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Edna S. Purcell House

The Edna S. Purcell house (now known as the Purcell–Cutts House) was designed by the firm of Purcell, Feick and Elmslie for architect William Purcell and his family in 1913. It is located in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Edna S. Purcell house
The east facade of the Edna S. Purcell (now Purcell–Cutts) House.
Location2328 Lake Place, Minneapolis, MN
Coordinates44°57′33.61″N 93°18′1.73″W / 44.9593361°N 93.3004806°W / 44.9593361; -93.3004806
Built1913
ArchitectPurcell & Elmslie
Architectural stylePrairie School
NRHP reference No.74001024[1]
Added to NRHPOctober 29, 1974

The dwelling is a notable example of Prairie School architecture, featuring a long, narrow floor plan that disregards Victorian concepts about room divisions. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. It is now part of the collection of the Minneapolis Institute of Art and has been extensively restored. The museum conducts tours on the second weekend of every month.[2]

History edit

The “Edna Purcell dwelling,” as it was referred to in its original project files, was built in 1913. William Purcell and partner George Elmslie collaborated on the house, designed for a narrow, 50- by 150-foot city lot[3] near Lake of the Isles in Minneapolis, Minnesota; construction costs totaled $14,500.[4] While George Feick Jr., appears as a partner on the project, he was not involved in the house's design and left the partnership that year.[5]

William Purcell and his wife, Edna, conceived plans for a permanent home in 1911, while they were residing in an apartment building on Humboldt Avenue in Minneapolis. Having adopted their son James that year, they needed a new space for their daily needs that also accommodated their increased social activity and showcased the architectural firm's expertise.[6]

The house was built at 2328 Lake Place, near the residence that Purcell and Feick had built for William Purcell's mother, Catherine Gray, on Lake of the Isles Parkway in 1907.[7] With financial assistance from William Purcell's father, Charles A. Purcell, the firm was able to realize the project.[8] The Purcell family moved into the house at Christmas, 1913.[9] In 1916, a decline in commissions induced Purcell to take a position as advertising manager at Alexander Brothers Leather and Belting Company in Philadelphia. By 1918, his family had all moved to Philadelphia, and the house on Lake Place was put up for sale.

In 1919, Anson Bailey Cutts Sr. (1866–1949), a chief rate clerk with the Great Northern Railway, purchased the Edna S. Purcell house. Cutts and his wife, Edna Browning Stokes (1875–1976), lived in the house with their son, Anson B. Cutts Jr. (1905–1985). Though he left the house to attend Yale and pursue his career, Anson Jr. returned to the house in 1962 to aid his widowed mother when her health was failing. He continued to live there after her death in 1976. In 1985, Cutts bequeathed the house to the Minneapolis Society of Fine Arts, parent organization of the Minneapolis Institute of Art. It now is part of the museum's collection.[10]

Architecture, design, and ornament edit

Plan and exterior features edit

The Edna S. Purcell house, or the “Little Joker,” as Elmslie nicknamed it,[11] is known for its innovative arrangement of space.[12] Occupying a deep, narrow lot, the plan of the house was organized on a single axis, open from one end to the other, evoking spaciousness within the relatively small interior.

Purcell and Elmslie set the house thirty feet behind the front property line, conserving a sense of privacy for its inhabitants and allowing them to look over their neighbors’ gardens to their north and south, rather than through their windows.[11] Likewise, the Purcells and the neighbors could enjoy the home's front garden, created in collaboration with landscape architect Harry Franklin Baker, including a reflecting pool with water plants and small fountain, and native plants and trees. The back porch overlooked the Lake of the Isles, where the Purcells could enjoy a secluded natural haven in the center of Minneapolis, in concordance with Prairie School ideals.[13]

The structure of the house is steel-reinforced, with a buff-colored stucco exterior, built on a concrete foundation.[14] Its overall design and decoration emphasizes a clean, modern aesthetic while serving practical functions and staying in harmony with natural surroundings. Overhanging eaves, with a 7-foot projection of the roof at the front (east) side of the house, emphasize the building's horizontality while also regulating heat and light at its entrance. A front wall of art glass windows connects the dwelling's interior to the garden, with bands of windows on the upper story adding to the sense of horizontality. Wooden piers and trim were all given “jin-di-sugi” treatment, a wood-aging technique based on traditional Japanese techniques using the application of chemicals or burning to artificially age wood.[15]

