<p>"A fascinating and important account of the life and architectural genius of Richard Morris Hunt. So many of Hunt’s remarkable creations have been lost, but in these pages, their beauty and majesty are brought back to life."—Anderson Cooper, journalist and <i>New York Times</i> bestselling author of <i>Vanderbilt: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty</i></p><p>"Sam Watters has composed a thoughtful, complex and startlingly haunting memorial, in images and words, to the life and work of Richard Morris Hunt—the patrician architect who more than any other single builder and taste-maker set the look and feel and architectural tone of the Gilded Age. Alert to what is most aspirational and most troubling about Hunt’s astonishing career, Watters has created a crucial and in many ways definitive account of the master builder of America in its ascendant age."—Ric Burns, filmmaker, director of the award-winning <i>New York: A Documentary Film</i></p><p>"In the wall of Central Park, on Fifth Avenue, at 70th Street, is a colonnaded exedra and seat. This ornate edifice is the Richard Morris Hunt Monument. Undoubtedly, no other architect in America is commemorated with such magnificence. With <i>The Gilded Life of Richard Morris Hunt: Architecture and Art for an American Civilization</i> Sam Watters explains all the things that make this shrine so well deserved. Aesthetically and culturally, Hunt didn’t just make New York more imposing. Succeeding in a mission to elevate and ennoble American architecture, he transformed the look of the entire nation. With the same erudition, Sam Watters succeeds in showing us how."—Michael Henry Adams, writer, lecturer, historian, activist, and author of <i>Harlem: Lost and Found</i></p>

Celebrated internationally in the nineteenth century as America's premier architect, Richard Morris Hunt (1827-1895) is best known for his opulent Gilded Age Vanderbilt mansions, including Biltmore, the Breakers, Marble House, and other landmark works. Yet Hunt's impact on American culture after the Civil War ranges far beyond his lavish palaces. In The Gilded Life of Richard Morris Hunt, historian Sam Watters reveals Hunt's remarkable influence in creating the institutions and their conventions that transformed Old World traditions into his generation's idea of an American civilization, through architecture, interior design, sculpture, painting, and the ardent advocacy of artisan trades. Watters repositions Hunt and his forty-year career in light of new discoveries and connections made through his meticulous study of the Richard Morris Hunt Collection at the Library of Congress. Featuring 200 illustrations, including Hunt's drawings, images he collected, portraits of his privileged New York and Newport inner circle, and new photographs and plans, this dynamic biography follows the contours of American thought that shaped Hunt's life and work among the ruling one percent.
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The illustrated story of the life and times of architect Richard Morris Hunt, his forty-year career, and his impact on American culture after the Civil War.
Foreword by Carla D. Hayden, Librarian of Congress; The Players; Introduction; 1. No Small Potatoes; 2. Soldier with a Crayon; Sketchbook Portfolio; 3. A Robust and Vivacious Temperament; 4. Desirable Elements for Wealth; Scrapbook Portfolio; 5. Les Palais Hunt; 6. Afterword; Acknowledgments; Sources and Abbreviations; Notes; Illustration Credits; Index
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Planned exhibition sponsored by the Newport Society for Historic Preservation-the society that owns Hunt's Breakers and Marble House, the most famous in a town of famous houses-May 25, 2025 through end of October 2025.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781913875817
Publisert
2024-10-07
Utgiver
Vendor
D Giles Ltd
Høyde
254 mm
Bredde
191 mm
AldersnivĂĽ
G, 01
SprĂĽk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
312

Biographical note

Sam Watters lectures and writes about forces that shaped American art, architecture, and landscape before World War II. An author of numerous books, columns, and essays, his first volume in association with the Library of Congress, Gardens for a Beautiful America 1895-1935: Photographs by Frances Benjamin Johnston (2012), won the Botanical and Horticultural Libraries Annual Literature Award. He lives in New York and California. Michael Froio is a photographer and educator in the Philadelphia metropolitan area. His commissioned work includes architectural, railroad, and heavy industry documentation and research projects in various mediums. His work resides in noted collections, including the Library of Congress, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Woodmere Museum, and the Camden County Arts Bank collection.