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Edward Durell Stone

Edward Durell Stone (March 9, 1902 – August 6, 1978) was an American architect known for the formal, highly decorative buildings he designed in the 1950s and 1960s. His works include the Museum of Modern Art, in New York City, the Museo de Arte de Ponce in Ponce, Puerto Rico, the United States Embassy in New Delhi, India, The Keller Center at the University of Chicago, and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.

Edward Durell Stone
Stone (center) viewing a model of NASA's Electronics Research Center, 1964
Born(1902-03-09)March 9, 1902
DiedAugust 6, 1978(1978-08-06) (aged 76)
New York City, U.S.
Alma materUniversity of Arkansas, Harvard University, M.I.T.
OccupationArchitect
BuildingsRadio City Music Hall, Museum of Modern Art, Kennedy Center, 2 Columbus Circle, First Canadian Place, Aon Center, University at Albany Uptown Campus

Life and work edit

Stone was born and raised in Fayetteville, Arkansas. He attended the University of Arkansas, where he joined the Sigma Nu Fraternity,[1] Harvard and M.I.T., but did not earn a degree.[2][page needed] In 1927, he won the Rotch Travelling Scholarship, which afforded him the opportunity to travel through Europe on a two-year stipend.[3] Stone was impressed by the new architecture he observed in Europe, buildings designed in what would come to be known as the International Style.[2][page needed] He returned to the United States in 1929 and took up residence in Manhattan. Hired by the architectural firm of Schultze and Weaver, he designed interiors for the new Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. He subsequently worked for the Associated Architects of Rockefeller Center and became the principal designer of Radio City Music Hall.[4][page needed]

 
Richard H. Mandel House, Mt. Kisco, New York (1933)

Stone was an early advocate of the International Style. His first independent commission was the Richard H. Mandel House, in Mount Kisco, New York (1933).[5] This was followed by the Ulrich Kowalski house, also in Mt. Kisco (1934),[6] and the Albert C. Koch house in Cambridge, Massachusetts (1936).[note 1][7] In 1936, Stone was chosen as associate architect for the new Museum of Modern Art in New York City, designed in collaboration with Philip L. Goodwin.[8] Stone also designed a private residence for MoMA president Anson Conger Goodyear, the A. Conger Goodyear House, in Old Westbury, NY (1938).[9] Both the Richard H. Mandel House and A. Conger Goodyear House are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[10]

At the outset of World War II, Stone enlisted in the U.S. Army. He was promoted to the rank of major and served as chief of the Army Air Force Planning and Design Section.[11][page needed] Returning to New York after the war, Stone was commissioned to design the ten-story El Panama Hotel in Panama City, Panama (1946),[12] the University of Arkansas Fine Arts Center in Fayetteville (1948),[13] and the 850-bed Hospital del Seguro Social del Empleado in Lima, Peru (1950).[note 2][14]

 
U.S. Embassy in New Delhi, India (1959)

Stone's best-known work was the Embassy of the United States in New Delhi, India (1959).[15] Tasked with creating a modern building that respected the architectural heritage of its host country, he designed a temple-like pavilion on a raised podium.[16] Frank Lloyd Wright called the embassy one of the most beautiful buildings he had ever seen,[17] and it won a first honor award from the American Institute of Architects (AIA).[18][page needed] Subsequent commissions such as the Stanford University Medical Center in Palo Alto, California (1955),[19] the Stuart Pharmaceutical Company in Pasadena, California (1956),[20] and the United States pavilion at the 1958 Brussels World's Fair (1957),[21] repeated elements originally designed for the embassy.[22] The Stuart building and World's Fair pavilion both won awards from the AIA,[18][page needed] and Stone was elected to the Institute's College of Fellows in 1958.[23]

Described as romanticist,[24][page needed] Stone's ornate designs[dubious ] brought him commercial success.[15] By the 1960s, his firm was among the largest architectural practices in the United States, with over 200 employees and offices on both coasts.[25] Buildings from this period include the North Carolina State Legislative Building in Raleigh (1960),[26] the Pakistan Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology in Nilore (1961),[27] the National Geographic Society building in Washington, D.C. (1961),[28] the Museo de Arte in Ponce, Puerto Rico (1961),[29] the uptown campus of the University at Albany (1962),[30] the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. (1962),[31] the General Motors Building in New York City (1964), the PepsiCo World Headquarters, in Purchase, New York (1967),[32] and the EcoTarium in Worcester, Massachusetts,[33] the Florida State Capital complex in Tallahassee, [34] and the Standard Oil building (now known as the Aon Center) in Chicago, Illinois (all 1970).[35]

Stone also was the architect of the former Windham College in Putney, Vermont. Windham closed in 1978 and its abandoned campus was taken over by the present-day Landmark College in 1985.

Furthermore, Stone also designed Harvey Mudd College in Claremont, California. Harvey Mudd College is a highly ranked private liberal arts college, and according to Travel and Leisure Magazine in 2013, is one of "America's ugliest college campuses".

Stone retired in 1974 and died in 1978.[11][page needed] Following a New York City funeral his ashes were buried in his hometown of Fayetteville.[36]

Honors and awards edit

Honorary degrees edit

  • Doctor of Fine Arts, University of Arkansas, 1951[37]
  • Doctor of Fine Arts, Colby College, 1959[38]
  • Master of Fine Arts, Otis Art Institute of Los Angeles County, 1961[39]
  • Doctor of Fine Arts, Hamilton College, 1962[40]

Memberships and honors edit

Architectural awards edit

  • Silver Medal, Architectural League of New York, 1937 – Guest House for Henry R. Luce, Mepkin Plantation, Moncks Corner, South Carolina[49]
  • Silver Medal, Architectural League of New York, 1950 – A. Conger Goodyear Residence, Old Westbury, New York[50]
  • Gold Medal, Architectural League of New York, 1950 – Museum of Modern Art, New York City (Philip Goodwin, Associate)[50]
  • Gold Medal, Architectural League of New York, 1950 – El Panama Hotel, Panama City, Panama[51]
  • First Honor Award, American Institute of Architects, 1958 – Stuart Pharmaceutical Co., Pasadena, California[18][page needed]
  • Award of Merit, American Institute of Architects, 1958 – U.S. Pavilion, Brussels, Belgium[18][page needed]
  • First Honor Award, American Institute of Architects, 1961 – U.S. Embassy, New Delhi, India[18][page needed]
  • Award of Merit, American Institute of Architects, 1963 – Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula, Carmel, California[52]
  • Honor Award, American Institute of Architects, 1967 – Ponce Museum of Art, Ponce, Puerto Rico[53]

Selected works edit

 
2 Columbus Circle, New York City (1958), before the facade was altered and the interior renovated
 
North Carolina State Legislative Building in Raleigh, North Carolina (1960)
 
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, D.C. (1962)
 
The Uptown Campus of the State University of New York at Albany (1962)
 
Busch Stadium (1966), the home of the St. Louis Cardinals baseball team from 1966 to 2005 and the St. Louis Cardinals football team from 1966 to 1987

Gallery edit

Footnotes edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Koch house was designed in association with Carl Koch Jr.
  2. ^ The hospital was designed in association with Alfred L. Aydelott.

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Division of Student Affairs Greek Life – Sigma Nu". University of Arkansas. from the original on July 6, 2015. Retrieved February 17, 2022.
  2. ^ a b Stone 1962.
  3. ^ "Tech Student Wins Rotch Scholarship," Boston Herald, May 4, 1927.
  4. ^ Hunting 2013.
  5. ^ "House of Richard H. Mandel," Architectural Forum, August 1935.
  6. ^ "Recent Work by Edward D. Stone," Architectural Forum, July 1941.
  7. ^ "Grand Prize: Prize Houses Over $12,000," Architectural Forum, January 1939.
  8. ^ "Current Architecture: The Museum of Modern Art, New York City," Architectural Review, September 1939.
  9. ^ "Recent Work by Edward D. Stone".
  10. ^ National Register of Historic Places Single Property Listings Finding Aid: New York, (Tucson: National Park Service Intermountain Region Museum Services Program, 2017).
  11. ^ a b Stone 2011.
  12. ^ The Architectural Forum. Vol. 94. Billboard Publications. 1951. p. 139. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
  13. ^ "University Art Center—Architect Stone's sure hand with countless details creates a harmonious home for seven arts under one Arkansas roof," Architectural Forum, September 1951.
  14. ^ "Big Double Hospital: Skillful handling of traffic and service flow by US architects integrates maternity and general health facilities for 850 Peruvian inpatients," Architectural Forum, June 1952.
  15. ^ a b Goldberger, Paul (August 7, 1978). "Edward Durell Stone Dead at 76; Designed Major Works Worldwide". The New York Times. p. A1. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  16. ^ Jane C. Loeffler, The Architecture of Diplomacy (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1998).
  17. ^ "It's news when Wright lauds an architect," Palo Alto Times, August 3, 1955.
  18. ^ a b c d e von Eckardt 1961.
  19. ^ "Medicine's new 'Taj Mahal'," Architectural Forum, April 1958.
  20. ^ "Splendor in the Factory," Architectural Record, December 1959.
  21. ^ "A final look at Brussels," Architectural Forum, October 1958.
  22. ^ Steven Bedford, "Stone, Edward Durell," in Encyclopedia of Architecture Design, Engineering & Construction, ed. by Joseph A. Wilkes and Robert T. Packard (New York: Wiley, 1989).
  23. ^ a b "HONOR FOR ARCHITECTS; Four Here Are Among Twenty Elected to Institute". The New York Times. April 27, 1958. p. 81. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  24. ^ Stone 1967.
  25. ^ "100 Largest Architectural Firms in the U.S.," Architectural Forum, April 1963; "100 Largest Architectural Firms in the U.S.," Architectural Forum, April 1964; "Man with a billion on the drawing board," Business Week, October 8, 1966.
  26. ^ "New Statehouse for North Carolina," Architectural Forum, December 1963.
  27. ^ "Architecture: Mogul Modern," Time, August 12, 1966.
  28. ^ Ada Louise Huxtable, "Architecture: In Capitol: National Geographic Society's Building Sets a Standard for Washington," New York Times, December 11, 1963.
  29. ^ "Ponce: Design for a Temperate Climate," Architectural Record, April 1966.
  30. ^ Douglas Dales, "Model of College Shown by State," New York Times, June 12, 1962.
  31. ^ Robert Hughes, "The New Monuments," Time, September 13, 1971.
  32. ^ "From Park Avenue to an old polo Field: a lush new setting for PepsiCo's headquarters," Architectural Record, February 1972.
  33. ^ [1]
  34. ^ "Florida: The Legislature: The multi-phased construction program of the new capitol complex in Tallahassee," Interior Design, January 1979.
  35. ^ "Block-Buster Approach to Architecture," Progressive Architecture, April 1970.
  36. ^ Williams 1984, p. 52.
  37. ^ "Art for Arkansas," "Interiors", July 1951, 12.
  38. ^ Hunting, "Edward Durell Stone".
  39. ^ "12 Graduated at Otis Art Institute". Los Angeles Times. June 15, 1961. p. 65. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
  40. ^ "Today's Youth Called Mature and Dedicated," New York Times, May 13, 1962.
  41. ^ "Honors," Architectural Record, July 1955, 16.
  42. ^ Sandra Knox, "Prizes are given in Arts, Letters," New York Times, May 22, 1958.
  43. ^ "Negro Aid Termed Good for Business," New York Times, September 11, 1958.
  44. ^ "Academy Elects 116," New York Times, May 12, 1960.
  45. ^ "Arts Group Elects 10," New York Times, April 22, 1960.
  46. ^ "Social Science Awards," New York Times, December 14, 1961; "Architects in the News: Elder Named at B.C.; Kahn, Stone, Saarinen Honored,” Architectural Record, May 1962, 58.
  47. ^ "Edward Durell Stone Cited by Building Stone Institute," New York Times, August 23, 1964; “People / Stone Wins Stone Award,” AIA Journal, October 1964, 84.
  48. ^ "Alger Award Voted to Lowell Thomas," New York Times, May 12, 1971.
  49. ^ "Architects Award Prizes in 3 Fields," New York Times, April 22, 1937.
  50. ^ a b "ART AWARDS ANNOUNCED; Architectural League Gives Medals in Gold Medal Show". The New York Times. June 2, 1950. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  51. ^ "Wins Gold Medal Award Of Architectural League," New York Times, January 18, 1952.
  52. ^ Thomas Ennis, "Institute Honors 13 New Projects: Progress Toward ‘Delight in Environment’ Noted,” New York Times, June 2, 1963.
  53. ^ John Leo, “Skidmore, Owings Is Presented With 5 Of Architects’ 20 Awards: Architects Give Annual Awards,” New York Times, May 16, 1967; “Edward Durell Stone Museo de Arte de Ponce,” AIA Journal, June 1967, 47.

Works cited edit

  • Stone, Edward Durell (1962). The Evolution of an Architect. Horizon Press. OCLC 929669.
  • Stone, Hicks (2011). Edward Durell Stone: A Son's Untold Story of a Legendary Architect. Random House Incorporated. ISBN 978-0-8478-3568-3.
  • von Eckardt, Wolf (1961). Mid-century Architecture in America: Honor Awards of the American Institute of Architects, 1949-1961. Johns Hopkins Press.
  • Hunting, Mary Anne (2013). Edward Durell Stone: Modernism's Populist Architect. W.W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-73301-3. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
  • Williams, John Griffith (1984). The curious and the beautiful: a memoir history of the architecture program at the University of Arkansas. University of Arkansas Press. ISBN 9780938626329. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
  • Stone, Edward Durell (1967). Edward Durell Stone: Recent and Future Architecture. New York: Horizon Press.

