A TOUR THROUGH MID-MICHIGAN
MODERN
Sunday, December 4,
2016 – 1:30 p.m.
Michigan Historical
Museum, 702 W. Kalamazoo
Learn first-hand about modernist
architecture from Susan Bandes, author of Mid-Michigan
Modern: From Frank Lloyd Wright to Googie, as she leads a tour of the new
exhibit Minds of Modernism which is on display at the Michigan History Museum.
Bandes, who teaches art history and is director of museum studies at MSU, acted
as advisor/curator for the exhibit and will conduct the free curated tour. Parking
is free and Bandes’s book will be available for purchase.
In her new book, Bandes has
collected photographs, art, and oral histories featuring more than 130
modernist structures that were built in East Lansing and Lansing between 1940
and 1970. Included are homes, offices, and sacred places you drive by every day,
but really don’t know the story behind the building. For example, the Michigan Medical
Society building on Saginaw in East Lansing is a classic example of modernism
and was designed by the architect of the Twin Towers, Minoru Yamasaki. She also
delves into the architects who designed the modernist buildings and looks at
what might be considered mundane structures like East Lansing’s Dawn Donuts.
One classic example of a home designed in the modernist vein is the soaring “airplane
house” on Moores River Dr., which was designed for the aviator-entrepreneur Talbert
Abrams and built to look like the shadow a plane casts while in the air.
The Minds of Modernism exhibit
includes architectural drawings, building models, and representative commercial
products from noted designers, such as Eero Saarinen, that reflect the Modernist era. The exhibit was
curated by the Archives of Michigan, the Michigan State Historic Preservation Office, the Michigan
Historical Center, and Susan Bandes.