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California Modern

The Architecture of Craig Ellwood

California Modern: The Architecture of Craig Ellwood by Neil Jackson He had no professional license, but was named one of the "three best architects of 1957" along with Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies van der Rohe. He drove a red Ferrari with the license plate VROOM. His succession of wives brought him clients and influenced his designs. Craig Ellwood relied on a staff of talented assistants to realize his ideas.

Craig Ellwood (1922-1992)

If ever there was a product of Hollywood, it was architect Craig Ellwood (1922-1992). A fiction of his own making - even his name was an invention - Craig Ellwood fashioned a career through charm, ambition, and a connoisseur's eye. By the 1950s Craig Ellwood had a thriving practice that infused the Germanic rationalism of Mies van der Rohe with an informal breeziness that was all Southern California. A series of dramatic, open, and elegant houses made him a media star, and interest in him and his work has only increased in recent years.

Comprehensive monograph

California Modern: The Architecture of Craig Ellwood is the first comprehensive monograph on this prolific, influential, and complex character. Copiously illustrated with contemporary images, including many striking black and white photographs by Julius Shulman, plans, drawings, and specially commissioned new photography, California Modern traces Ellwood's fascinating personal history, provides a critical evaluation of his work, and establishes his importance as a pivotal shaper of the California style.

California Modern

California Modern: The Architecture of Craig Ellwood by Neil Jackson
Publisher: Princeton Architectural Press
ISBN: 1568983034

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