The exterior features ornamentation created by George Elmslie, including bands of red and blue stenciled square motifs and sawn wood elements.[16] These include playful symbols of Purcell's family life: for example, a sawn wood beam-end decoration above the side gate that includes the motto, “Gray Days and Gold,” in reference to Purcell's grandparents, the Grays, to the colors of the firm's progressive architecture, and to the funds supporting Purcell's architectural practice and house. Two art glass windows flanking the entryway door contain a written message for neighbors and callers: “Peek-a-Boo.”

Interior edit

Though open-plan, the first-level interior of the Purcell–Cutts House features individual room areas by virtue of alterations in floor level and breadth of floor space, while the tented ceiling maintains the same height throughout. The ground floor living room area at the front of the house features a high ceiling, increasing available space for the repeated pairs of art glass windows that comprise the walls of the front of the living room, while the dining area behind, set a half-story above, has a low ceiling. The pointed prow separating the dining and living areas creates a small nook, reserved as Edna Purcell's writing area. The effect of the main level's design is to maintain intimacy within the larger space, not rendering adjacent spaces automatically visible in main areas of the house, while preserving unity between rooms and the openness of the entire floor.[17]

The second floor is accessed by a stairway on the north side, and includes a small hallway opening to a guest bedroom with sink, a bathroom, and the family bedroom space. The latter is a singular suite which could be divided by a built-in folding screen wall, separating it into children's and master bedrooms. The maid's room is accessed off the stair landing, which is surrounded by wraparound wall of art glass windows.[18]

Decoration, furniture, innovative features edit

Throughout the house's interior, painted Elmslie-designed stencils repeat along the upper border of walls, with designs differing from room to room. Curtains were originally painted to match the rooms’ respective stencils, or were embroidered with other designs.[19] Windows throughout the house also feature graceful geometric patterns of clear glass, highlighted with subtle colors, which vary slightly from window to window.[20] In the first floor living room space, these patterns echo in art glass doors of the bookcase, built into the prow. Above the mantel-less fireplace, a mural by illustrator Charles Livingston Bull depicts Louisiana herons flying before a lake scene. A wood decoration of semicircular design, decorated with art glass and sawed wood decoration, partially frames the painted scene.[21]

Purcell and Elmslie designed select pieces of furniture for the house, including a small, triangular-backed chair, dubbed a “surprise point” chair by William Purcell, for use in Edna's writing nook.[22] Several noteworthy built-in furnishings include a combined bench and radiator cover beneath the front living room windows; a desk in the writing nook; and a combined bed, writing desk, bookcase, and storage area in the children's room, which Purcell designed after the Pullman-style bed of a train's sleeping car.[23] Purcell brought furniture from his previous home for use in the dining space, and folding chairs were stored in the dining area for impromptu visitors.[19]

Several technological innovations were incorporated into the house's design, including a state-of-the-art heating and cooling system, as well as a central vacuum system. The Purcell home had a telephone nook, an electric call system for the maid, and a spring-loaded pocket door to the kitchen, activated through buttons in the floor.[24]

Alteration and restoration edit

William Purcell resumed correspondence with the Cutts family around 1953, when he and George Elmslie were honored with an exhibition at the Walker Art Center. The Cutts family had avoided changing the house substantially, except for adding a garage in the 1920s and later filling the reflecting pool in the front garden.[25] The kitchen and bathroom remained nearly untouched, and are rare original service areas in a home of this age.[24]

In 1961 letter, Purcell expressed his gratitude to Edna Cutts for opening her home to students and voiced the desire to have a share in any attempts to restore the house or make it public.[26] Purcell also sketched out a scheme for expanding the space around the house and setting up a trust fund for the building. He imagined reproducing the Purcell and Elmslie dining suite designed for Mrs. William H. Hanna of Chicago. The suite is now in the collection of the Minneapolis Institute of Art,[27] renting the space to young couples at low rates, and allowing regular public entry.[28]

