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Alden B. Dow: Midwestern Modern


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 : Alden B. Dow: Midwestern Modern

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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 720.92
EAN: 9780393732481
ISBN: 0393732487
Label: Archetype Press
Manufacturer: Archetype Press
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 264
Publication Date: September 17, 2007
Publisher: Archetype Press
Studio: Archetype Press




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Editorial Review:

Product Description:
Alden Dow was a midwesterner by birth, but he left a legacy national in stature.

"Art is feeling . . . science is fact.
Feelings must be combined with facts
before anything new, of value, can be created."
—Alden B. Dow


Active from the early 1930s through the late 1970s, Dow designed some six hundred projects—often daringly modern houses and religious buildings, schools and colleges, business and civic structures, and even a new town in Texas. He changed the face of his hometown of Midland, Michigan, leaving it more than one hundred houses, offices and plants for The Dow Chemical Company, churches, banks, schools, and recreational structures.

Nowhere is Dow's genius more evident than in his Home and Studio in Midland, a National Historic Landmark. Alden B. Dow: Midwestern Modern tells the story of both this exceptional residence and the architect who spent a half century developing his vision of a more humane way of building. Beginning with the family—his father founded The Dow Chemical Company—and the town that encouraged him, the book traces the life and work of Alden Dow as well as the intensely personal philosophy that governed everything he did.

The architect rejected the traditional concept of style and instead urged that buildings reflect their function, inspire their users, and encompass the qualities of honesty, humility, and enthusiasm. "There is never a fine thing unless it is original," he suggested, emphasizing the need for creativity and quality. Dow's influences were numerous: nature, the organic architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright (with whom he studied briefly as part of the Taliesin Fellowship), reason and practicality, the arts of Japan, the color wheel, and, always, an unfailing sense of fun and joy.

Dow's Home and Studio—which rises like a visionary island from an enveloping pond—represents one of the earliest of his many architectural experiments. It and a dozen other homes were built of what he called Unit Blocks, an innovative and adaptable material created from cinder ash recycled from Dow Chemical furnaces. His studio and one of his Unit Block houses captured the grand prize at a 1937 Paris exposition, bringing him instant international recognition. Dow went on to design hundreds of other houses, from inexpensive prefabricated dwellings to provocative prototypes to residences of America's business leaders. During his half-century career, he was repeatedly honored by civic, educational, and architectural institutions.

The architect's exceptional talents and vision were recognized while he was still in his thirties. In 1942 the noted architecture critic Talbot Hamlin captured the essence of this progressive designer: "Alden Dow . . . has not been content to accept the accepted. . . . He has sought to create out of building materials a poetry of plane and line, of outside and in, of color and form . . . ," noted Hamlin. "Here is a man not content with building mere comfortable and efficient shelters but a man who conceives that architecture . . . must also create buildings which enlarge the imagination and enrich the emotional life of those who dwell in them." 185 color, 220 black-and-white illustrations.



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - SWEEBE, in the ink.
In 1969 my grandfather finished building the house that I lived in from age 18-22, until I left Midland for the US Air Force. He moved to Florida and I kept up the house, it was amazing and beautiful in every way. Whenever someone would come over they would first be amazing with the beauty and architecture of the home and again that an 18 year old lived in this place with a friend. Everyone would ask me, "I didn't know you lived in a Dow house" and I would tell them that I didn't. My fathers father, ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Great book of one of my favorite architects
This is a beautifully done book reviewing the life and work of Alden B. Dow, a prairie school architect based in Midland, Michigan. I grew up in Midland, so I'm very familiar with his excellent work. It is nice to see it all in beautiful pictures.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Excellent review of a little-known architect
I wasn't familiar with this architect until my boyfriend "discovered" him. He does fantastic, contemporary work and this book really showed a great deal of his architectural gems in color. Excellent book.





 

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