This exhibition excavates the unheralded legacy of Alfred and Jane West Clauss, who, in 1939, created the first modern deed-restricted subdivision in America-known colloquially in Knoxville as 鈥淟ittle Switzerland.鈥 In the process, the Clausses laid the groundwork for what we now recognize as regional modernism.
Through original artifacts鈥攊ncluding photographs, drawings, posters, furniture, graphic maps, home videos, and timelines鈥Seeds of Regionalism聽traces the DNA of this architectural subdivision and explores how the Clausses鈥 move to East Tennessee inspired them to experiment with blending modernist ideas with local traditions and a strong sense of place.
BENEFACTOR SPONSORS: AIA East Tennessee, Barbara & Steve Apking, Sandi Burdick & Tom Boyd, Susan French, Cecilia & Caesar Stair IV, Fred Trainer, Nancy Sharp Voith & Kenneth Stark Family
DIRECTORS CIRCLE SPONSORS: Julia & Gary Bentley, John M. Cotham, Louis Gauci & Kathy Franzel-Gauci, Lane Hays & Stuart Worden, Laura & Mark Heinz, Maribel Koella, Townes Osborn & Bob Marquis