Publication

  • Minoru Yamasaki: Humanist Architecture for a Modernist World
    Dale Allen Gyure
    Author
    Yale University Press, 2017
  • GRANTEE
    Dale Allen Gyure
    GRANT YEAR
    2016

Yamasaki, Leinweber, and Associates, McGregor Memorial Conference Center, 1955–58, Detroit, Michigan. Photo: Dale Allen Gyure.

Minoru Yamasaki: Humanist Architecture for a Modernist World analyzes the architecture of Minoru Yamasaki, a seminal American designer of the postwar period. He rose to prominence with buildings like the Lambert–St. Louis Airport and the McGregor Memorial Conference Center at Wayne State University, merging modern materials and functional concerns with historical elements and a humanist sensibility grounded in notions of "serenity, surprise, and delight." He achieved his greatest acclaim in the early 1960s, leading to the commission for the World Trade Center. Despite widespread recognition and numerous honors, however, some critics portrayed him as a decorator and populist. Later postmodern thinkers found his architecture frivolous and detached from crucial theoretical issues. The book locates Yamasaki within numerous and often conflicting midcentury discourses, including historicism, populism, and the debate over ornament, in a manner that enhances our understanding of this tumultuous time and assesses his contributions to modern architecture.

Dale Allen Gyure is professor of architecture at Lawrence Technological University. He earned a PhD in architectural history from the University of Virginia, a JD from Indiana University, and a BS in psychology from Ball State University. Gyure's research focuses on American and modern architecture of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. He has published two books Frank Lloyd Wright's Florida Southern College (2010) and the Graham Foundation-supported The Chicago Schoolhouse, 18562006: High School Architecture and Educational Reform (2011), as well as numerous articles, book chapters, and reviews. Much of this work has been funded by grants from the College Art Association, the American Philosophical Society, and the Spencer Foundation. Gyure has served on the Boards of Directors for the Society of Architectural Historians and the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy, and is a member of the Michigan Historic Preservation Review Board and Wayne State University's Minoru Yamasaki Advisory Board.