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Join Docomomo Wisconsin for the next installment of our From the Archives Lecture Series, presented in partnership with AIA Milwaukee, the Milwaukee Public Library, the Wisconsin Architectural Archive, and UWM Special Collections & Archives.
Industrial designer Brooks Stevens was a visionary who helped define American modernism—creating “smart product design” for businesses that would appeal to consumers and stimulate sales for everything from home appliances to automobiles. His 1939 Fox Point residence, designed with architect Fitzhugh Scott Jr., stands as a rare and remarkable example of Streamline Moderne domestic architecture in Wisconsin.
This illustrated talk explores the Brooks and Alice Stevens House as both a personal statement and a prototype for living in the Machine Age. The lecture is a biography of a house that was devised to express Brooks’ personal brand while creating a comfortable place for family life. Through archival photographs, drawings, and insight by Lecturer Michael Bridgeman, the presentation situates the house within 1930s modernism—where form, function, and personality aligned to create a home “as modern as tomorrow.”
Speaker: Michael Bridgeman
Long before retiring from PBS Wisconsin in 2012, Michael Bridgeman had a keen interest in historic architecture. He has been a dedicated volunteer with the Madison Trust for Historic Preservation for more than forty years by serving on its board, preparing and leading Historic Architecture Walking Tours, and (over the last six years) writing more than fifty web posts about Madison area architecture. Bridgeman has hosted two PBS Wisconsin programs highlighting notable historic buildings across the state, done research for preservation consultants, and worked part-time in the State Historic Preservation Office. He and his spouse live in an 1899 stone farmhouse near Sauk City.
Exhibition Opens: 4:30 PM
Lecture Begins: 5:00 PM
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Submitted for AIA/CES Approval
No refunds day of event.
IN PARTNERSHIP WITH