Description
Marcel Breuer’s American houses don’t get talked about enough. We all know the Bauhaus-era furniture and the big institutional projects, but the residential work in New England is where his ideas start to feel personal—tough, pragmatic, and oddly intimate at the same time.
Breuer’s Bohemia follows the homes he designed in Connecticut and Massachusetts from the 1950s through the ’70s, and it treats them as more than isolated “great houses.” They’re part of a living scene: clients who became friends, weekends that turned into salons, and a tight circle that pulled architecture into the same room as art and literature. Rufus and Leslie Stillman and Andrew and Jamie Gagarin are at the center of it, with the larger cast orbiting nearby—Alexander Calder, Arthur Miller, Francine du Plessix Gray, Philip Roth, William Styron.
James Crump tells the story with the instincts of a filmmaker (his documentary shares the title), using original research and interviews to bring voices back into the rooms. The book is heavy on imagery—vintage shots, contemporary photography, and archival material you don’t usually see—which makes the houses feel less like icons and more like places where people argued, hosted, retreated, and kept building a version of postwar culture around the table.











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