General references edit

  • Everett, Derek R. "Modern Statehouses for Modern States: Edward Durell Stone's Capitol Architecture in North Carolina and Florida." Southern Historian, Vol. 28 (Spring 2007): pp. 74–91.
  • Head, Jeffrey. "Unearthing Stone." Metropolis magazine, Urban Journal, January 2008.
  • Heyer, Paul. Architects on Architecture: New Directions in America. (New York: Walker & Co., 1966): pp. 172–183.
  • Hunting, Mary Anne. "Edward Durell Stone, Perception and Criticism." (PhD diss., Graduate Center, City University of New York, 2007).
  • Hunting, Mary Anne. “Edward Durell Stone.” In Oxford Bibliographies in Architecture, Planning, and Preservation. New York: Oxford University Press, forthcoming.
  • Hunting, Mary Anne. "From Craft to Industry: Furniture designed by Edward Durell Stone for Senator Fulbright." The Magazine Antiques (May 2004): 110–121.
  • Hunting, Mary Anne. “Legacy of Stone: As Campus Buildings Rise and Fall, A Leading Mid-20th-Century Architect's Vision Endures,” Vanderbilt Magazine (Summer 2014): *18–19, 78–79.
  • Hunting, Mary Anne. "The Richard H. Mandel House in Bedford Hills, New York." Living with Antiques.The Magazine Antiques (July 2001): 72–83.
  • Hunting, Mary Anne. "Rediscovering the Work of Edward Durell Stone". Modern Magazine (Spring 2013): 70 and 72.
  • Ricciotti, Dominic. "Edward Durell Stone and the International Style in America: Houses of the 1930s." American Art Journal, Vol. 20, No. 3 (Summer 1988): pp. 48–73.
  • Ricciotti, Dominic. "The 1939 Building of the Museum of Modern Art: The Goodwin-Stone Collaboration." American Art Journal, Vol. 17, No. 3 (Summer 1985): pp. 51–76.

External links edit

  • The Edward Durell Stone web site, a resource for current information on the life and work of Edward Durell Stone
  • Finding Aid for the Edward Durell Stone Papers at The University of Arkansas, David W. Mullins Library, Department of Special Collections
  • Finding Aid for the James Hicks Stone Papers at The University of Arkansas, David W. Mullins Library, Department of Special Collections
  • The Edward Durell Stone entry in The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture by Robert L. Skolmen
  • Photographs of the Bruno and Josephine Graf house in Dallas, Texas
  • Ethel Goodstein-Murphree, "In Memoriam: Edward Durell Stone's Carlson Terrace, 1957–2007"

