Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate...

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Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney
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Transcript of Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate...

Page 1: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915)

By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney

Page 2: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

General Overview of ‘Where we were”

• The Victorian Age going on the Elizabethan Era (Suffragettes, women taking over the work force, and the invention of the bra)

• Henry Ford invents the Model T; over 15 million sold in America alone!

• Isolationism prevails— Germany invades Belgium 1914, U.S. finally enters war in 1917

Page 3: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

General Architectural Themes

• Early Modernism

• Gothic Revival

• Beaux-Arts

• Craftsmanship

Page 4: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Early Modernism

• First skyscraper built in Chicago 1885 (ten stories), but Louis Sullivan later created the most influential shape– Geometric cube– Base floor entrance– ‘honeycomb’ of identical floors to stress

verticality– On top service floor and cornice

Page 5: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

The Wainwright Building

Page 6: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Evolution of Sullivan’s Skyscraper— responding to the urban context;The Bayard Building, NYC, 1897

Page 7: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

The Gage Building, Chicago 1898

Page 8: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Carson-Pirie Scott Department Store, Chicago, 1899-1904—

horizontal velocity

Page 9: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Sullivan’s apprentice— Frank Lloyd Wright’s First Life

• Modern interpretation of Jeffersonian theme— continuity and expansion: Frank Lloyd Wright House, Oak Park, Illinois, 1889

Page 10: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Cross-axial plan

• River Forest, Illinois, 1898-1901

Page 11: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Craftsmanship

• Craftsmanship was found mainly in the western states like California. It was generally a bungalow house, with a low, overhanging roof to provide shade. The title of craftsmanship was derived from the idea that the house should be natural, and gardens were an integral part of this.

Page 12: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

The Robert Roe Blacker House

Page 13: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

First Floor Plan

Page 14: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Gamble House

Page 15: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.
Page 16: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.
Page 17: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.
Page 18: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Floor Plans

Page 19: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

First Church of Christ Science

Page 20: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Interior

Page 21: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Beaux-Arts Style Architecture1885-1920

-After the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893, this style of architecture took off in America. The exposition is also accredited with sparking the City Beautiful movement-Also referred to as Classical Revival, Academic Classicism, Neoclassicism, and Renaissance Revival-Beaux-Arts represents a mixture of styles, borrowing from Greek and Roman models as well as Renaissance forms. This architectural style emphasizes grandness, even in traditional detailing and focuses on symmetry-Bernard Maybeck, Frank Furness, Charles McKim, and Henry Hobson Richardson were architects who produced Beaux-Arts style designs. Many of these architects, as well as Louis Sullivan, studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris

Page 22: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

The World’s Columbian Exposition

The Charles Atwood designed Peristyle

Page 23: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Bull and Peristyle from the Exposition

Page 24: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Boston Public Library1888-1895

Page 25: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Design Details of the Boston Public Library

• Closely based upon the mid 19th century prototype of the Bibliotheque Sainte Genevieve by Henri Labrouste

• Designed by the firm of McKim, Mead, and White

• Constructed of bearing masonry and stone

Page 26: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Richard Guy Wilson wrote, “The (Boston Public) library was the first public building that

demonstrated the possibilities of collaborative art, and was the first great example of ‘civic art.’”

Page 27: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Library 1st (left) and 2nd Story Floor Plans

Page 28: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

New York Public Library1897-1911

Page 29: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Design Details of the Library

• Designed by Carrere and Hastings

• Carrere and Hastings worked for McKim, Mead, and White before forming their own firm

• Constructed of bearing masonry

Page 30: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Library Floor Plan

Page 31: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Pennsylvania Station1906-1910

Page 32: Turn of the Century American Architecture (1895-1915) By Laura Proctor, Amy Johnson, and Kate Matney.

Design Details of Penn Station

• Designed by McKim, Mead, and White

• Constructed of plaster, steel, and masonry

• The original design was demolished in 1964

• Highlights of the design were steel vaults, glass, and cut stone columns over steel