Though Purcell's plans did not come to fruition in his lifetime, Anson Cutts Jr.’s bequest of the house, along with funds for its restoration, led to a 3-year-long undertaking (lasting from 1987 to 1990) by the Minneapolis Institute of Arts with the firm of MacDonald & Mack Architects. It was opened to the public as the Purcell–Cutts House in September 1990.[29] Their restorative work centered on preventing further deterioration of the roof of the house, stabilizing the main roof and straightening the cantilever of the projecting first-story eaves.[30] Restorers also worked to return surfaces to their original color, re-tinting exterior stucco, and preserving, restoring, or repainting interior stencil friezes as necessary. Wood trims were refinished and waxed, and the mural by Charles Livingston Bull was cleaned. The art glass windows were repaired and cleaned. The landscaping, including the reflecting pool and fountain, were recreated to match historic photographs.[31] Based on historic evidence, the MIA reproduced furniture for the house including a reproduction of the Hanna suite for the dining room. As a part of the house's bequest, mementos of the Cutts family also remain. Public tours are held the second weekend of each month.[2]

Significance edit

The Edna S. Purcell House was known to architects of its time, published and pictured extensively in the Western Architect.[32] It was also published with several photographs in the March 1917 issue of The Minnesotan.[33] Purcell himself, and later architectural scholars like David Gebhard and H. Allen Brooks, would declare the house to be one of the most complete works of architecture by the firm of Purcell and Elmslie, if not the most complete.[34]

The many modern features of the home, including its open plan, flexible room spaces, built-in furniture, and technologically advanced amenities pointed toward the future of home design. Contrasting it with the expensive houses built concurrently by Frank Lloyd Wright, the Purcell home's modern considerations accommodated for fewer servants and limited daily issues of maintenance, while giving flexibility for use and daily living, providing for the lifestyle of a young early 20th-century family.[35]

References edit

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 15, 2006.
  2. ^ a b "Minneapolis Institute of Art".
  3. ^ Olivarez, et al., Progressive Design in the Midwest, 35.
  4. ^ Gebhard, “William Gray Purcell and George Grant Elmslie,” 191.
  5. ^ Brooks, The Prairie School: Frank Lloyd Wright and his Midwest Contemporaries, 219.
  6. ^ Olivarez, et al., 32.
  7. ^ The firm had also collaborated on the Catherine Gray house with George Elmslie, before he moved to Minneapolis as a partner in 1910 (Olivarez, 26 – 27).
  8. ^ Olivarez, et al., 33.
  9. ^ Olivarez, et al., 32–33.
  10. ^ Olivarez, et al., 63 – 66.
  11. ^ a b Olivarez, et al., 35.
  12. ^ Historian H. Allen Brooks would claim that the Edna S. Purcell residence featured the “most brilliant spatial planning achieved by the firm[.]” (Brooks, 212).
  13. ^ Olivarez, et al., 36.
  14. ^ MacDonald and Mack Partnership, Historic Structures Report, v. 2, 178.
  15. ^ For more information on this technique, see Conforti, et al., Minnesota 1900, 69.
  16. ^ "Unified Vision > Purcell–Cutts Tour > Introduction".
  17. ^ Brooks, 214 – 216.
  18. ^ Olivarez, et al., 57–59.
  19. ^ a b Purcell, Parabiographies for 1913.
  20. ^ Olivarez, et al., 45–46.
  21. ^ Olivarez, et al., 49.
  22. ^ Olivarez, et al., 52.
  23. ^ Olivarez, et al., 59.
  24. ^ a b Olivarez, et al., 60–63.
  25. ^ Olivarez, et al., 65.
  26. ^ Purcell to Edna Cutts, June 2, 1961, Correspondence file, Job Number 197, William Gray Purcell Papers (cit. Olivarez, et al., 65).
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 2004-09-06. Retrieved 2013-08-15.
  28. ^ Undated sketch with notes, correspondence file, JN 197, William Gray Purcell Papers (cit. Progressive Design 65).
  29. ^ Olivarez, et al., 66.
  30. ^ For more details on restoration, see Kronick and Kliment.
  31. ^ Kohls, "The Art of Architecture," 12.
  32. ^ It was published in with an extensive photo spread in Volume 21, Number 1, January 1915 of the Western Architect, now republished in Brooks, ed. Prairie School Architecture: Studies from ‘The Western Architect,’ 80–129.
  33. ^ “Where Other People Live,” The Minnesotan, March 1917: 21–23.
  34. ^ Gebhard, 193–194; Brooks, 212 (see reference 11); Purcell, VII-4 (cit. Olivarez, et al., 33).
  35. ^ Gebhard, 194.