Two views on 2 Columbus Circle

  • "Goodbye, 2 Columbus Circle" by Witold Rybczynski

edward, durell, stone, march, 1902, august, 1978, american, architect, known, formal, highly, decorative, buildings, designed, 1950s, 1960s, works, include, museum, modern, york, city, museo, arte, ponce, ponce, puerto, rico, united, states, embassy, delhi, in. Edward Durell Stone March 9 1902 August 6 1978 was an American architect known for the formal highly decorative buildings he designed in the 1950s and 1960s His works include the Museum of Modern Art in New York City the Museo de Arte de Ponce in Ponce Puerto Rico the United States Embassy in New Delhi India The Keller Center at the University of Chicago and the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington D C Edward Durell StoneStone center viewing a model of NASA s Electronics Research Center 1964Born 1902 03 09 March 9 1902Fayetteville Arkansas U S DiedAugust 6 1978 1978 08 06 aged 76 New York City U S Alma materUniversity of Arkansas Harvard University M I T OccupationArchitectBuildingsRadio City Music Hall Museum of Modern Art Kennedy Center 2 Columbus Circle First Canadian Place Aon Center University at Albany Uptown Campus Contents 1 Life and work 2 Honors and awards 2 1 Honorary degrees 2 2 Memberships and honors 2 3 Architectural awards 3 Selected works 4 Gallery 5 Footnotes 5 1 Notes 5 2 Citations 5 3 Works cited 5 4 General references 6 External linksLife and work editStone was born and raised in Fayetteville Arkansas He attended the University of Arkansas where he joined the Sigma Nu Fraternity 1 Harvard and M I T but did not earn a degree 2 page needed In 1927 he won the Rotch Travelling Scholarship which afforded him the opportunity to travel through Europe on a two year stipend 3 Stone was impressed by the new architecture he observed in Europe buildings designed in what would come to be known as the International Style 2 page needed He returned to the United States in 1929 and took up residence in Manhattan Hired by the architectural firm of Schultze and Weaver he designed interiors for the new Waldorf Astoria Hotel He subsequently worked for the Associated Architects of Rockefeller Center and became the principal designer of Radio City Music Hall 4 page needed nbsp Richard H Mandel House Mt Kisco New York 1933 Stone was an early advocate of the International Style His first independent commission was the Richard H Mandel House in Mount Kisco New York 1933 5 This was followed by the Ulrich Kowalski house also in Mt Kisco 1934 6 and the Albert C Koch house in Cambridge Massachusetts 1936 note 1 7 In 1936 Stone was chosen as associate architect for the new Museum of Modern Art in New York City designed in collaboration with Philip L Goodwin 8 Stone also designed a private residence for MoMA president Anson Conger Goodyear the A Conger Goodyear House in Old Westbury NY 1938 9 Both the Richard H Mandel House and A Conger Goodyear House are listed on the National Register of Historic Places 10 At the outset of World War II Stone enlisted in the U S Army He was promoted to the rank of major and served as chief of the Army Air Force Planning and Design Section 11 page needed Returning to New York after the war Stone was commissioned to design the ten story El Panama Hotel in Panama City Panama 1946 12 the University of Arkansas Fine Arts Center in Fayetteville 1948 13 and the 850 bed Hospital del Seguro Social del Empleado in Lima Peru 1950 note 2 14 nbsp U S Embassy in New Delhi India 1959 Stone s best known work was the Embassy of the United States in New Delhi India 1959 15 Tasked with creating a modern building that respected the architectural heritage of its host country he designed a temple like pavilion on a raised podium 16 Frank Lloyd Wright called the embassy one of the most beautiful buildings he had ever seen 17 and it won a first honor award from the American Institute of Architects AIA 18 page needed Subsequent commissions such as the Stanford University Medical Center in Palo Alto California 1955 19 the Stuart Pharmaceutical Company in Pasadena California 1956 20 and the United States pavilion at the 1958 Brussels World s Fair 1957 21 repeated elements originally designed for the embassy 22 The Stuart building and World s Fair pavilion both won awards from the AIA 18 page needed and Stone was elected to the Institute s College of Fellows in 1958 23 Described as romanticist 24 page needed Stone s ornate designs dubious discuss brought him commercial success 15 By the 1960s his firm was among the largest architectural practices in the United States with over 200 employees and offices on both coasts 25 Buildings from this period include the North Carolina State Legislative Building in Raleigh 1960 26 the Pakistan Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology in Nilore 1961 27 the National Geographic Society building in Washington D C 1961 28 the Museo de Arte in Ponce Puerto Rico 1961 29 the uptown campus of the University at Albany 1962 30 the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington D C 1962 31 the General Motors Building in New York City 1964 the PepsiCo World Headquarters in Purchase New York 1967 32 and the EcoTarium in Worcester Massachusetts 33 the Florida State Capital complex in Tallahassee 34 and the Standard Oil building now known as the Aon Center in Chicago Illinois all 1970 35 Stone also was the architect of the former Windham College in Putney Vermont Windham closed in 1978 and its abandoned campus was taken over by the present day Landmark College in 1985 Furthermore Stone also designed