Curators Bob Bailey and Peter McMahon have put together a sleek, handsome show that follows the rise and fall of the functional geometries of modernist houses in Provincetown, Truro, and Wellfleet. Photos in color and black-and-white and models made by Ben Stracco portray simply built summer homes with broad planes, angular outlines, and modest materials that echo and update the Cape's vernacular saltbox houses. Squatting low among the scrubby pines or projecting like an extended balcony over the dunes, these buildings harmonize with the landscape, providing still focal points around which the constant shift and swing of nature pivot.

Jack Phillips , a Bostonian and follower of Walter Gropius who owned a lot of acreage in Truro and Wellfleet, invited intellectuals from MIT and Harvard to come and make use of the land in the early 1940s. Architects such as Marcel Breuer , Serge Chermayeff, and Paul Weidlinger took their cues from Bauhaus design, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Le Corbusier.

- bill 8-24-2006 8:25 pm

i just sent this article to my cousins who are architects and designed a house in truro for my aunt & uncle. see some older photos here
- julie 8-25-2006 1:52 am [add a comment]



was that the art studio addition project? looks solid!
- bill 8-25-2006 5:08 pm [add a comment]


yep - the whole house.
- julie 8-25-2006 10:55 pm [add a comment]





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