Blair Kamin reports on the United States Post Office's 2005 Commemorative Stamp Program's twelve stamps titled "Masterworks of Modern American Architecture."
I could only skim Kamin's piece, since in the very first paragraph he rips on his least favorite building, Soldier Field. He says, "I often write about BIG THINGS -- skyscrapers that soar into the clouds, exhibition halls bigger than 14 football fields, blockbusting stadiums that tower over their neighborhoods" (my italics). I think BK needs to get over this; he lost the fight to stop the renovation and he needs to move on.
Regardless, he whines about Chicago buildings (SOM's Hancock and Mies' 860/880 LSD) being featured only on two stamps. That's two of twelve. Sixteen percent. One less than New York City. That's plenty, to me.
The twelve stamps are:
:: Guggenheim Museum by Frank Lloyd Wright
:: Disney Concert Hall by Frank Gehry
:: Yale Art and Architecture Building by Paul Rudolph
:: Chrysler Building by William Van Alen
:: 860/880 Lake Shore Drive by Mies van der Rohe
:: High Museum of Art by Richard Meier
:: Vanna Venturi House by Robert Venturi
:: East Building of the National Gallery of Art by I.M. Pei
:: Phillips Exeter Academy Library by Louis I. Kahn
:: TWA Terminal by Eero Saarinen
:: Glass House by Philip Johnson
:: Hancock Center by SOM
More information on the stamps can be found on the USPS Press Release.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment