic Architecture in Midcentury America

Volker M. Welter

$99.95

Hardback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
Getty Publications
19 November 2019
This volume analyzes the extraordinary patronage of modern architecture that the Tremaine family sustained for nearly four decades in the mid-twentieth century.

 

From the late 1930s to the early 1970s, two brothers, Burton G. Tremaine and Warren D. Tremaine, and their respective wives, Emily Hall Tremaine and Katharine Williams Tremaine, commissioned approximately thirty architecture and design projects. Richard Neutra and Oscar Niemeyer designed the best-known Tremaine houses; Philip Johnson and Frank Lloyd Wright also created designs and buildings for the family that achieved iconic status in the modern movement.

 

Focusing on the Tremaines’ houses and other projects, such as a visitor center at the meteor crater in Arizona, this volume explores the Tremaines’ architectural patronage in terms of the family’s motivations and values, exposing patterns in what may appear as an eclectic collection of modern architecture. Architectural historian Volker M. Welter argues that the Tremaines’ patronage was not driven by any single factor; rather, it stemmed from a network of motives comprising the clients’ practical requirements, their private and public lives, and their ideas about architecture and art.

 

By:  
Imprint:   Getty Publications
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 254mm,  Width: 241mm,  Spine: 25mm
Weight:   1.120kg
ISBN:   9781606066140
ISBN 10:   1606066145
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Volker M. Welter is a professor in the Department of the History of Art and Architecture at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Reviews for Tremaine Houses: One Family's Patronage of Domestic Architecture in Midcentury America

Welter's comprehensive history of the Tremaines' campaign to build in several locations, with both established and avant-garde architects, provides the most detailed cultural history I have read concerning the motivations, social dimensions, and architect-client relationships behind their strikingly original residences and unbuilt projects. Moreover, the author has penetrated the largely opaque world of a post-war oligarchy that was at once struggling to establish its relevance to a new, more liberal era, yet still maintain its status in a turbulent, capitalist economy, driving the richest country in the world... The extensive illustrations, many from the UCSB Architectural Archives, are rich and evocative of the period. --Mark A. Hewitt FAIA, Mark Alan Hewitt Architects With the imaginative rigor he exerted in his books on biologist/urbanist Patrick Geddes and architect Ernst Freud, Volker Welter narrates the fascinating dealings of the Tremaine family in Southern California at midcentury. Welter examines the Tremaine's relationship with Vienna-trained architect Richard Neutra, which yielded one of the most widely discussed postwar American houses, as well as the Tremaine's patronage of the young Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer, who designed a stunning beach house for the couple. Grounded in meticulous archival explorations, the book brings to light a saga of faith in the virtues of modern architecture. --Jean-Louis Cohen, professor at NYU's Institute of Fine Arts and author of Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes and The Future of Architecture Since 1889: A Worldwide History With its focus on one family's commissions, Tremaine Houses presents a rich body of domestic architecture and discusses/looks at its wider cultural and socioeconomic significance for modernism of the postwar period. Utilizing a wealth of archival material, Welter makes a vital contribution to understanding the role of patronage in modernism, shedding new light on how design processes unfolded. This rigorous study, encompassing the close analysis of interiors, art collecting, landscape design, and vernacular building, offers a timely examination of modernism at midcentury. --Robin Schuldenfrei, The Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London In studies of the history of modern architecture, one of the most underexamined aspects has been the role of enlightened clients and patrons--an issue that Volker Welter addresses in this welcome book on the two Tremaine brothers and their wives, Warren and Katharine Tremaine and Burton and Emily Tremaine, who commissioned designs from Richard Neutra, Oscar Niemeyer, Philip Johnson, and others for sites as varied as Southern California, Arizona, Connecticut, and Ireland. The book should furnish indispensable examples and ideas for any future studies of modernist architectural patronage. --Thomas S. Hines, author of Architecture of the Sun: Modern Los Angeles Architecture, 1900-1970 (2010) and Architecture and Design at the Museum of Modern Art: The Arthur Drexler Years, 1951-1986 (2019)


See Inside

See Also