Scholarship list
Journal article
Published 06/01/2023
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 82, 2, 110 - 129
Book chapter
Baptistries in Marcel Breuer and Associates' American Catholic sacred spaces
Published 2023
Water and Sacred Architecture
Book chapter
Published 01/01/2022
, 311 - 323
Book
Saint John's Abbey Church: Marcel Breuer and the creation of a modern sacred space
Published 2022
Chronicles the design process and construction of Saint John's Abbey Church in Collegeville, Minnesota, and explores the relationship between architect Marcel Breuer and the Benedictine monks. Examines the impact of the church on mid-century religious design and architecture across the United States regardless of denomination. Includes black-and-white photographs. Includes bibliographical references and index.
Book chapter
Published 07/29/2020
Military History
A war artist is one who captures the subject of war in some type of artistic form. Since the beginning of time, artists have recorded scenes of war as a visual record of a culture’s existence and tribulations. Images of battles, ship portraits, leaders, and soldiers made up the bulk of war images until the late 19th century. The creators of the majority of these works are unknown, but when the entire world first went to war in 1914, nations hired official war artists to depict the action, including warplanes, tanks, and other newly developed technologies, among other aspects, as subject matter. These artists were mostly men, who were on the front lines sketching, painting, and photographing the action, collecting the visuals of war that they might then collate into an official work for a nation. As the 20th century progressed into our current era, images became immediately accessible on television and film, in news reports, and in live streams, as reporters embedded themselves with soldiers. Official war artists still exist in several nations, as do official collections of artwork created by them. We also have vibrant unofficial images of war produced by soldiers and prisoners for their own purposes, or by people protesting war itself. In compiling this bibliography, we sought to convey the breadth of war art mainly in 2-D media in chronology, type, artistic style, and maker, including voices of artists whenever possible. We also considered how artists from differing sides in battle impact each other’s artistic production. Being an artist who depicts war is a challenge. How do you convey honor and brutality, tradition and modernity, glory and defeat? How do you watch devastation around you and provide witness as you record the intensity and sadness of death? Combat artists of a particular country create art that reveals their experience of war. Is it personal? Or should it only be a documentary? The complexities found in creating the art of war are many, yet without these works there are centuries of battle we would not understand from social, political, or technological viewpoints.
Review
The Suburban Church: Modernism and Community in Postwar America
Published 03/01/2017
Buildings & Landscapes, 24, 1, 97 - 99
Journal article
Minnesota Modern: Architecture and Life at Midcentury by Larry Millett (review)
Published 2017
Middle West review, 4, 1, 165 - 167
Book
Saint John's Abbey Church: Marcel Breuer and the creation of a modern sacred space
Published 2014
"In the 1950s the brethren at the Benedictine Abbey of Saint John the Baptist in Collegeville, Minnesota--the largest Benedictine abbey in the world--decided to expand their campus, including building a new church. From a who's who of architectural stars--such as Walter Gropius, Richard Neutra, Pietro Belluschi, Barry Byrne, and Eero Saarinen--the Benedictines chose a former member of the Bauhaus, Marcel Breuer. In collaboration with the monks, this untested religious designer produced a work of modern sculptural concrete architecture that reenvisioned what a church could be and set a worldwide standard for midcentury religious design. Saint John's Abbey Church documents the dialogue of the design process, as Breuer instructed the monks about architecture and they in turn guided him and his associates in the construction of a sacred space in the crucial years of liturgical reform. A reading of letters, drawings, and other archival materials shows how these conversations gave shape to design elements from the church's floor plan to the liturgical furnishings, art, and incomparable stained glass installed within it. The book offers a rare detailed view of how a patron and architect work together in a successful building campaign--one that, in this case, lasted for two decades and resulted in designs for twelve buildings, ten of which were completed. The post-World War II years were critical in the development of religious and architectural experiences in the United States--experiences that came together in the construction of Saint John's Abbey and University Church and that find their full expression in Victoria M. Young's account of the process. Using the liturgy of the mid-twentieth century as a cornerstone for understanding the architecture produced to support it, her book showcases the importance of modernism in the design of sacred space, and of Marcel Breuer's role in setting the standard."--
Book chapter
The Design and Construction of Saint John’s Abbey Church, 1953-1961
Published 2006
Saint John’s at 150: A Portrait of this Place Called Collegeville, 117 - 128
Review
Published 10/01/2003
CRM: the journal of heritage stewardship, 1, 1, 123 - 125