Harvey Mudd College in Claremont California Harvey Mudd College is a highly ranked private liberal arts college and according to Travel and Leisure Magazine in 2013 is one of America s ugliest college campuses Stone retired in 1974 and died in 1978 11 page needed Following a New York City funeral his ashes were buried in his hometown of Fayetteville 36 Honors and awards editHonorary degrees edit Doctor of Fine Arts University of Arkansas 1951 37 Doctor of Fine Arts Colby College 1959 38 Master of Fine Arts Otis Art Institute of Los Angeles County 1961 39 Doctor of Fine Arts Hamilton College 1962 40 Memberships and honors edit Medal of Honor New York Chapter of the American Institute of Architects 1955 41 American Institute of Architects Fellow 1958 23 National Institute of Arts amp Letters Member 1958 42 National Urban League Trustee 1958 43 American Academy of Arts amp Sciences Fellow 1960 44 American Federation of Arts Trustee 1960 45 National Institute of Social Sciences Gold Medal 1961 46 Building Stone Institute Architect of the Year 1964 47 Horatio Alger Award 1971 48 Architectural awards edit Silver Medal Architectural League of New York 1937 Guest House for Henry R Luce Mepkin Plantation Moncks Corner South Carolina 49 Silver Medal Architectural League of New York 1950 A Conger Goodyear Residence Old Westbury New York 50 Gold Medal Architectural League of New York 1950 Museum of Modern Art New York City Philip Goodwin Associate 50 Gold Medal Architectural League of New York 1950 El Panama Hotel Panama City Panama 51 First Honor Award American Institute of Architects 1958 Stuart Pharmaceutical Co Pasadena California 18 page needed Award of Merit American Institute of Architects 1958 U S Pavilion Brussels Belgium 18 page needed First Honor Award American Institute of Architects 1961 U S Embassy New Delhi India 18 page needed Award of Merit American Institute of Architects 1963 Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula Carmel California 52 Honor Award American Institute of Architects 1967 Ponce Museum of Art Ponce Puerto Rico 53 Selected works edit nbsp 2 Columbus Circle New York City 1958 before the facade was altered and the interior renovated nbsp North Carolina State Legislative Building in Raleigh North Carolina 1960 nbsp Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Washington D C 1962 nbsp The Uptown Campus of the State University of New York at Albany 1962 nbsp Busch Stadium 1966 the home of the St Louis Cardinals baseball team from 1966 to 2005 and the St Louis Cardinals football team from 1966 to 1987Radio City Music Hall and the Center Theater in Rockefeller Center New York City as senior designer in the employ of the Rockefeller Center Associated Architects with Donald Deskey and Eugene Schoen interior designers 1932 Richard H Mandel House Bedford Hills New York with Donald Deskey interior designer 1933 Mepkin Plantation for Mr and Mrs Henry R Luce now known as Mepkin Abbey Monck s Corner South Carolina 1936 Museum of Modern Art New York City Philip L Goodwin associate architect 1937 A Conger Goodyear House Old Westbury New York 1938 Ingersoll Steel Utility Unit House Kalamazoo Michigan 1946 El Panama Hotel Panama City Panama Mendez and Sanders associated architects 1946 Fine Arts Center University of Arkansas Fayetteville Arkansas Haralson amp Mott associated architects 1948 United States Embassy New Delhi India 1954 Phoenicia InterContinental Hotel first phase Beirut Lebanon Elias and Dagher associated architects 1954 Second phase by Joseph Philippe Karam then altered 1997 Stanford Medical Center Palo Alto California 1955 Bruno amp Josephine Graf Residence Dallas Texas 1956 Main Library and Mitchell Park Branch Library Palo Alto California 1956 Mitchell Park Branch demolished 2010 Edward Durell Stone Townhouse 130 East 64th Street New York City 1956 Stuart Pharmaceutical Co Pasadena California 1956 partially demolished U S Pavilion at Expo 58 Brussels Belgium 1957 partially demolished First Unitarian Society Church Schenectady New York 1958 Gallery of Modern Art including the Huntington Hartford Collection now known as Museum of Arts amp Design New York City 1958 substantially altered 2006 International Trade Mart now known as Four Seasons Hotel and Private Residences New Orleans New Orleans Louisiana Robert Hall associate architect 1959 Robert M Hughes Memorial Library Norfolk Virginia 1959 substantially altered 2011 Harvey Mudd College Claremont California 1959 North Carolina State Legislative Building Raleigh North Carolina Holloway Reeves amp Associates associated architects 1960 Beckman Auditorium California Institute of Technology Pasadena California 1960 National Geographic Society Museum Washington D C 1961 Museo de Arte Ponce Puerto Rico 1961 Windham College now known as Landmark College Putney Vermont 1961 State University of New York at Albany Albany New York 1962 John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Washington D C 1962 Prince George s Center now known as University Town Center Hyattsville Maryland 1962 Busch Memorial Stadium St Louis Missouri 1962 demolished 2005 WAPDA House Lahore Pakistan 1962 Stuhr Museum of the Prairie Pioneer Grand Island Nebraska 1963 Claremont School of Theology Claremont California 1963 P S 199 School Lincoln Square Upper West Side New York 1963 Davenport Public Library Davenport Iowa 1964 General Motors Building New York City Emory Roth and Sons associated architects 1964 Ethel Percy Andrus Gerontology Center University of Southern California Los Angeles California 1964 Tulsa Convention Center Tulsa Oklahoma Murray Jones