Details

ISBN-10: 0816673195
ISBN-13: 9780816673193
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publish Date: 01/15/2015
Dimensions: 9.84" L, 7.54" W, 0.68" H

Impossible Heights: Skyscrapers, Flight, and the Master Builder

Paperback

Price: $37.50

Overview

The advent of the airplane and skyscraper in 1920s and ’30s America offered the population an entirely new way to look at the world: from above. The captivating image of an airplane flying over the rising metropolis led many Americans to believe a new civilization had dawned. In Impossible Heights, Adnan Morshed examines the aesthetics that emerged from this valorization of heights and their impact on the built environment.

The lofty vantage point from the sky ushered in a modernist impulse to cleanse crowded twentieth-century cities in anticipation of an ideal world of tomorrow. Inspired by great new heights, American architects became central to this endeavor and were regarded as heroic aviators. Combining close readings of a broad range of archival sources, Morshed offers new interpretations of works such as Hugh Ferriss’s Metropolis drawings, Buckminster Fuller’s Dymaxion houses, and Norman Bel Geddes’s Futurama exhibit at the 1939 New York World’s Fair. Transformed by the populist imagination into “master builders,” these designers helped produce a new form of visuality: the aesthetics of ascension.

By demonstrating how aerial movement and height intersect with popular “superman” discourses of the time, Morshed reveals the relationship between architecture, art, science, and interwar pop culture. Featuring a marvelous array of never before published illustrations, this richly textured study of utopian imaginings illustrates America’s propulsion into a new cultural consciousness.

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Reviews

"Impossible Heights is an original account of the American fascination with the skyscraper and the airplane and the enthusiasm for the new perspective on high from which people surveyed the city and landscape. Adnan Morshed examines the intersections between intellectual biography, visuality, and cultural history and brings together the 'art of architecture' with mass culture and spectatorship. In doing so, he illuminates 'the aesthetics of ascension' as a widely shared cultural phenomenon that characterized the interwar period." –Gail Fenske, author of The Skyscraper and the City: The Woolworth Building and the Making of Modern New York

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Details

ISBN-10: 0816673195
ISBN-13: 9780816673193
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publish Date: 01/15/2015
Dimensions: 9.84" L, 7.54" W, 0.68" H
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