Paul T. Frankl
Harper and Brothers, New York, 1930, English
Nonfiction, Architecture; Nonfiction, Interior Design
5.75 x 8.75 inches, hardcover, 203 pages, 109 black-and-white plates

From Modernism 101. "Frankl integrates the arts, showing architecture, photography, and all aspects of the decorative arts; he credits Frank Lloyd Wright with being the first modern American architect; he emphasizes the important contributions of European immigrants; he talks about new materials and their significance to progressive aesthetics; and he promotes American work in general.

"Carrying his message even to the design of the printed page, Frankl emphasizes the importance of the unity and totality of the modern movement." [Wilson, Pilgrim, Tashjian: The Machine Age in America 1918-1941. New York: Brooklyn Museum of Art and Harry N. Abrams, 1986, p. 285]

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