After You Left / They Took It Apart: Demolished Paul Rudolph Homes

While more conventional art can be tucked neatly away on gallery walls, houses have a much larger footprint. And when a home outlives its most basic function of providing shelter, a decision has to be made as to whether it is ultimately worth saving. Modernist homes like those designed by Paul Rudolph face an additional challenge as products of a stark, concrete-laden brutalist style now seen by many to be cold and uninviting.
Photographer Chris Mottalini visited three abandoned Rudolph homes awaiting demolition. His photos present these onetime symbols of opulence and power at their most vulnerable and defeated. Rich, full-color photos show sunlight playing across shattered windows, dusty stairs, and ruined living rooms, presenting a view of modernism that few have seen before. The photos speak to the ephemeral nature of contemporary taste, and its uneasy relationship with history, as well as the consequences of modernism on our visual lexicon. And in a final coda, the pictures themselves serve to preserve these masterpieces long after time and tastes move on. 
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After You Left / They Took It Apart: Demolished Paul Rudolph Homes

While more conventional art can be tucked neatly away on gallery walls, houses have a much larger footprint. And when a home outlives its most basic function of providing shelter, a decision has to be made as to whether it is ultimately worth saving. Modernist homes like those designed by Paul Rudolph face an additional challenge as products of a stark, concrete-laden brutalist style now seen by many to be cold and uninviting.
Photographer Chris Mottalini visited three abandoned Rudolph homes awaiting demolition. His photos present these onetime symbols of opulence and power at their most vulnerable and defeated. Rich, full-color photos show sunlight playing across shattered windows, dusty stairs, and ruined living rooms, presenting a view of modernism that few have seen before. The photos speak to the ephemeral nature of contemporary taste, and its uneasy relationship with history, as well as the consequences of modernism on our visual lexicon. And in a final coda, the pictures themselves serve to preserve these masterpieces long after time and tastes move on. 
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After You Left / They Took It Apart: Demolished Paul Rudolph Homes

After You Left / They Took It Apart: Demolished Paul Rudolph Homes

by Chris Mottalini
After You Left / They Took It Apart: Demolished Paul Rudolph Homes

After You Left / They Took It Apart: Demolished Paul Rudolph Homes

by Chris Mottalini

Hardcover

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Overview


While more conventional art can be tucked neatly away on gallery walls, houses have a much larger footprint. And when a home outlives its most basic function of providing shelter, a decision has to be made as to whether it is ultimately worth saving. Modernist homes like those designed by Paul Rudolph face an additional challenge as products of a stark, concrete-laden brutalist style now seen by many to be cold and uninviting.
Photographer Chris Mottalini visited three abandoned Rudolph homes awaiting demolition. His photos present these onetime symbols of opulence and power at their most vulnerable and defeated. Rich, full-color photos show sunlight playing across shattered windows, dusty stairs, and ruined living rooms, presenting a view of modernism that few have seen before. The photos speak to the ephemeral nature of contemporary taste, and its uneasy relationship with history, as well as the consequences of modernism on our visual lexicon. And in a final coda, the pictures themselves serve to preserve these masterpieces long after time and tastes move on. 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781935195450
Publisher: Columbia College Chicago Press
Publication date: 10/15/2013
Pages: 75
Product dimensions: 8.10(w) x 10.20(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author


Chris Mottalini is a photographer living in New York. His work has been exhibited in solo exhibitions and internationally. His previous work has been collected in The Mistake by the Lake.

Table of Contents

Preserve One and Pull Down the Rest (?)

By Allison Arieff

The Plates

Remembering the Cerrito House

Notes on the Plates

Acknowledgements

About the Photographer and the Essayist

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