Bibliography edit

  • Brooks, H. Allen. The Prairie School: Frank Lloyd Wright and his Midwest Contemporaries. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1972.
  • Brooks, H. Allen, ed. Prairie School Architecture: Studies from ‘The Western Architect.’ New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, 1983.
  • Conforti, Michael, et al. Minnesota 1900: Art and Life on the Upper Mississippi 1890–1915. Newark : University of Delaware Press, 1994.
  • Gebhard, David. “William Gray Purcell and George Grant Elmslie: Early Progressive Movement in American Architecture from 1900 to 1920, v. 1–2.” Diss. Minneapolis State U, 1957. Print.
  • Kliment, Stephen A., ed. “At Home on the Prairie.” Architectural Record: Preservation, March 1991: 144–151.
  • Kohls, Ann. “The Art of Architecture: The Purcell–Cutts House, now part of the museum’s collection, is respectfully restored.” Arts Magazine, August 1990, 12.
  • Kronick, Richard L. “The Underachieving Cantilever.” Old House Journal, June 1997: 40–45.
  • Olivarez, Jennifer Komar, et al. Progressive Design in the Midwest: The Purcell–Cutts House and the Prairie School Collection at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Minneapolis, Minn. : Institute of Arts : Distributed by the University of Minnesota Press, 2000.
  • William Gray Purcell papers, N3, Northwest Architectural Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries, Minneapolis, MN.
  • “Where Other People Live: Describing briefly the Attractive home of a Minneapolis architect, William Gray Purcell, President of the Minnesota chapter of A.I.A., who designed his own home to express a real and useful idea in planning for the convenience and beauty of home life.” The Minnesotan, March 1917: 21–23.

External links edit

  • The Minneapolis Institute of Art. Explore the Collection: The Purcell–Cutts House
  • Unified Vision: The Architecture and Design of the Prairie School (Minneapolis Institute of Art)
  • For more details on interior ornament and furnishings, see the online tour of the house, provided by the Minneapolis Institute of Art.
  • Where Other People Live, article from March, 1917, Minnesotan magazine

