Iconic Vision
Price: $50

Book Details:

208 Pages
hardcover
• ISBN: 9781626400085
12"x9"

Awards and Recognition:

“Angel City’s new book does an outstanding job showing John Parkinson’s iconic vision. The mix of historical anecdotes and vintage documents and images presented also show how prolific the man was.”- KCET

Iconic Vision is itself a vision, being lavishly illustrated with period and contemporary photos and with renderings and architectural sketches. Fans of architectural and construction project history will appreciate both the detailed accounts of both successful and unrealized projects, and others may enjoy some of the personal accounts drawn from British-born Parkinson’s own writings that Gee has included.” – Civil Engineering

“Oddly, the architect’s name is not widely known, but his landmark structures – Los Angeles City Hall, Union Station, the L.A. Memorial Coliseum and Bullock’s Wilshire – have defined the city’s skyline since the early 20th century.” – Los Angeles Times

“Long overdue survey of the native of Bolton, England, who never gained the lasting fame of Richard Neutra or Rudolf Schindler but had a towering impact on the skyline of Los Angeles, designing many of its landmarks, including City Hall, Union Station and Bullocks Wilshire.” – KCRW

“Gee’s book comes as Los Angeles reappraises Parkinson’s contribution. The city has a reputation for not looking back, but it might have relented.” – Daily Telegraph

 

Iconic Vision

John Parkinson, Architect of Los Angeles
By: Stephen Gee (author)

Architect John Parkinson died in 1935, and the Los Angeles Times praised him: “Future generations have only to walk through the streets of Los Angeles to be reminded how much John Parkinson in his lifetime contributed to the city that grew up under his hand.” In Iconic Vision: John Parkinson, Architect of Los Angeles, author Stephen Gee proves that this singular visionary created the look of America’s most dynamic metropolis, long before the world recognized the city’s importance. Consider that among more than four hundred buildings in the City of Angels that carried his architectural imprimatur, John Parkinson designed:

Los Angeles was a small town plunked amid wide-open spaces when John Parkinson arrived in 1894. Before the century turned, he was already shaping the identity of the fledgling town through architectural innovation. Like the importance of the city he loved, Parkinson’s impact shot skyward: he conceived the first skyscraper in Los Angeles and introduced its first steel-frame structures.

And yet, does anyone really know his name? No libraries hold books devoted to his work. No classes are devoted to his designs in architecture schools. It is almost impossible to believe, but no author has significantly presented a study of John Parkinson. Until now.

Iconic Vision, the first biography of the master architect, documents-in remarkable detail and images-Parkinson’s monumental contributions to the city he loved. Although other architects’ names have become synonymous with the city, John Parkinson designed more landmark buildings in Los Angeles than any other architect, living or dead. And, while other architects may have taken credit for Parkinson’s designs, Stephen Gee’s penetrating biography establishes the truth. He tells the story of a man who envisioned tomorrow.

Detail Photos:

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