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The Architecture of the Shakers

Product ID : 16081645


Galleon Product ID 16081645
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About The Architecture Of The Shakers

Product Description During the nineteenth century, the Shakers conducted America's first successful experiment in utopian living. From Maine to Kentucky, they built communal villages whose unique buildings were designed to accommodate hundreds of inhabitants unified in the common purpose of work and worship. Julie Nicoletta's perceptive text and Bret Morgan's striking photographs illuminate the austere beauty, regional variations, and functional and stylistic evolution of Shaker buildings over the course of two centuries, evoking a visual and literary survey of Shaker design and its impact on our culture at large. Despite the fact that Shaker communities are almost extinct, an appreciation for their legacy continues to grow. Architects, designers, curators, collectors, and an ever-widening public have sought inspiration in Shaker art and architecture. The Architecture of the Shakers is a book for all those who wish to learn more about these remarkable buildings and how the rich cultural legacy of the Shakers continues to resonate within them. From Library Journal Historian Nicoletta presents Shaker architecture as a function of the sect's spirituality, celibacy, and industriousness and examines its evolution from the beginnings of religious revivalism to the decline of Shakerism in the 20th century. The 22 communities, once bustling, have long since been abandoned (with the exception of Sabbathday Lake, Maine), and the author shows how the rise and fall of Shakerism influenced the construction and renovation of their structures. Nicoletta also discusses the effect outside influences had on Shaker architecture, especially as members began to leave the communities. This work is more substantive than Paul Rocheleau and June Sprigg's Shaker Built: The Form and Function of Shaker Architecture (LJ 2/1/95) because here Nicoletta focuses on how the different construction styles served the Shakers' unique lifestyle. And although he does not offer the plans that Herbert Schiffer included in Shaker Architecture (1979), Nicoletta presents color photographs of communities that have since been renovated. Highly recommended for public and academic libraries with strong Shaker or vernacular architecture collections. Julie C. Boehning, "Library Journal" Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. Review Highly recommended. -- Library Journal Julie Nicoletta's thoughtful history enables the reader to situate the splendid architectural achievements of Shaker builders in their proper religious and social context. -- Witold Rybczynski While not the first book to treat American Shaker utopian villages and facets of their building heritage, this new volume does so in a more comprehensive, in-depth, and analytical manner than any previous work to appear in print on the subject. . . Outstanding. -- The New England Quarterly About the Author Julie Nicoletta is a leading member of a new generation of scholars specializing in American vernacular architecture. Currently a professor of history at the University of Washington, Nicoletta holds a doctorate in art history from Yale University. Bret Morgan is a photographer with a special interest in the poetry of old buildings. His architectural and institutional clients include Pei Cobb Freed & Partners, The Museum of Modern Art, and the Smithsonian. Morgan holds a Master of Architecture degree from Columbia University.