Denatured Visions Landscape and Culture in the Twentieth Century Published by The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Edited by William Howard Adams, Stuart Wrede. Contributions by Robert Rosenblum, Vincent Scully. Text by John Beardsley, Caroline Constant, Galen Cranz, Paul Groth, John Dixon Hunt, John Jackson, Geoffrey Jellicoe, Stephen Krog, Leo Marx, Marc Treib, Kenneth Frampton. Back in Print Is modernism fundamentally hostile to nature? How have the radical transformations of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries affected our attitude toward nature and impacted the landscape, as seen in the relationship of modern building to the land, and in the parks and gardens of this past century? Proceeding from the premise that how we shape our physical environment is a fundamental reflection of our culture, this compendium of essays on landscape in the twentieth century evolved from a symposium of distinguished historians, scholars, architects, landscape architects and artists organized by The Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1988. Presented in a historical perspective, the discussion focuses on the problems and solutions of the twentieth century and addresses the issues that carry over into the twenty-first.
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