and Murray associated architects 1964 expanded and renamed to Cox Business Center Von KleinSmid Center University of Southern California Los Angeles California 1964 Garden State Arts Center now known as PNC Bank Arts Center Holmdel New Jersey 1965 Pakistan Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology 1965 Georgetown University Law Center Bernard P McDonough Hall Washington D C 1966 Westgate Tower Austin Texas 1966 Brith Emeth Temple Pepper Pike Ohio 1967 Fort Worth City Hall Fort Worth Texas 1967 Kirwan Blanding Complex University of Kentucky Lexington Kentucky 1967 demolished 2020 PepsiCo World Headquarters Complex Purchase New York 1967 Jefferson County Civic Center Pine Bluff Arkansas 1968 Worcester Science Museum now known as the EcoTarium Worcester Massachusetts 1964 altered 1998 Aiwan e Sadr 1970 Islamabad Wilshire Colonnade Los Angeles California 1970 Eisenhower Medical Center Rancho Mirage California 1971 W E B Du Bois Library University of Massachusetts Amherst Amherst Massachusetts 1971 Amarillo Museum of Art Amarillo Texas 1972 Standard Oil Building now known as Aon Center Chicago Illinois Perkins amp Will associated architects 1972 Buffalo News Building Buffalo New York 1973 Scripps Green Hospital La Jolla California 1974 First Bank Building now known as First Canadian Place Toronto Ontario 1975 Babin Kuk Resort Dubrovnik Croatia 1976 Florida State Capitol Tallahassee Florida Reynolds Smith amp Hills associated architects 1977 University of Alabama School of Law Tuscaloosa Alabama 1977 Scripps Anderson Outpatient Pavilion La Jolla California by Edward Durell Stone Associates 1983 Government Center Station Miami Florida 1984 Scripps Research Institute La Jolla California by Edward Durell Stone Associates 1985 Museum of Anthropology Xalapa Veracruz Mexico by Edward Durell Stone Associates 1986 Gallery edit nbsp Radio City Music Hall New York City 1932 nbsp Anson Conger Goodyear House Old Westbury New York 1938 nbsp Anson Conger Goodyear House Old Westbury New York 1938 nbsp Stanford U Medical Center Palo Alto California 1955 nbsp Stuart Pharmaceutical Co Pasadena California 1956 nbsp Stuart Pharmaceutical Co Pasadena California 1956 nbsp Palo Alto Main Library Palo Alto California 1956 nbsp Edward Durell Stone Townhouse New York City 1956 nbsp United States Pavilion Expo 1958 Brussels Belgium 1957 nbsp First Unitarian Society Schenectady New York 1958 nbsp Beckman Auditorium California Institute of Technology Pasadena California 1960 nbsp Museo de Arte Ponce Puerto Rico 1961 nbsp National Geographic Society Headquarters Washington D C 1961 nbsp Metro One Building University Town Center Hyattsville Maryland 1962 nbsp Main academic podium University at Albany Albany New York 1962 nbsp Davenport Public Library Davenport Iowa 1964 nbsp Von KleinSmid Center University of Southern California Los Angeles California 1964 nbsp General Motors Building New York City 1964 nbsp ITM Building New Orleans Louisiana 1967 nbsp PepsiCo Headquarters Purchase New York 1967 nbsp Aon Center Chicago Illinois 1972 nbsp First Canadian Place Toronto Ontario Canada 1975 Footnotes editNotes edit The Koch house was designed in association with Carl Koch Jr The hospital was designed in association with Alfred L Aydelott Citations edit Division of Student Affairs Greek Life Sigma Nu University of Arkansas Archived from the original on July 6 2015 Retrieved February 17 2022 a b Stone 1962 Tech Student Wins Rotch Scholarship Boston Herald May 4 1927 Hunting 2013 House of Richard H Mandel Architectural Forum August 1935 Recent Work by Edward D Stone Architectural Forum July 1941 Grand Prize Prize Houses Over 12 000 Architectural Forum January 1939 Current Architecture The Museum of Modern Art New York City Architectural Review September 1939 Recent Work by Edward D Stone National Register of Historic Places Single Property Listings Finding Aid New York Tucson National Park Service Intermountain Region Museum Services Program 2017 a b Stone 2011 The Architectural Forum Vol 94 Billboard Publications 1951 p 139 Retrieved May 9 2020 University Art Center Architect Stone s sure hand with countless details creates a harmonious home for seven arts under one Arkansas roof Architectural Forum September 1951 Big Double Hospital Skillful handling of traffic and service flow by US architects integrates maternity and general health facilities for 850 Peruvian inpatients Architectural Forum June 1952 a b Goldberger Paul August 7 1978 Edward Durell Stone Dead at 76 Designed Major Works Worldwide The New York Times p A1 Retrieved April 27 2020 Jane C Loeffler The Architecture of Diplomacy New York Princeton Architectural Press 1998 It s news when Wright lauds an architect Palo Alto Times August 3 1955 a b c d e von Eckardt 1961 Medicine s new Taj Mahal Architectural Forum April 1958 Splendor in the Factory Architectural Record December 1959 A final look at Brussels Architectural Forum October 1958 Steven Bedford Stone Edward Durell in Encyclopedia of Architecture Design Engineering amp Construction ed by Joseph A Wilkes and Robert T Packard New York Wiley 1989 a b HONOR FOR ARCHITECTS Four Here Are Among Twenty Elected to Institute The New York Times April 27 1958 p 81 Retrieved April 27 2020 Stone 1967 100 Largest Architectural Firms in the U S Architectural Forum April 1963 100 Largest Architectural Firms in the U S Architectural Forum April 1964 Man with a billion on the drawing board Business Week October 8 1966 New Statehouse for North Carolina Architectural Forum December 1963 Architecture Mogul Modern Time August 12 1966 Ada Louise