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Richard Neutra's Miller House
 
 
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Richard Neutra's Miller House [Paperback]

Stephen Leet (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

Primary Material April 1, 2004
At the dawn of his international fame, architect Richard Neutra was approached by a St. Louis socialite, Grace Lewis Miller, to design a small winter home on the edge of glamour-baked Palm Springs. Miller wanted an open, light-filled house that could also act as a studio for her fashionably avant-garde exercise course in posture and grace, "The Mensendieck System." This unique program, combined with the desert landscape and the proactive health-minded client appealed to the idealist in Neutra. The frequent, fervent dialog between Neutra and Miller, who had great mutual respect, produced a work of forward-thinking and artful architecture.
In Richard Neutra's Miller House, Stephen Leet traces the conception and realization of the house, examines the complex relationship between architect and client, and shows how the Mensendieck System influenced the creation of this seminal Neutra project. Beautiful duotone photographs by Julius Shulman, excerpts from the detailed correspondence between Neutra and Miller, and sketches and drawing provide valuable insight into the design process.
Like the houses of Albert Frey, a contemporary of Neutra's who also build in the desert, the Miller House shows how architecture , the California landscape, and an interest in well-being can intersect in a moment of the architectural sublime.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In a world of coffee table architecture books that simply scan the surface of movements, styles and artists, this book’s focus is refreshing: it takes a single, significant construction and explores it from beginning to end. The house that Austrian-born architect Richard Neutra created for socialite Grace Lewis Miller in Palm Springs, CA, was neither stylistically "innovative" nor "transitional," Leet explains; its design "does not significantly deviate" from the sleek, minimalist design of Neutra’s other 1930s work. However, the extensive archive Miller kept documenting the house’s planning, construction and subsequent fame allows Leet to analyze "the complex cultural conditions that directed its design"—among them: the personalities, life and work of both Miller and Neutra; the public’s reticence to embrace modern architecture; the development of Palm Springs as a resort community in the 1930s, and the emigration of European architects to America. A vigorous, intelligent woman, Miller was a teacher of the Mensendieck System of Functional Exercise, and she wanted an open, airy environment that not only could hold a studio for her practice, but would bring in the ample sun from outside. The letters that she exchanged with Neutra suggest that she was "as vain, resolute and determined as her famous architect," and that their demanding collaboration brought out the best in each of their work. Leet’s writing, while generally precise and clean, is occasionally marred by overwrought sentences, but this flaw does not detract much from his highly sophisticated, well-contextualized piece of work. 120 duotone illustrations.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

Explores every aspect of construction, delving into complex nuances of the architect-client relationship. -- Dwell, January 2005

Extensively illustrated, this is an essential history of modern architecture. -- Wallpaper, June 2004

Leet's splendid book is a testament to the challenges inherent in the pursuit of quality and the rewards of achievement. -- St Louis Post-Dispatch, November 24, 2004

Product Details

  • Paperback: 191 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton Architectural Press; 1 edition (April 1, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1568982747
  • ISBN-13: 978-1568982748
  • Product Dimensions: 9.9 x 8 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,684,353 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars great house, decent book, October 16, 2005
By 
Anne Erikson (St. Louis, MO USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Richard Neutra's Miller House (Paperback)
This book presents the people, ideas, and history behind Richard Neutra's for Grace Lewis Miller in Palm Springs, California. The house and the process of its design and construction are well documented with reproductions of important texts, drawings, and photographs. The book's contents are fascinating for their intimate, direct presentation of these primary materials.

While many photographs, drawings, and documents are presented here for the first time, the author's discussion and explication of this historically significant material is generally dry and academic. While Mr. Leet puts the project into a variety of contexts, the overall effort lacks direction and focus. That the house itself is worthy of a book-length monograph is without dispute. However, the author's attempts to intellectualize the material fall flat. A variety of interesting (but generally unrelated) material is included as part of an attempt to put the project in historical context, but these illustrations and examples tend to be somewhat forced and/or obscure. In addition, the selection of the images includes what appear to be gratuitous displays of the flesh. Such illustrations seem to appear when the text is driest, as if the somewhat sensuous nature of the images may help keep the reader from dozing off to sleep.

Throughout the book, I regularly felt the desire to skip passages of text hoping to find something more compelling, original, or informative. Many writers dealing with the modern movement in architecture incessantly present stale rationalizations for the necessity for International Style modernism. These discussions typically deal with modern man's need for health, sunlight, and exercise as justification for the resulting abstract geometrical forms. Of course, one can exercise just as well in classically styled buildings, although the details and ornament tend to clutter the setting undermining the look of strength and vitality. The simplicity of modernist architecture tends to enhance the sleek, well-toned look of athletic bodies; an impassive, monotonous context tends to exaggerate a person's visual qualities, whether positive or negative.

What this book essentially tells us: Mrs. Miller taught the Mensendieck system of exercise, she had the foresight to hire Neutra, and ended up with a wonderful modern winter home. The examples of partially clothed female bodies, including Mrs. Miller's, seem designed to pique our curiosity. Apparently, Mrs. Miller hoped the svelte images of her would have a similar effect on her client base. However, despite her personal beauty, impeccable taste in architecture, advertisements praising her exercise regime, and membership in Palm Spring's prestigious clubs, her well-intentioned desire to create a successful business teaching "functional exercises" never became more than an idea.

The author's selection of titles and headings can sometimes border on the pretentious as with "Eliminating 'Phantomic Extension'," "The Deluge," and "Scorpions and Black Widows". In the chapter entitled "Construction by Remote Control," three of the five photographs of the construction depict Neutra and his assistant standing at the building site; the other two photographs show the house under construction with no one at all. So much for remote control building.

With respect to the book's publication, its production quality is excellent. The graphic design is simple and appealing. The sans-serif font is elegant, crisp, and most appropriate to the subject. Unfortunately, it is also rather small. When the reader repeatedly comes upon entirely or essentially blank pages, its hard not to think that the font chosen could have been one or two points larger. While graphically and aesthetically interesting, the excessive use of white space seems creates the regrettable impression that there was insufficient material available to fill a book. The selected colors are appropriately muted and the photographs beautifully printed.

Great thanks go to Princeton Architectural Press for publishing high-quality books on topics typically given insufficient attention by other publishers in the field. In this case, the historical material is worthy of their high standards, but the author's text is somewhat less compelling.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
When Grace Lewis Miller commissioned Richard Neutra to design her Palm Springs house in 1936, the architect's international reputation had already been firmly established. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
modern architecture, winter house
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Palm Springs, Miller House, Richard Neutra, Grace Lewis Miller, Los Angeles, Museum of Modern Art, New York, Racquet Club, Indian Avenue, Mensendieck Method, Research House, Dione Neutra, United States, World War, Julius Shulman, Architectural Forum, Architectural Record, Grant Wood, Great Depression, Lovell Demonstration Health House, Vereinigten Staaten, Erich Mendelsohn, Rudolph Schindler, Frank Lloyd Wright, Harris Armstrong
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