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Wikipedia

Louis Sullivan

Louis Henry Sullivan (September 3, 1856 – April 14, 1924)[1] was an American architect, and has been called a "father of skyscrapers"[2] and "father of modernism."[3] He was an influential architect of the Chicago School, a mentor to Frank Lloyd Wright, and an inspiration to the Chicago group of architects who have come to be known as the Prairie School. Along with Wright and Henry Hobson Richardson, Sullivan is one of "the recognized trinity of American architecture."[4] The phrase "form follows function" is attributed to him, although the idea was theorised by Viollet le Duc who considered that structure and function in architecture should be the sole determinants of form.[5] In 1944, Sullivan was the second architect to posthumously receive the AIA Gold Medal.[6]

Louis Henry Sullivan
c. 1895
BornSeptember 3, 1856
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedApril 14, 1924(1924-04-14) (aged 67)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
OccupationArchitect

Early life and career

Sullivan was born to a Swiss-born mother, née Andrienne List (who had emigrated to Boston from Geneva with her parents and two siblings, Jenny, b. 1836, and Jules, b. 1841) and an Irish-born father, Patrick Sullivan. Both had immigrated to the United States in the late 1840s.[7] He learned that he could both graduate from high school a year early and bypass the first two years at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology by passing a series of examinations. Entering MIT at the age of sixteen, Sullivan studied architecture there briefly. After one year of study, he moved to Philadelphia and took a job with architect Frank Furness.

The Depression of 1873 dried up much of Furness's work, and he was forced to let Sullivan go. Sullivan moved to Chicago in 1873 to take part in the building boom following the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. He worked for William LeBaron Jenney, the architect often credited with erecting the first steel frame building. After less than a year with Jenney, Sullivan moved to Paris and studied at the École des Beaux-Arts for a year. He returned to Chicago and began work for the firm of Joseph S. Johnston & John Edelman as a draftsman. Johnston & Edleman were commissioned for the design of the Moody Tabernacle, and tasked Sullivan with the design of the interior decorative fresco secco stencils (stencil technique applied on dry plaster).[8] In 1879 Dankmar Adler hired Sullivan. A year later, Sullivan became a partner in Adler's firm. This marked the beginning of Sullivan's most productive years.

Adler and Sullivan initially achieved fame as theater architects. While most of their theaters were in Chicago, their fame won commissions as far west as Pueblo, Colorado, and Seattle, Washington (unbuilt). The culminating project of this phase of the firm's history was the 1889 Auditorium Building (1886–90, opened in stages) in Chicago, an extraordinary mixed-use building that included not only a 4,200-seat theater, but also a hotel and an office building with a 17-story tower and commercial storefronts at the ground level of the building, fronting Congress and Wabash Avenues. After 1889 the firm became known for their office buildings, particularly the 1891 Wainwright Building in St. Louis and the Schiller (later Garrick) Building and theater (1890) in Chicago. Other buildings often noted include the Chicago Stock Exchange Building (1894), the Guaranty Building (also known as the Prudential Building) of 1895–96 in Buffalo, New York, and the 1899–1904 Carson Pirie Scott Department Store by Sullivan on State Street in Chicago.

Sullivan and the steel high-rise

 
Prudential Building, also known as the Guaranty Building, Buffalo, New York, 1894

Prior to the late nineteenth century, the weight of a multi-story building had to be supported principally by the strength of its walls. The taller the building, the more strain this placed on the lower sections of the building; since there were clear engineering limits to the weight such "load-bearing" walls could sustain, tall designs meant massively thick walls on the ground floors, and definite limits on the building's height.

The development of cheap, versatile steel in the second half of the nineteenth century changed those rules. America was in the midst of rapid social and economic growth that made for great opportunities in architectural design. A much more urbanized society was forming and the society called out for new, larger buildings. The mass production of steel was the main driving force behind the ability to build skyscrapers during the mid-1880s. By assembling a framework of steel girders, architects and builders could create tall, slender buildings with a strong and relatively lightweight steel skeleton. The rest of the building elements—walls, floors, ceilings, and windows—were suspended from the skeleton, which carried the weight. This new way of constructing buildings, so-called "column-frame" construction, pushed them up rather than out. The steel weight-bearing frame allowed not just taller buildings, but permitted much larger windows, which meant more daylight reaching interior spaces. Interior walls became thinner, which created more usable (and rentable) floor space.

Chicago's Monadnock Building (not designed by Sullivan) straddles this remarkable moment of transition: the northern half of the building, finished in 1891, is of load-bearing construction, while the southern half, finished only two years later, is of column-frame construction. While experiments in this new technology were taking place in many cities, Chicago was the crucial laboratory. Industrial capital and civic pride drove a surge of new construction throughout the city's downtown in the wake of the 1871 fire.

The technical limits of weight-bearing masonry had imposed formal as well as structural constraints; suddenly, those constraints were gone. None of the historical precedents needed to be applied and this new freedom resulted in a technical and stylistic crisis of sorts. Sullivan addressed it by embracing the changes that came with the steel frame, creating a grammar of form for the high rise (base, shaft, and cornice), simplifying the appearance of the building by breaking away from historical styles, using his own intricate floral designs, in vertical bands, to draw the eye upward and to emphasize the vertical form of the building, and relating the shape of the building to its specific purpose. All this was revolutionary, appealingly honest, and commercially successful.

In 1896, Louis Sullivan wrote:

It is the pervading law of all things organic and inorganic, of all things physical and metaphysical, of all things human, and all things super-human, of all true manifestations of the head, of the heart, of the soul, that the life is recognizable in its expression, that form ever follows function. This is the law. (italics in original)[9]

 
Sullivan in 1919, painting by Frank A. Werner

"Form follows function" would become one of the prevailing tenets of modern architects.

