Aperture

Ezra Stoller

Ezra Stoller photographed postwar U.S. architecture with the rigor of a true believer. His imagespublished widely in numerous trade magazines as well as in House Beautiful and House & Gardenpresented modernism not as an avant-garde or utopian vision, but as a movement in situ, one born fully formed like Athena from Zeus’s skull. Yet a global war and an ocean unequivocally separate early twentieth-century experiments undertaken at the Bauhaus and by Le Corbusier from the postwar embrace of modern architecture by corporate leaders and the cultural elite in the United States.

In Stoller’s crisp, black-and-white prints,——

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