as a young college graduate, and later became one of its practitioners. The exhibition
Modern Architecture: International Exhibition ran from February 9 to March 23, 1932, at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), in the
Heckscher Building at Fifth Avenue and 56th Street in New York. Beyond a foyer and office, the exhibition was divided into six rooms: the "Modern Architects" section began in the entrance room, featuring a model of William Lescaze's Chrystie-Forsyth Street Housing Development in New York. From there visitors moved to the centrally placed Room A, featuring a model of a mid-rise housing development for
Evanston, Illinois, by Chicago architect brothers
Monroe Bengt Bowman and
Irving Bowman, as well as a model and photos of Walter Gropius's Bauhaus building in Dessau. In the largest exhibition space, Room C, were works by Le Corbusier, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe,
J. J. P. Oud and Frank Lloyd Wright (including a project for a house on the Mesa in Denver, 1932). Room B was a section titled "Housing", presenting "the need for a new domestic environment" as it had been identified by historian and critic
Lewis Mumford. In Room D were works by Raymond Hood (including "Apartment Tower in the Country" and the
McGraw-Hill Building) and Richard Neutra. In Room E was a section titled "The extent of modern architecture", added at the last minute,
Curators MoMA director
Alfred H. Barr hired architectural historian and critic
Henry-Russell Hitchcock and
Philip Johnson to curate the museum's first architectural exhibition. The three of them toured Europe together in 1929 and had also discussed Hitchcock's book about modern art. By December 1930, the first written proposal for an exhibition of the "new architecture" was set down, yet the first draft of the book was not complete until some months later.
Publications The 1932 exhibition led to two publications by Hitchcock and Johnson: • The exhibition catalog, "Modern Architecture: International Exhibition" • The book,
The International Style: Architecture Since 1922, published by W. W. Norton & Co. in 1932. • reprinted in 1997 by W. W. Norton & Company Previous to the 1932 exhibition and book, Hitchcock had concerned himself with the themes of modern architecture in his 1929 book
Modern Architecture: Romanticism and Reintegration. According to
Terence Riley: "Ironically the (exhibition) catalogue, and to some extent, the book
The International Style, published at the same time of the exhibition, have supplanted the actual historical event."
Exemplary Uses of the International Style The following architects and buildings were selected by Hitchcock and Johnson for display at the exhibition
Modern Architecture: International Exhibition: File:VillaSavoye.jpg|
Villa Savoye, Paris, Le Corbusier File:Dessau Bauhaus-Gebäude asv2024-06 img1.jpg|
Bauhaus School, Dessau, Walter Gropius File:Fagus-Werke-01.jpg|
Fagus Factory,
Alfeld, Walter Gropius File:The Barcelona Pavilion, Barcelona, 2010.jpg|
German Pavilion, Barcelona,
Mies van der Rohe File:Villa Tugendhat, Brno, CZ (2).jpg|
Villa Tugendhat, Brno, Mies van der Rohe File:Rothenberg-Siedlung (4).jpg|Rothenberg Siedlung, Kassel, Otto Haesler File:Lovell House, Los Angeles, California.JPG|
Lovell House, Los Angeles,
Rudolph Schindler (garden by
Richard Neutra) File:Mcgraw-hill-42nd-st 1.jpg|
McGraw-Hill Building, New York City,
Raymond Hood File:PSFSBuilding1985.jpg|
Loews Philadelphia Hotel, Philadelphia,
George Howe and
William Lescaze File:Turunsanomat.jpg|Turun Sanomat,
Turku,
Alvar Aalto Notable omissions The exhibition excluded other contemporary styles that were exploring the boundaries of architecture at the time, including:
Art Deco; German Expressionism, for instance the works of
Hermann Finsterlin; and the
organicist movement, popularized in the work of
Antoni Gaudí. As a result of the 1932 exhibition, the principles of the International Style were endorsed, while other styles were classed less significant. In 1922, the competition for the
Tribune Tower and its famous
second-place entry by Eliel Saarinen gave some indication of what was to come, though these works would not have been accepted by Hitchcock and Johnson as representing the "International Style". Similarly, Johnson, writing about Joseph Urban's recently completed New School for Social Research in New York, stated: "In the New School we have an anomaly of a building supposed to be in a style of architecture based on the development of the plan from function and facade from plan but which is a formally and pretentiously conceived as a Renaissance palace. Urban's admiration for the New Style is more complete than his understanding." Then, "[f]or more than 20 years, Schindler had intermittently launched a series of spirited, cantankerous exchanges with the museum." ==Before 1932==