Vincent Scully is likely the best-known living art historian
in the United States today.
Until recently, he was still teaching at his alma mater,
Yale University, where a wide variety of students were drawn to his
undergraduate history of art and architecture courses.
For years, Scully's deep engagement with the subject and his
passionate presentation style have inspired his students to value these
subjects. Many of them have gone on to become prominent architects, historians,
or clients of architecture.
In his lectures and his more-than-20 books on architecture,
Scully's insights are eye-opening and have championed the work of such modern
architects as Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Kahn, Robert Venturi, and Aldo Rossi.
He has focused on topics ranging from the American Shingle Style of the late
19th Century, which he identified and named, to a reassessment of Greek temples
and their response to the surrounding landscape.
The breadth and depth of his knowledge, which includes a
close familiarity with literature as well as with the visual arts, lends a
special richness to his historical interpretations.
This film explores the phenomenon of Scully, tracing his
connection to New Haven, his birthplace, and his time at Yale, from when he
entered as a freshman in 1936 to the present. The narrative follows the arc of
his interests in classical art and architecture to American architecture,
historic preservation, and urban design in the 20th Century.
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