Albert Frey’s 1931 Aluminaire House™ and Its Influence on American Modernism

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Where

Annenberg Theater
at Main Museum

When

October 21, 1:00 - 3:00pm

Where

Annenberg Theater
at Main Museum

When

October 21, 1:00 - 3:00pm

In anticipation of the Palm Springs Art Museum’s permanent installation of the 1931 Aluminaire House™, architect Leo Marmol will explore the impact this structure had on American Modernism design.

Marmol will trace the varied influences of Modern Architecture in California from Le Corbusier’s revolutionary treatise, The Five Points of Architecture and Walter Gropius’s Bauhaus Manifesto, to the social, economic, and geographic conditions that made the arid region of Palm Springs so ripe for the cultivation and proliferation of Modern Architecture – hence the ideal permanent home for Aluminaire.

Following the talk join attendees for a reception in the museum’s sculpture garden to celebrate the groundbreaking.


About Aluminaire House™

The home was designed by Albert Frey and A. Lawrence Kocher as part of the New York Architectural and Allied Arts Exposition in 1931. The original installation represented the first major exhibition of European Modernism on U.S. soil. Constructed of prefabricated steel and aluminum components and designed following the principles set forth by Albert Frey’s mentor, Le Corbusier, the structure acted as a harbinger of American Modernism and the futuristic way of life it promised. The lecture will explore why Palm Springs supports Modern Architecture as the prevailing aesthetic as well as Frey’s relationship with the desert.

Modernism Week — October is a four-day long “mini-Modernism Week” featuring more than 50 events, including tours, talks, and parties in unique locations not regularly open to the public.

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