Prodigy Houses of Virginia:
Architecture and the Native Elite |
| |
| Barbara Burlison Mooney |
| 400 pages, 7 x 10 |
| 147 b&w illustrations |
| 11 tables |
| Cloth 978-0-8139-2673-5 $65.00 |
| January 2008 |
 |
In a list of objectives and inquiries meant to guide and make
profitable the European travel of two young Americans in 1788,
Thomas Jefferson noted, "Architecture [is] worth great attention.
As we double our numbers ever 20 years we must double our houses.
. . . It is then among the most important arts: and it is desireable
to introduce taste into an art which shews so much." Referring
both to the large physical presence of architecture, as well as
the ability of a structure to reveal its owner’s character, Jefferson
articulates the telling relationship in eighteenth-century Virginia
between architecture and construction of the self. In Prodigy
Houses of Virginia: Architecture and the Native Elite, Barbara
Burlison Mooney employs Jefferson’s theory to examine twenty-five
great eighteenth-century Virginia mansions, and offer an analytical
overview of Virginia's elite residential architecture from a patronage
perspective.
Though it focuses on architectural history, the book concerns
itself less with issues of design and construction than with the
social and cultural context in which the Virginia gentry commissioned
their imposing dwellings. In her examination of such places as
Stratford Hall, Carter's Grove, and Gunston Hall—mansions whose
grandeur has become synonymous with the image—if not the reality—of
life in Colonial Virginia—Mooney illuminates the fortunes, motivations,
and aspirations of the wealthy and powerful owners who built their
"homes" with the objective of securing their status
and impressing the public. In choosing to spend astonishing sums
to provide themselves with grand houses that far exceeded their
living requirements—in some cases, by a disastrous measure—the
owners of these mansions advanced grand claims to social and political
prestige.
Clearly and accessibly written, Prodigy Houses of Virginia will appeal not only to architectural and social historians of the Colonial period but also to the general reader interested in these mansions and the people who inhabited them.
Barbara Burlison Mooney is Associate Professor of Art and Art History at the University of Iowa.