edna, purcell, house, edna, purcell, house, known, purcell, cutts, house, designed, firm, purcell, feick, elmslie, architect, william, purcell, family, 1913, located, minneapolis, minnesota, edna, purcell, houseu, national, register, historic, placesthe, east,. The Edna S Purcell house now known as the Purcell Cutts House was designed by the firm of Purcell Feick and Elmslie for architect William Purcell and his family in 1913 It is located in Minneapolis Minnesota Edna S Purcell houseU S National Register of Historic PlacesThe east facade of the Edna S Purcell now Purcell Cutts House Location2328 Lake Place Minneapolis MNCoordinates44 57 33 61 N 93 18 1 73 W 44 9593361 N 93 3004806 W 44 9593361 93 3004806Built1913ArchitectPurcell amp ElmslieArchitectural stylePrairie SchoolNRHP reference No 74001024 1 Added to NRHPOctober 29 1974 The dwelling is a notable example of Prairie School architecture featuring a long narrow floor plan that disregards Victorian concepts about room divisions It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974 It is now part of the collection of the Minneapolis Institute of Art and has been extensively restored The museum conducts tours on the second weekend of every month 2 Contents 1 History 2 Architecture design and ornament 2 1 Plan and exterior features 2 2 Interior 2 3 Decoration furniture innovative features 3 Alteration and restoration 4 Significance 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory editThe Edna Purcell dwelling as it was referred to in its original project files was built in 1913 William Purcell and partner George Elmslie collaborated on the house designed for a narrow 50 by 150 foot city lot 3 near Lake of the Isles in Minneapolis Minnesota construction costs totaled 14 500 4 While George Feick Jr appears as a partner on the project he was not involved in the house s design and left the partnership that year 5 William Purcell and his wife Edna conceived plans for a permanent home in 1911 while they were residing in an apartment building on Humboldt Avenue in Minneapolis Having adopted their son James that year they needed a new space for their daily needs that also accommodated their increased social activity and showcased the architectural firm s expertise 6 The house was built at 2328 Lake Place near the residence that Purcell and Feick had built for William Purcell s mother Catherine Gray on Lake of the Isles Parkway in 1907 7 With financial assistance from William Purcell s father Charles A Purcell the firm was able to realize the project 8 The Purcell family moved into the house at Christmas 1913 9 In 1916 a decline in commissions induced Purcell to take a position as advertising manager at Alexander Brothers Leather and Belting Company in Philadelphia By 1918 his family had all moved to Philadelphia and the house on Lake Place was put up for sale In 1919 Anson Bailey Cutts Sr 1866 1949 a chief rate clerk with the Great Northern Railway purchased the Edna S Purcell house Cutts and his wife Edna Browning Stokes 1875 1976 lived in the house with their son Anson B Cutts Jr 1905 1985 Though he left the house to attend Yale and pursue his career Anson Jr returned to the house in 1962 to aid his widowed mother when her health was failing He continued to live there after her death in 1976 In 1985 Cutts bequeathed the house to the Minneapolis Society of Fine Arts parent organization of the Minneapolis Institute of Art It now is part of the museum s collection 10 Architecture design and ornament editPlan and exterior features edit The Edna S Purcell house or the Little Joker as Elmslie nicknamed it 11 is known for its innovative arrangement of space 12 Occupying a deep narrow lot the plan of the house was organized on a single axis open from one end to the other evoking spaciousness within the relatively small interior Purcell and Elmslie set the house thirty feet behind the front property line conserving a sense of privacy for its inhabitants and allowing them to look over their neighbors gardens to their north and south rather than through their windows 11 Likewise the Purcells and the neighbors could enjoy the home s front garden created in collaboration with landscape architect Harry Franklin Baker including a reflecting pool with water plants and small fountain and native plants and trees The back porch overlooked the Lake of the Isles where the Purcells could enjoy a secluded natural haven in the center of Minneapolis in concordance with Prairie School ideals 13 The structure of the house is steel reinforced with a buff colored stucco exterior built on a concrete foundation 14 Its overall design and decoration emphasizes a clean modern aesthetic while serving practical functions and staying in harmony with natural surroundings Overhanging eaves with a 7 foot projection of the roof at the front east side of the house emphasize the building s horizontality while also regulating heat and light at its entrance A front wall of art glass windows connects the dwelling s interior to the garden with bands of windows on the upper story adding to the sense of horizontality Wooden piers and trim were all given jin di sugi treatment a wood aging technique based on traditional Japanese techniques using the application of chemicals or burning to artificially age wood 15 The exterior features ornamentation created by George Elmslie including bands of red and blue stenciled square motifs and sawn wood elements 