The history of a fascinating and forgotten study--never before published--of the creative capacities of forty preeminent midcentury architects.
Pierluigi Serraino, AIA, is an architect, author, and educator. His work and writings have been published in professional and scholarly journals such as Architectural Record, Architecture California, the Journal of Architectural Education, and Architectural Design (UK). He has authored and contributed to several books, among them Modernism Rediscovered (Taschen, 2000), Eero Saarinen (Taschen, 2005), and NorCalMod: Icons of Northern California Modernism (Chronicle Books, 2006).
..".a delicious bit of reading and a fascinating snapshot of a
moment in time.... In Serraino's telling, great architects are
really true to themselves, burning with an inner sense of destiny
and the rightness of their cause. But he avoids Ayn Randian cliches
about the omnipotent designer, preferring to situate architectural
creativity within a midcentury context. He does so
convincingly."
--James McCown, Architecture Boston "What makes someone
creative? The same question fascinates Pierluigi Serraino, an
Italian-American architect practising in San Francisco whose book,
The Creative Architect: Inside the Great Midcentury Personality
Study, has refocused attention on that now almost forgotten UC
Berkeley study. The 1950s study's research, findings and
conclusions about creativity will still strike a chord today, just
as they did when they were first released from 1959 onwards to an
attentive American public, drawn by the many big names
involved."
--Shelley Gare, Australian Financial Review
"Ever wonder what the secret sauce is for a successful creative
career? You'd be far from the first. In The Creative
Architect, author Pierluigi Serraino chronicles the
little-known research project--and this confluence of psychological
inquiry and the world of design."
--Curbed, The best architecture and design books of 2016
"Serraino delves into the finer details of the study, down to the
original handwritten questionnaires, to reveal the inner workings
of the creative mind and the equally fascinating meta-creativity of
designing and implementing this enormously inventive, daring,
influential, and still unparalleled study."
--Maria Popova, Brain Pickings
"What does the OSS, the precursor to the CIA, have to do with
midcentury architects and the creative process? Serraino explores
the goals and findings of this mysterious, never before-published
project."
--Frances Anderton, DnA's 6 Most Intriguing Books of 2016
"One of the best books--if not the best book--I've read all
year."
--Debbie Millman, Design Matters podcast "What finally makes
The Creative Architect so compelling is the fact that so
many of these gifted introverts traveled to Berkeley in the first
place, hungry to meet their peers and curious, in a larger sense,
about who they were and what in the world they were doing. 'Very
interesting, ' wrote Saarinen in his evaluation of the weekend.
'Wonderful for the ego!'"
--Christine Cipriani, The Wall Street Journal "'What are the
motivations that make people do what they do?' asks Pierluigi
Serraino, a Berkeley-based architect and educator whose book, The
Creative Architect, chronicles the IPAR research. The study
revealed that each of the celebrated architects had something in
their backgrounds that they had to overcome: lack of money,
repressive parents, or poor health. 'To declare in no uncertain
terms the core trait of the creative person: The answer is courage,
' Serraino writes."
--Mimi Zeiger, Architect Magazine "Over 22 hours of testing,
scientists studied the personalities, neuroses, and inner conflicts
of architects who are, even today, among the most famous on earth.
What resulted was an incredibly intimate, at times uncomfortable,
portrait of a group of now-legendary architects. . . . The Creative
Architect is a window into another world; one where we can see how
the anxieties, personality defects, and fraught childhood dramas
can coexist--and even bolster--the creative successes of very
flawed humans. Which, even 60 years later, is heartening."
--Fast Company's Co.Design "Dusts off the forgotten
findings of a study conducted in 1958 and 1959 by the University of
California, Berkeley, which sought to map the minds of visionaries
such as I. M. Pei, George Nelson, Louis Kahn and about 40 of their
contemporaries. Drawing on interview transcripts, aptitude tests
and other original sources, Serraino's intriguing book seeks to
answer the question that researchers posed when the studies began:
what accounts for artistic greatness? Though it's impossible to
know for sure, this book offers plenty to ponder."
--Monocle "Pierluigi Serraino creates a detailed, fascinating
account of the forgotten moment in 1959 when 40 preeminent modern
architects were summoned to the University of California's
Institute of Personality Assessment and Research for a study that
attempted to gauge the nature of creativity. The study featured a
three-day barrage of psychological tests and interviews, including
the arrangement of tiles, conformity studies, and
proto-Meyers-Briggs evaluations. The participants were asked to
rank one another's creative prowess before the study; Philip
Johnson, A. Quincy Jones, and Eero Saarinen each ranked themselves
first. Interview commentary on Richard Neutra noted that 'he almost
literally thinks of himself as superman.' Not all were consumed by
hubris; many were identified as nervous and self-effacing, and
almost all were labeled colossal introverts. Serraino notes that
the study revealed that it is 'much easier to determine the traits
of the creative person than... the creative process.' It did
identify the subjects' 'fierce escape from the conformism of
thought and belief, ' their tendency to perceive problems that
others did not, and an unfailing quest to not merely solve problems
but solve them elegantly. A highly entertaining look at an unusual
event in the history of American architecture."
--Publishers Weekly "This fascinating book investigates the
long-thought-to-be-apocryphal 1958-59 psychological studies
conducted on the nation's top architects, including Eero Saarinen,
Philip Johnson, and Louis Kahn. The examinations, held at the
University of California, Berkeley, consisted of interviews and
aptitude tests--several of which appear in the book. A ranking
table found Richard Neutra to be the "most creative" among the
architect subjects, but also placed Johnson in the top five. Which
is to say, such metrics are hopelessly spotty."
--Metropolis "When I first became interested in Creativity, a
psychologist friend told me to start by reading about Donald
MacKinnon's research into creative architects. It was great advice.
Now that story is told in full."
--John Cleese, writer and comedian "The Creative Architect
is a richly textured account of one of the most consequential
studies in the field of creativity, and compulsive reading for
those of us intrigued by architecture and psychology."
--Brian Little, author of Me, Myself, and Us: The Science of
Personality and the Art of Well-Being "We now know that
childlike wonder, an absence of fear, and strong intuition are key
aspects of creativity. The Creative Architect is a
thought-provoking and inspiring documentation, richly illustrated
with mosaic constructions and drawings made by some of the
twentieth-century's most important architects."
--Steven Holl, architect
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