From
the earliest classical temples to today's achievements, over two thousand
years of Western architectural history are summarized. Every architectural
style is the product of an ideology, and the author shows how the
buildings of Greece and Rome, of the Early Christian and Byzantine
centuries, of the Gothic Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and the Enlightenment
grew out of their respective cultures. In the nineteenth century the
story in Europe and North America became more complicated, with the
competing forces of Romanticism and industrial functionalism leading
to apparently contradictory results a situation that continues today
in the clash between postmodernism and high-tech.
But perspectives change, and every decade has its own views of the
past. Eastern Europe has inevitably been underrepresented in Western
criticism since 1945; Czech Baroque, Polish Neoclassicism, and Hungarian
Art Nouveau provide some unexpected revelations. Illustrated throughout
with photographs closely linked to the text, this is a guide for the
student and general reader to follow into the twenty-first century.
ISBN
0-500-20316-4 · 400 illustrations