SPRING SALE đź“š Buy 3+ Books | Get 25% Off

The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: The Man in the Glass House: Philip Johnson, Architect of the Modern Century, Mark Lamster

The Man in the Glass House: Philip Johnson, Architect of the Modern Century

Mark Lamster

Critic Reviews

Good

Based on 7 reviews on

BookMarks logo
Finalist:National Book Critics Circle Award -Biography (2018)
A "smoothly written and fair-minded" (Wall Street Journal) biography of architect Philip Johnson -- a finalist for the National Book Critic's Circle Award.

When Philip Johnson died in 2005 at the age of 98, he was still one of the most recognizable and influential figures on the American cultural landscape. The first recipient of the Pritzker Prize and MoMA's founding architectural curator, Johnson made his mark as one of America's leading architects with his famous Glass House in New Caanan, CT, and his controversial AT&T Building in NYC, among many others in nearly every city in the country -- but his most natural role was as a consummate power broker and shaper of public opinion.

Johnson introduced European modernism -- the sleek, glass-and-steel architecture that now dominates our cities -- to America, and mentored generations of architects, designers, and artists to follow. He defined the era of "starchitecture" with its flamboyant buildings and celebrity designers who esteemed aesthetics and style above all other concerns. But Johnson was also a man of deep paradoxes: he was a Nazi sympathizer, a designer of synagogues, an enfant terrible into his old age, a populist, and a snob. His clients ranged from the Rockefellers to televangelists to Donald Trump.

Award-winning architectural critic and biographer Mark Lamster's The Man in the Glass House lifts the veil on Johnson's controversial and endlessly contradictory life to tell the story of a charming yet deeply flawed man. A rollercoaster tale of the perils of wealth, privilege, and ambition, this book probes the dynamics of American culture that made him so powerful, and tells the story of the built environment in modern America.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Little Brown and Company
  • Publish Date: Nov 6th, 2018
  • Pages: 528
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.50in - 6.30in - 1.60in - 1.75lb
  • EAN: 9780316126434
  • Categories: • Artists, Architects, Photographers• United States - 20th Century• Buildings - Landmarks & Monuments

More books to explore

Book Cover for: Everybody Thought We Were Crazy: Dennis Hopper, Brooke Hayward, and 1960s Los Angeles, Mark Rozzo
Book Cover for: The Slip: The New York City Street That Changed American Art Forever, Prudence Peiffer
Book Cover for: Sybil & Cyril: Cutting Through Time, Jenny Uglow
Book Cover for: Sybil & Cyril: Cutting Through Time, Jenny Uglow
Book Cover for: The Shores of Bohemia: A Cape Cod Story, 1910-1960, John Taylor Williams
Book Cover for: de Kooning: An American Master, Mark Stevens
Book Cover for: Florine Stettheimer: A Biography, Barbara Bloemink
Book Cover for: What Is Now Known Was Once Only Imagined: An (Auto)Biography of Niki de Saint Phalle, Nicole Rudick
Book Cover for: Inventor of the Future: The Visionary Life of Buckminster Fuller, Alec Nevala-Lee
Book Cover for: Light on the Prairie: Solomon D. Butcher, Photographer of Nebraska's Pioneer Days, Nancy Plain
Book Cover for: Yamasaki in Detroit: A Search for Serenity, John Gallagher
Book Cover for: What Becomes a Legend Most: A Biography of Richard Avedon, Philip Gefter
Book Cover for: Mad Enchantment: Claude Monet and the Painting of the Water Lilies, Ross King
Book Cover for: Georgia O'Keeffe and New Mexico: A Sense of Place, Barbara Buhler Lynes
Book Cover for: Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher: The Epic Life and Immortal Photographs of Edward Curtis, Timothy Egan

About the Author

Mark Lamster is the architecture critic of the Dallas Morning News, a professor in the architecture school at the University of Texas at Arlington, and a 2017 Loeb Fellow of the Harvard Graduate School of Design.

