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Long Island Moderns : From Arcadia to Suburbia

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This is an exploration of Modernist visual arts and architecture of Long Island. "Long Island Moderns: from Arcadia to Suburbia" provides a new cultural narrative of Long Island in the 20th century through an examination of its architectural and artistic emergence during that period.

Beginning in the late 1920s, architects like Albert Frey, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Wallace Harrison built homes for themselves and influential clients, who sought to bring high culture to their Long Island estates and retreats.

As a result, beginning in the mid-1940s, Long Island became home to works by Masters of Modernism like Philip Johnson and Marcel Breuer, while new communities like Levittown changed the landscape.

In later years, Paul Rudolf and Charles Moore among others pushed Modernism in new directions.

Throughout the period important artists such as Lee Krasner, Fernand Leger, Irving Penn and Cindy Sherman lived and worked on the island, cementing the region as a center of the Modernist art movement.

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Product Details
Heckscher Museum of Art
1879195151 / 9781879195158
Paperback / softback
01/11/2009
United States
208 pages, 80 colour illustrations
165 x 216 mm
General (US: Trade) Learn More