Winner, Alice Davis Hitchcock Award, Society of Architectural Historians.
The work of the French architect Claude-Nicolas Ledoux has fascinated art historians, social critics, and architects alike since the French Revolution. Criticized in his own time for extravagance and megalomania, Ledoux has since been hailed as a visionary and utopian, and as a radical neoclassicist. In the 1930s Ledoux's designs were seen as anticipating modernist abstraction in architecture, and more recently they have been mined as a source of postmodern imagery.
A product of detailed research into late-eighteenth-century cultural and social history, this book examines the controversial architect's life and work in the context of the Revolutionary period. It discusses Ledoux's education, early career, and the development of his personal idiom as a domestic architect. Vidler analyzes what was, perhaps, the most significant of Ledoux's public works, the Saline de Chaux, one of the most celebrated factory towns of its time and the only work of Ledoux to survive at the scale of its conception. The building of this rural factory, in conjunction with its proposed social and technical program, serves as a case study of Ledoux's early speculations on the relationship of architecture to industrial management.
Ledoux was deeply involved in urban projects as well, and Vidler studies a number of them - most notably, the Palace of Justice of Aix-en-Provence, the Theater of Besancon, and the tollgates around Paris - as examples of Ledoux's attempt to create a "modern classicism" that would reinvest ancient forms with contemporary meaning and ultimately fashion an aesthetic for the representation of the public realm
In the book's final section, Vidler turns to the more explicitly utopian designs that Ledoux proposed for the "Ideal City of Chaux," which he imagined growing up around the saltworks in France-Comte. It was an entire city of symbolic and functional institutions, and Ledoux invented an architectural language to express their social and moral significance.
Anthony Vidler is Professor of Architecture at Princeton University, where he also directs the European Cultural Studies Program.
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-- Joseph Rykwert, University of Pennsylvania " This is the only book on Claude-Nicolas Ledoux in English, and is likely to remain that for the foreseeable future. More important, it is the best book on Ledoux in any language." -- Joseph Rykwert, University of Pennsylvania & quot; This is the only book on Claude-Nicolas Ledoux in English, and is likely to remain that for the foreseeable future. More important, it is the best book on Ledoux in any language.& quot; -- Joseph Rykwert, University of Pennsylvania "This is the only book on Claude-Nicolas Ledoux in English, and is likely to remain that for the foreseeable future. More important, it is the best book on Ledoux in any language."--Joseph Rykwert, University of Pennsylvania
Winner, Alice Davis Hitchcock Award, Society of Architectural Historians.The work of the French architect Claude-Nicolas Ledoux has fascinated art historians, social critics, and architects alike since the French Revolution. Criticized in his own time for extravagance and megalomania, Ledoux has since been hailed as a visionary and utopian, and as a radical neoclassicist. In the 1930s Ledoux's designs were seen as anticipating modernist abstraction in architecture, and more recently they have been mined as a source of postmodern imagery.A product of detailed research into late-eighteenth-century cultural and social history, this book examines the controversial architect's life and work in the context of the Revolutionary period. It discusses Ledoux's education, early career, and the development of his personal idiom as a domestic architect. Vidler analyzes what was, perhaps, the most significant of Ledoux's public works, the Saline de Chaux, one of the most celebrated factory towns of its time and the only work of Ledoux to survive at the scale of its conception. The building of this rural factory, in conjunction with its proposed social and technical program, serves as a case study of Ledoux's early speculations on the relationship of architecture to industrial management.Ledoux was deeply involved in urban projects as well, and Vidler studies a number of them - most notably, the Palace of Justice of Aix-en-Provence, the Theater of Besancon, and the tollgates around Paris - as examples of Ledoux's attempt to create a "modern classicism" that would reinvest ancient forms with contemporary meaning and ultimately fashion an aesthetic for the representation of the public realmIn the book's final section, Vidler turns to the more explicitly utopian designs that Ledoux proposed for the "Ideal City of Chaux," which he imagined growing up around the saltworks in France-Comte. It was an entire city of symbolic and functional institutions, and Ledoux invented an architectural language to express their social and moral significance.Anthony Vidler is Professor of Architecture at Princeton University, where he also directs the European Cultural Studies Program.
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Zustand: Good. Ships from the UK. Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in clean, average condition without any missing pages. Artikel-Nr. GRP17528998
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Anbieter: ThriftBooks-Dallas, Dallas, TX, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less 4.9. Artikel-Nr. G0262220326I4N00
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Anbieter: THE CROSS Art + Books, Sydney, NSW, Australien
32.0 x 24.0cms 440pp b/w Illusts very good+ hardback & dustwrapper This book examines Le Doux''s work and life in the context of the Revolutionary period. it discusses his education early career and the development of his personal idiom as a domestic architect. It analyses his Saline de Chaux the celebrated factory town; the Palace of Justice of Aix-de-Provence; the Theatre of Besancon; the Paris tollgates and ''The Ideal City of Chaux'' as examples of a ''modern classicism'' that would reinvent the ancient forms with contemporary meaning. Artikel-Nr. 30054424
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Anbieter: Design Books, New York, NY, USA
Hard Cover. Zustand: Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very Good. This is a fine hardcover copy with a very good dust jacket with wear to the edges and spine tips. Completely clean. The first substantial monograph in English on the French Neo-Classical architect Claude-Nicolas Le Doux (1736-1806). Illustrated in black & white. Bibliography. 13" high X 9" wide, 446 pages. Large heavy book, foreign shipping will be extra. This book will be securely wrapped and packed in a sturdy box and shipped with tracking. Artikel-Nr. 018652
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