Mark Crinson
Stirling and Gowan
Architecture from Austerity to Affluence
2012
James Stirling (1924-1992) is acclaimed as the most influential and controversial modern British architect. His partnership with James Gowan between 1956 and 1963 put postwar British architecture on the international map, and their Leicester University Engineering Building became an iconic monument for a new kind of modernism.
Mark Crinson’s book is the most thoroughly researched study of Stirling and Gowan’s partnership to date. Based on extensive interviews and archival research, Crinson argues that their work was the product of two equally creative partners whose different concerns produced a dynamic aesthetic. This critical reassessment dispels previous myths and inaccuracies regarding their partnership and analyses how ideas about mannerism, modernism, nostalgia, community, consumerism Victorian cities and institutional typologies influenced their designs, Stirling and Gowan positions their avant-garde creations within a larger context as creative responses to Britain’s postwar deindustrialization and the shift from austerity to affluence.