Fotografía de autor

Brantley Hightower

Autor de The Courthouses of Central Texas

1 Obra 5 Miembros 1 Reseña

Obras de Brantley Hightower

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1976

Miembros

Reseñas

Texas: Architecture
Brantley Hightower
The Courthouses of Central Texas
Austin: University of Texas Press
978-0-292-76294-7, hardcover, $45.00
192 pages; 92 color illustrations, 61 maps
Spring 2015
May is recognized each year as Preservation Month, an opportunity to highlight our shared heritage and why we should save it. The Courthouses of Central Texas by Brantley Hightower, an elegantly conceived and executed coffee-table book, volume 20 in the University of Texas Press’s Clifton and Shirley Caldwell Texas Heritage Series, features Texas’s beloved architectural confections: our distinctive courthouses. Handsome in its subdued burnt orange, black, and bone color scheme, Courthouses brims with sepia-toned photographs and architectural drawings of the fifty courthouses in the central Texas region, as well as the history of each, on matte heavy-stock paper.
Each courthouse in the central Texas region is addressed individually. From the fairly simple Italianate limestone of the Kendall County courthouse, the grand Renaissance Revival style of Bell County, the awkward mishmash of medieval towers and Second Empire style of Hamilton County, the Gothic drama of Bosque County, to the low horizontal modernism of Zavala County, each of these buildings is unique. “The collection of county courthouses built in central Texas represents a wide spectrum of architectural styles, approaches, and ambitions. This diversity is not random, but the product of the specific social, economic, and political forces in existence when a courthouse was designed and constructed. As such, each courthouse can be seen as a reflection of a particular community at a particular place and time.” For example, courthouses were situated differently depending upon whether the municipality was a Spanish land grant town or settled by Anglos or by immigrants from continental Europe. Size and style differed depending upon the availability of various funding options, the state of the economy, and current fashions. Entries for each courthouse are followed by a concise discussion of the architects, preservation challenges, and the Texas Historic Courthouse Preservation Program.
Courthouses is not merely a pretty collection of photographs. From the poetic foreword penned by Max Levy to Hightower’s insightful social commentary on the significance of these public buildings for disparate societal constituencies, there is food for thought here as well. The courthouses of Texas were, above all, aspirational. As Max Levy, FAIA, notes in his foreword, “What…emerges is this architectural principle: that a single building, distinguished by its setting and composure, crafted with care and designed with meaning for its community, can affect an entire town.”
I suggest a road trip. Who’s in?

Originally published in Lone Star Literary Life.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
TexasBookLover | May 25, 2015 |

Estadísticas

Obras
1
Miembros
5
Popularidad
#1,360,914
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
1
ISBNs
3