More books by Mark Lamster

Book Cover for: Master of Shadows: The Secret Diplomatic Career of the Painter Peter Paul Rubens, Mark Lamster
Book Cover for: Spalding's World Tour: The Epic Adventure That Took Baseball Around the Globe - And Made It America's Game, Mark Lamster

Critics’ reviews

Praise for this book

"The Man in the Glass House is a vivid, thoughtful, illuminating, disturbing, and definitive chronicle of one of twentieth-century architecture's most celebrated and powerful figures."--Kurt Andersen, author and host of Studio 360
"Smoothly written and fair-minded... [a] searching and thorough overview of Johnson's engrossing life."--Wall Street Journal
"[a] brisk, clear-eyed new biography... Johnson emerges in Lamster's treatment as a person of utter consistency, determined in every instance to strip architecture of social purpose."--the New Yorker
"Searing yet judicious... thoroughly documented and convincingly laid out... [an] insightful investigation."--The New York Review of Books
"The perfect addition to the aesthete's bookshelf... essential"--The Globe and Mail
"[A] thoroughly researched and highly readable volume that vividly captures the essence of a complex and disturbing character."--Architectural Record
"Mark Lamster thoughtfully teases out the real history of this modernist icon, from his impressive sexual appetites and more-than-flirtation with fascism in Hitler's Germany to his 1990s collaboration with Donald Trump. It's clear that Johnson was a fascinating and disturbing figure; Lamster's biography, impressively and honestly, displays him with his full complexity."--Ruth Franklin, author of Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life
"More than a dozen years after his death Philip Johnson remains a perplexing, polarizing, magnetic and frustrating figure: although he was far from our greatest architect, no one did more to shape our architectural culture. In this compelling biography, Mark Lamster deconstructs Johnson's complex persona, evaluates his work and begins the complex process of establishing his place in history."--Paul Goldberger, Pulitzer Prize-winning critic and author of Building Art: The Life and Work of Frank Gehry
"Philip Johnson was as complicated and contradictory as the American century that created him and which he helped define. Modernist, reactionary, anti-Semite, populist, artist, and commercial powerhouse, he lived, in some sense, to contradict himself. In Mark Lamster's nuanced telling, Johnson becomes more than the man in the round glasses or the avatar of modernism; he becomes a symbol of America itself. This is biography as history, and it is a magnificent piece of work."--David L. Ulin, author of Sidewalking: Coming to Terms with Los Angeles
"The Man in the Glass House captures the essence of a prodigious, multivalent, enigmatic American talent with authority and aplomb. It's a biography with attitude, a bullet train through the shifting landscapes of twentieth-century America, and a sheer pleasure to read."--Tom Vanderbilt, author of Traffic: Why We Drive The Way We Do
"Philip Johnson led many lives--as curator, aspiring demagogue with a Third Reich fixation, modernist architect, winking post-modernist, and finally kingmaker in the profession--and Mark Lamster has masterfully woven them together in a biography that is as much literary as critical achievement. Required reading for anyone hoping to make sense of the American century, for Johnson was its house architect."--Christopher Hawthorne, Chief Design Officer for the city of Los Angeles and former architecture critic, Los Angeles Times
"An astute... look at the influential modernist architect. Offering a fresh look at his subject's less-than-savory aspects, Lamster portrays a diffident genius for whom being boring was the greatest crime."--Kirkus (starred review)
"Lamster's mesmerizing, authoritative, and often-astonishing study grapples with Johnson's legacy in all its ambiguity... Lamster depicts a man by turns enchanting and irritating, sublime and subpar, pioneering and derivative... Johnson's contradictions, Lamster argues, reveal something of the nation's. Readers may come away with both contempt and admiration, a testament to Lamster's masterful achievement."--Booklist (starred review)
One of the Best Books of the Year - Smithsonian Magazine