Huxtable Architecture In Capitol National Geographic Society s Building Sets a Standard for Washington New York Times December 11 1963 Ponce Design for a Temperate Climate Architectural Record April 1966 Douglas Dales Model of College Shown by State New York Times June 12 1962 Robert Hughes The New Monuments Time September 13 1971 From Park Avenue to an old polo Field a lush new setting for PepsiCo s headquarters Architectural Record February 1972 1 Florida The Legislature The multi phased construction program of the new capitol complex in Tallahassee Interior Design January 1979 Block Buster Approach to Architecture Progressive Architecture April 1970 Williams 1984 p 52 Art for Arkansas Interiors July 1951 12 Hunting Edward Durell Stone 12 Graduated at Otis Art Institute Los Angeles Times June 15 1961 p 65 Retrieved May 9 2020 Today s Youth Called Mature and Dedicated New York Times May 13 1962 Honors Architectural Record July 1955 16 Sandra Knox Prizes are given in Arts Letters New York Times May 22 1958 Negro Aid Termed Good for Business New York Times September 11 1958 Academy Elects 116 New York Times May 12 1960 Arts Group Elects 10 New York Times April 22 1960 Social Science Awards New York Times December 14 1961 Architects in the News Elder Named at B C Kahn Stone Saarinen Honored Architectural Record May 1962 58 Edward Durell Stone Cited by Building Stone Institute New York Times August 23 1964 People Stone Wins Stone Award AIA Journal October 1964 84 Alger Award Voted to Lowell Thomas New York Times May 12 1971 Architects Award Prizes in 3 Fields New York Times April 22 1937 a b ART AWARDS ANNOUNCED Architectural League Gives Medals in Gold Medal Show The New York Times June 2 1950 Retrieved April 27 2020 Wins Gold Medal Award Of Architectural League New York Times January 18 1952 Thomas Ennis Institute Honors 13 New Projects Progress Toward Delight in Environment Noted New York Times June 2 1963 John Leo Skidmore Owings Is Presented With 5 Of Architects 20 Awards Architects Give Annual Awards New York Times May 16 1967 Edward Durell Stone Museo de Arte de Ponce AIA Journal June 1967 47 Works cited edit Stone Edward Durell 1962 The Evolution of an Architect Horizon Press OCLC 929669 Stone Hicks 2011 Edward Durell Stone A Son s Untold Story of a Legendary Architect Random House Incorporated ISBN 978 0 8478 3568 3 von Eckardt Wolf 1961 Mid century Architecture in America Honor Awards of the American Institute of Architects 1949 1961 Johns Hopkins Press Hunting Mary Anne 2013 Edward Durell Stone Modernism s Populist Architect W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 73301 3 Retrieved May 9 2020 Williams John Griffith 1984 The curious and the beautiful a memoir history of the architecture program at the University of Arkansas University of Arkansas Press ISBN 9780938626329 Retrieved May 9 2020 Stone Edward Durell 1967 Edward Durell Stone Recent and Future Architecture New York Horizon Press General references edit Everett Derek R Modern Statehouses for Modern States Edward Durell Stone s Capitol Architecture in North Carolina and Florida Southern Historian Vol 28 Spring 2007 pp 74 91 Head Jeffrey Unearthing Stone Metropolis magazine Urban Journal January 2008 Heyer Paul Architects on Architecture New Directions in America New York Walker amp Co 1966 pp 172 183 Hunting Mary Anne Edward Durell Stone Perception and Criticism PhD diss Graduate Center City University of New York 2007 Hunting Mary Anne Edward Durell Stone In Oxford Bibliographies in Architecture Planning and Preservation New York Oxford University Press forthcoming Hunting Mary Anne From Craft to Industry Furniture designed by Edward Durell Stone for Senator Fulbright The Magazine Antiques May 2004 110 121 Hunting Mary Anne Legacy of Stone As Campus Buildings Rise and Fall A Leading Mid 20th Century Architect s Vision Endures Vanderbilt Magazine Summer 2014 18 19 78 79 Hunting Mary Anne The Richard H Mandel House in Bedford Hills New York Living with Antiques The Magazine Antiques July 2001 72 83 Hunting Mary Anne Rediscovering the Work of Edward Durell Stone Modern Magazine Spring 2013 70 and 72 Ricciotti Dominic Edward Durell Stone and the International Style in America Houses of the 1930s American Art Journal Vol 20 No 3 Summer 1988 pp 48 73 Ricciotti Dominic The 1939 Building of the Museum of Modern Art The Goodwin Stone Collaboration American Art Journal Vol 17 No 3 Summer 1985 pp 51 76 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edward Durell Stone The Edward Durell Stone web site a resource for current information on the life and work of Edward Durell Stone Finding Aid for the Edward Durell Stone Papers at The University of Arkansas David W Mullins Library Department of Special Collections Finding Aid for the James Hicks Stone Papers at The University of Arkansas David W Mullins Library Department of Special Collections The Edward Durell Stone entry in The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History amp Culture by Robert L Skolmen An Edward Durell Stone biography established and maintained by the State University of New York at Albany Photographs of the Bruno and Josephine Graf house in Dallas Texas Ethel Goodstein Murphree In Memoriam Edward Durell Stone s Carlson Terrace 1957 2007 Two views on 2 Columbus Circle Goodbye 2 Columbus Circle by Witold Rybczynski She Doesn t Want to Be Helped by Walt Lockley Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward Durell Stone amp oldid 1187694224, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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