• A blog, focused on buildings, the title of which comes from an essay by Flannery O’Connor, “The Nature and Aims of Fiction,” in which she makes this compelling observation:

    “It is a good deal easier for most people to state an abstract idea than to describe and thus re-create some object that they actually see.”

    So I try to be concrete.

    Visit it here: tculvahouse.tumblr.com.

    Or, you can take a look at the individual posts:

    Why Matter and Mode

    On Landsdowne Crescent“: the doorway as the beginning of ornament

    Virtual Reality at Keble College,” on William Butterfield’s fancy brickwork

    Indelible Shadows“: Frank Lloyd Wright and Zorro

    Relativity and Rococo,” on Mendelsohn’s Einstein Tower

    Preface to Kahn,” on something he said about stair landings

    Exeter Corrected?“: the first of several posts having to do with windows

    A Cozy Monumentality“: more on the Exeter Library

    More on Windows,” with Jim Jarmusch

    Front Door, Back Door,” at the Villa Snellman

    Learning How Big Things Are” and why that’s important

    Remembering Saarinen” in Columbus, Indiana

    Windows Frame“: an observation from the Grand Canal

    Thinking Windows“: Mackintosh’s Glasgow School of Art

    On Snow,” and the window in Louis MacNiece’s poem

    Warped“: two houses, Providence and London

    The Moving Window Writes“: Traquair House

    Yet Again By the Pacific,” from a weekend at The Sea Ranch

    Boxwood and Brick“: Jefferson’s serpentine walls

    The Same, and Different,” from my master’s thesis

    A Mystery of Time“: the Swarthmore amphitheater

    City Car“: the Citroën DCV

    Continuity and Character“: more about the surfaces of cars

    Fronts and Backs” at the Royal Crescent

    Approaching Jackson Square“: the recursive city

    A Place with No Backs“: the TVA

    An Eye On the Street?“: a simple house in Berkeley

    The Evolution of Housing in America, 1878-2021,” on that monstrosity proposed for UC Santa Barbara

    Facts“: Luigi Pirandello and the Kimbell Art Museum

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