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Zoom Wave Hits Architecture
Alan Powers (2007)
Britain: Modern Architectures in History
B. Diamonstein (1982)
American architecture nowLeonardo, 15
B. Jones (1951)
The unsophisticated arts
Peggy Angus Archive, letter from Richards to Peggy Angus, undated
The Condition of Architecture and the Principle of Anonymity
J. Seddon (2007)
The Architect and the ‘Arch-Pedant’: Sadie Speight, Nikolaus Pevsner and ‘Design Review’Journal of Design History, 20
(1939)
Nikolaus Pevsner Papers
East Sussex Records Office, Peggy Angus Archive, letter from Richards to Peggy Angus
Gloag (1996)
68The Architectural Review
(2011)
The Hollow Victory of Modern Architecture and the Quest for the Vernacular: J. M. Richards and "the Functional Tradition
It was at Furlongs that Eric Ravilious met Helen Binyon and they began an affair that lasted until 1938: Binyon, Eric Ravilious
Rational Aesthetic
The Experience of Modernism
RIBA Discourse: The Hollow Victory
G. Hegel (2012)
Philosophy of right
TGA 955/1/1/10, ICA Papers, ICA Statement of Policy and Aims
J. Martin, B. Nicholson, N. Gabo (1971)
Circle: international survey of constructive art;
P. Guillery (2010)
Built from Below: British Architecture and the Vernacular
(2005)
Hegel, preface to Philosophy of Right
J. Scanlon (1950)
Notes toward a Definition of CultureAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly, 24
The Atavism of a Short Distance Mini Cyclist
Stocktaking, 5', The Architectural Review
Where do we Stand?', The Architectural Review
Liking/disliking own home
Nautical Style
Gourna: a lesson in basic architecture
A New Spirit and Idealism', The Architects
Institute of History and Theory of Architecture, GTA Archives, General Secretariat Papers, Letter from Sigfried Giedion to Hartland-Thomas
N. Taylor (1973)
Village-as-the-City:
The Next Step', The Architectural Review
R. Harris (1978)
The first half century.Australian dental journal, 23 1
Hollow Victory (2007)
Hollow victoryNature, 450
Criticism: Stockholm, New Commercial Centre
Helen Binyon (1983)
Eric Ravilious: Memoir of an Artist
East Sussex Records Office, Peggy Angus Archive, letter dated
Royal Institute of British Architects Archive, SAG/92/i/(2/2), Godfrey Samuel Papers, letter from Richards to MARS group
W. Whyte (2009)
The Englishness of English architecture: modernism and the making of a national international style, 1927-1957Journal of British Studies, 48
Richards
36Memoirs
giving 1932 as the date that they first rented Brick House; Binyon, Eric Ravilious
The Architectural Review
M. Rosso (1939)
Pioneers of the Modern Movement, from William Morris to Walter Gropius, by Nikolaus PevsnerParnassus
Stocktaking 2', in idem
J. Gold (1997)
The Experience of Modernism: Modern Architects and the Future City, 1928-53
Karen Bearor (1993)
Irene Rice Pereira: Her Paintings and Philosophy
J. Richards (1980)
Memoirs of an unjust fella
Criticism: Pirelli Building Milan
Towards a Rational Aesthetic
Institute of History and Theory of Architecture, GTA Archives, General Secretariat Papers
East Sussex Records Office, Peggy Angus Archive, Peggy Angus Archive, letter from Richards to Peggy Angus
D. Simpson (1988)
The Origins of Modern Critical Thought: German Aesthetic and Literary Criticism from Lessing to Hegel
Andrew Higgott (2006)
Mediating Modernism: Architectural Cultures in Britain
S. Goldhagen (2005)
Something to Talk about: Modernism, Discourse, StyleJournal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 64
(1963)
Banham described these efforts at 'education' as nothing more than attempts 'to equip the working classes with middle-class responses'; see Reyner Banham
Melvin Rotsch, J. Richards, Eric Maré (1958)
The functional tradition in early industrial buildings
Ståle Dingstad
CriticismIbsen in Context
Richards
12Introduction to Modern Architecture
Speed the Citizen, urban rapid transit and the future of cities
Fully Licensed
J. Richards (1973)
The castles on the ground
Architectural Expression
RICHARD Williams (2004)
The Anxious City: British Urbanism in the late 20th Century
On Trial: 5', The Architectural Review
Hugh Casson first appeared on the MARS members list in
TGA 955/1/1/10, ICA Papers
E. Darling (2006)
Re-forming Britain: Narratives of Modernity before Reconstruction
Neville Conder (1949)
An introduction to modern architecture
The Architectural Review
For more details see Gold, The Experience of Modernism. 69 'MARS the Pictoral Record
(1938)
The Penguin Archive, DM1843/15/4, Letters to Richards from Allan Lane
(1940)
This phrase 'the man in the street' is used repeatedly in Richards's 1940 book
(2007)
Memoir of an Artist (edn Cambridge
Vision and Design: English Architectural Taste -2
See for example Erten
1934); as quoted in Richards
R. Oliver, Raymond Williams (1959)
Culture and Society, 1780-1950British Journal of Educational Studies, 8
General Secretariat Papers, Notes of Discussion at MARS Group Meeting (undated)
Scenario for Human Drama
Williams
34The Anxious City
The Anxious City
Architecture and The Public', The Architectural Review
In 1946 J. M. Richards, editor of the Architectural Review (AR) and self-proclaimed champion of modernism, published a book entitled The Castles on the Ground (Fig. 1). This book, written while working for the Ministry of Information (Mol) in Cairo during the war, was a study of British suburban architecture and contained long, romantic descriptions of the suburban house and garden. Richards described the suburb as a place in which ‘everything is in its place’ and where ‘the abruptness, the barbarities of the world are far away’. For this reason The Castles on the Ground is most often remembered as a retreat from pre-war modernism, into nostalgia for mock-Tudor houses and privet hedges. The writer and critic Reyner Banham, who worked with Richards at the AR in the 1950s, described the book as a ‘blank betrayal of everything that Modern Architecture was supposed to stand for’. More recently, however, it has been rediscovered and reassessed for its contribution to mid-twentieth-century debates about the relationship between modern architects and the British public. These reassessments get closer to Richards’s original aim for the book. He was not concerned with the style of suburban architecture for its own sake, but with the question of why the style was so popular and what it meant for the role of modern architects in Britain and their relationship to the ‘man in the street’.
Architectural History – Cambridge University Press
Published: Jan 12, 2016
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