Article taken from www.architecturaldigest.com/
When Time
magazine put Richard J. Neutra on the cover of its August 15, 1949,
issue, the Austrian-born architect had been designing astounding
modernist houses for more than 20 years—houses, Time said, with
“broad, glassy brows” and spaciousness and compactness combined.” Neutra (1892–1970) was a prophet
of clean, crisp modernism, and his houses, most of which were built in
California, have inspired countless architects and emboldened
preservationists in an area of the country notoriously quick to raze
landmarks. And why not? As Time eloquently observed, “Their
beauty, like that of any sea shell, is more than skin-deep—practical,
not pretentious.”
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