16 These include playful symbols of Purcell s family life for example a sawn wood beam end decoration above the side gate that includes the motto Gray Days and Gold in reference to Purcell s grandparents the Grays to the colors of the firm s progressive architecture and to the funds supporting Purcell s architectural practice and house Two art glass windows flanking the entryway door contain a written message for neighbors and callers Peek a Boo Interior edit Though open plan the first level interior of the Purcell Cutts House features individual room areas by virtue of alterations in floor level and breadth of floor space while the tented ceiling maintains the same height throughout The ground floor living room area at the front of the house features a high ceiling increasing available space for the repeated pairs of art glass windows that comprise the walls of the front of the living room while the dining area behind set a half story above has a low ceiling The pointed prow separating the dining and living areas creates a small nook reserved as Edna Purcell s writing area The effect of the main level s design is to maintain intimacy within the larger space not rendering adjacent spaces automatically visible in main areas of the house while preserving unity between rooms and the openness of the entire floor 17 The second floor is accessed by a stairway on the north side and includes a small hallway opening to a guest bedroom with sink a bathroom and the family bedroom space The latter is a singular suite which could be divided by a built in folding screen wall separating it into children s and master bedrooms The maid s room is accessed off the stair landing which is surrounded by wraparound wall of art glass windows 18 Decoration furniture innovative features edit Throughout the house s interior painted Elmslie designed stencils repeat along the upper border of walls with designs differing from room to room Curtains were originally painted to match the rooms respective stencils or were embroidered with other designs 19 Windows throughout the house also feature graceful geometric patterns of clear glass highlighted with subtle colors which vary slightly from window to window 20 In the first floor living room space these patterns echo in art glass doors of the bookcase built into the prow Above the mantel less fireplace a mural by illustrator Charles Livingston Bull depicts Louisiana herons flying before a lake scene A wood decoration of semicircular design decorated with art glass and sawed wood decoration partially frames the painted scene 21 Purcell and Elmslie designed select pieces of furniture for the house including a small triangular backed chair dubbed a surprise point chair by William Purcell for use in Edna s writing nook 22 Several noteworthy built in furnishings include a combined bench and radiator cover beneath the front living room windows a desk in the writing nook and a combined bed writing desk bookcase and storage area in the children s room which Purcell designed after the Pullman style bed of a train s sleeping car 23 Purcell brought furniture from his previous home for use in the dining space and folding chairs were stored in the dining area for impromptu visitors 19 Several technological innovations were incorporated into the house s design including a state of the art heating and cooling system as well as a central vacuum system The Purcell home had a telephone nook an electric call system for the maid and a spring loaded pocket door to the kitchen activated through buttons in the floor 24 Alteration and restoration editWilliam Purcell resumed correspondence with the Cutts family around 1953 when he and George Elmslie were honored with an exhibition at the Walker Art Center The Cutts family had avoided changing the house substantially except for adding a garage in the 1920s and later filling the reflecting pool in the front garden 25 The kitchen and bathroom remained nearly untouched and are rare original service areas in a home of this age 24 In 1961 letter Purcell expressed his gratitude to Edna Cutts for opening her home to students and voiced the desire to have a share in any attempts to restore the house or make it public 26 Purcell also sketched out a scheme for expanding the space around the house and setting up a trust fund for the building He imagined reproducing the Purcell and Elmslie dining suite designed for Mrs William H Hanna of Chicago The suite is now in the collection of the Minneapolis Institute of Art 27 renting the space to young couples at low rates and allowing regular public entry 28 Though Purcell s plans did not come to fruition in his lifetime Anson Cutts Jr s bequest of the house along with funds for its restoration led to a 3 year long undertaking lasting from 1987 to 1990 by the Minneapolis Institute of Arts with the firm of MacDonald amp Mack Architects It was opened to the public as the Purcell Cutts House in September 1990 29 Their restorative work centered on preventing further deterioration of the roof of the house stabilizing the main roof and straightening the cantilever of the projecting first story eaves 30 Restorers also worked to return surfaces to their original color re tinting exterior stucco and preserving restoring or repainting interior stencil friezes as necessary Wood trims were refinished and waxed and the mural by Charles Livingston Bull was cleaned The art glass windows were repaired and