Unreal Amer -OSI
Ada Louise Huxtable. New Press, $30 (188pp) ISBN 978-1-56584-055-3
""Kitsch is king"" in American architecture says Pulitzer Prize winner Huxtable, the New York Times's first architecture critic (1963-82). In her first book since The Tall Building Artistically Reconsidered (1984), she provides a walking tour through America's invented environments, pointing out how the ""marriage of commerce and history"" has altered the American landscape to unveil ""the shoddy, the transient, and the unreal."" The acceptance of the term ""authentic reproduction"" indicates a change in values, and a blurring of boundaries between fake and real. A sanitized, selective version of the past began with the ""fudging of facts"" in the restoration of Colonial Williamsburg. This paved the way for the ""Victoriana knockoffs"" of Disneyland, with its ""uninspired design"" and ""truly awesome commercial overkill."" The next step brought towns remade in the theme-park image, such as Addison, Tex., where authentic buildings were destroyed to make room for a fictitious 35-acre recreation of a nonexistent 19th-century Old Town. Amid the superstores and megamalls, Huxtable finds a denial of diversity and ""history used like wallpaper"" to fabricate an ersatz experience. In her final pages, Huxtable contrasts these with a survey of new architects responsible for ""buildings of uncommon beauty and intelligence."" Readers who discovered Huxtable's visionary viewpoints in the New York Times and followed her writing through a half-dozen books (Kicked a Building Lately?) will eagerly seek out this examination of environment as entertainment. Illustrations. (Apr.)
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Reviewed on: 03/31/1997
Genre: Nonfiction