cleaned The landscaping including the reflecting pool and fountain were recreated to match historic photographs 31 Based on historic evidence the MIA reproduced furniture for the house including a reproduction of the Hanna suite for the dining room As a part of the house s bequest mementos of the Cutts family also remain Public tours are held the second weekend of each month 2 Significance editThe Edna S Purcell House was known to architects of its time published and pictured extensively in the Western Architect 32 It was also published with several photographs in the March 1917 issue of The Minnesotan 33 Purcell himself and later architectural scholars like David Gebhard and H Allen Brooks would declare the house to be one of the most complete works of architecture by the firm of Purcell and Elmslie if not the most complete 34 The many modern features of the home including its open plan flexible room spaces built in furniture and technologically advanced amenities pointed toward the future of home design Contrasting it with the expensive houses built concurrently by Frank Lloyd Wright the Purcell home s modern considerations accommodated for fewer servants and limited daily issues of maintenance while giving flexibility for use and daily living providing for the lifestyle of a young early 20th century family 35 References edit National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 15 2006 a b Minneapolis Institute of Art Olivarez et al Progressive Design in the Midwest 35 Gebhard William Gray Purcell and George Grant Elmslie 191 Brooks The Prairie School Frank Lloyd Wright and his Midwest Contemporaries 219 Olivarez et al 32 The firm had also collaborated on the Catherine Gray house with George Elmslie before he moved to Minneapolis as a partner in 1910 Olivarez 26 27 Olivarez et al 33 Olivarez et al 32 33 Olivarez et al 63 66 a b Olivarez et al 35 Historian H Allen Brooks would claim that the Edna S Purcell residence featured the most brilliant spatial planning achieved by the firm Brooks 212 Olivarez et al 36 MacDonald and Mack Partnership Historic Structures Report v 2 178 For more information on this technique see Conforti et al Minnesota 1900 69 Unified Vision gt Purcell Cutts Tour gt Introduction Brooks 214 216 Olivarez et al 57 59 a b Purcell Parabiographies for 1913 Olivarez et al 45 46 Olivarez et al 49 Olivarez et al 52 Olivarez et al 59 a b Olivarez et al 60 63 Olivarez et al 65 Purcell to Edna Cutts June 2 1961 Correspondence file Job Number 197 William Gray Purcell Papers cit Olivarez et al 65 Unified Vision gt the Collection gt Skylight Archived from the original on 2004 09 06 Retrieved 2013 08 15 Undated sketch with notes correspondence file JN 197 William Gray Purcell Papers cit Progressive Design 65 Olivarez et al 66 For more details on restoration see Kronick and Kliment Kohls The Art of Architecture 12 It was published in with an extensive photo spread in Volume 21 Number 1 January 1915 of the Western Architect now republished in Brooks ed Prairie School Architecture Studies from The Western Architect 80 129 Where Other People Live The Minnesotan March 1917 21 23 Gebhard 193 194 Brooks 212 see reference 11 Purcell VII 4 cit Olivarez et al 33 Gebhard 194 Bibliography editBrooks H Allen The Prairie School Frank Lloyd Wright and his Midwest Contemporaries Toronto University of Toronto Press 1972 Brooks H Allen ed Prairie School Architecture Studies from The Western Architect New York Van Nostrand Reinhold Company 1983 Conforti Michael et al Minnesota 1900 Art and Life on the Upper Mississippi 1890 1915 Newark University of Delaware Press 1994 Gebhard David William Gray Purcell and George Grant Elmslie Early Progressive Movement in American Architecture from 1900 to 1920 v 1 2 Diss Minneapolis State U 1957 Print Kliment Stephen A ed At Home on the Prairie Architectural Record Preservation March 1991 144 151 Kohls Ann The Art of Architecture The Purcell Cutts House now part of the museum s collection is respectfully restored Arts Magazine August 1990 12 Kronick Richard L The Underachieving Cantilever Old House Journal June 1997 40 45 Olivarez Jennifer Komar et al Progressive Design in the Midwest The Purcell Cutts House and the Prairie School Collection at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts Minneapolis Minn Institute of Arts Distributed by the University of Minnesota Press 2000 William Gray Purcell papers N3 Northwest Architectural Archives University of Minnesota Libraries Minneapolis MN Where Other People Live Describing briefly the Attractive home of a Minneapolis architect William Gray Purcell President of the Minnesota chapter of A I A who designed his own home to express a real and useful idea in planning for the convenience and beauty of home life The Minnesotan March 1917 21 23 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Purcell Cutts House The Minneapolis Institute of Art Explore the Collection The Purcell Cutts House Unified Vision The Architecture and Design of the Prairie School Minneapolis Institute of Art For more details on interior ornament and furnishings see the online tour of the house provided by the Minneapolis Institute of Art Where Other People Live article from March 1917 Minnesotan magazine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edna S Purcell House amp oldid 1163035136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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