Sullivan attributed the concept to Marcus Vitruvius Pollio, the Roman architect, engineer, and author, who first asserted in his book, De architectura (On architecture), that a structure must exhibit the three qualities of firmitas, utilitas, venustas – that is, it must be "solid, useful, beautiful."[10] This credo, which placed the demands of practical use above aesthetics, later would be taken by influential designers to imply that decorative elements, which architects call "ornament", were superfluous in modern buildings, but Sullivan neither thought nor designed along such dogmatic lines during the peak of his career. While his buildings could be spare and crisp in their principal masses, he often punctuated their plain surfaces with eruptions of lush Art Nouveau or Celtic Revival decorations, usually cast in iron or terra cotta, and ranging from organic forms, such as vines and ivy, to more geometric designs and interlace, inspired by his Irish design heritage. Terra cotta is lighter and easier to work with than stone masonry. Sullivan used it in his architecture because it had a malleability that was appropriate for his ornament. Probably the most famous example of ornament used by Sullivan is the writhing green ironwork that covers the entrance canopies of the Carson Pirie Scott store on south State Street.

Such ornaments, often executed by the talented younger draftsmen in Sullivan's employ, eventually would become Sullivan's trademark; to students of architecture, they are instantly recognizable as his signature.

Another signature element of Sullivan's work is the massive, semi-circular arch. Sullivan employed such arches throughout his career—in shaping entrances, in framing windows, or as interior design.

All of these elements are found in Sullivan's widely admired Guaranty Building, which he designed while partnered with Adler. Completed in 1895, this office building in Buffalo, New York is in the Palazzo style, visibly divided into three "zones" of design: a plain, wide-windowed base for the ground-level shops; the main office block, with vertical ribbons of masonry rising unimpeded across nine upper floors to emphasize the building's height; and an ornamented cornice perforated by round windows at the roof level, where the building's mechanical units (such as the elevator motors) were housed. The cornice is covered by Sullivan's trademark Art Nouveau vines and each ground-floor entrance is topped by a semi-circular arch.

Because Sullivan's remarkable accomplishments in design and construction occurred at such a critical time in architectural history, he often has been described as the "father" of the American skyscraper. But many architects had been building skyscrapers before or as contemporaries of Sullivan; they were designed as an expression of new technology. Chicago was replete with extraordinary designers and builders in the late years of the nineteenth century, including Sullivan's partner, Dankmar Adler, as well as Daniel Burnham and John Wellborn Root. Root was one of the builders of the Monadnock Building (see above). That and another Root design, the Masonic Temple Tower (both in Chicago), are cited by many as the originators of skyscraper aesthetics of bearing wall and column-frame construction, respectively.

Later career and decline

 
Ornamentation on the World's Fair Transportation Building, Chicago, 1893–94

In 1890 Sullivan was one of the ten U.S. architects, five from the east and five from the west, chosen to build a major structure for the "White City", the World's Columbian Exposition, held in Chicago in 1893. Sullivan's massive Transportation Building and huge arched "Golden Door" stood out as the only building not of the current Beaux-Arts style, and with the only multicolored facade in the entire White City. Sullivan and fair director Daniel Burnham were vocal about their displeasure with each other. Sullivan later claimed (1922) that the fair set the course of American architecture back "for half a century from its date, if not longer."[11] His was the only building to receive extensive recognition outside America, receiving three medals from the French-based Union Centrale des Arts Decoratifs the following year.

Like all American architects, Adler and Sullivan suffered a precipitous decline in their practice with the onset of the Panic of 1893. According to Charles Bebb, who was working in the office at that time, Adler borrowed money to try to keep employees on the payroll.[12] By 1894, however, in the face of continuing financial distress with no relief in sight, Adler and Sullivan dissolved their partnership. The Guaranty Building was considered the last major project of the firm.

By both temperament and connections, Adler had been the one who brought in new business to the partnership, and following the rupture Sullivan received few large commissions after the Carson Pirie Scott Department Store. He went into a twenty-year-long financial and emotional decline, beset by a shortage of commissions, chronic financial problems, and alcoholism. He obtained a few commissions for small-town Midwestern banks (see below), wrote books, and in 1922 appeared as a critic of Raymond Hood's winning entry for the Tribune Tower competition.

He died in a Chicago hotel room on April 14, 1924. He left a wife, Mary Azona Hattabaugh, from whom he was separated. A modest headstone marks his final resting spot in Graceland Cemetery in Chicago's Uptown and Lake View neighborhood. Later, a monument was erected in Sullivan's honor, a few feet from his headstone.

 
Monument for Sullivan in Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, Illinois - note the alternative spelling of his middle name on the memorial

Legacy

Sullivan's legacy is contradictory. Some consider him the first modernist.[13] His forward-looking designs clearly anticipate some issues and solutions of Modernism; however, his embrace of ornament makes his contribution distinct from the Modern Movement that coalesced in the 1920s and became known as the "International Style". Sullivan's built work expresses the appeal of his incredible designs: the vertical bands on the Wainwright Building, the burst of welcoming Art Nouveau ironwork on the corner entrance of the Carson Pirie Scott store, the (lost) terra cotta griffins and porthole windows on the Union Trust building, and the white angels of the Bayard Building, Sullivan's only work in New York City. Except for some designs by his longtime draftsman George Grant Elmslie, and the occasional tribute to Sullivan such as Schmidt, Garden & Martin's First National Bank in Pueblo, Colorado (built across the street from Adler and Sullivan's Pueblo Opera House), his style is unique. A visit to the preserved Chicago Stock Exchange trading floor, now at The Art Institute of Chicago, is proof of the immediate and visceral power of the ornament that he used so selectively.

Original drawings and other archival materials from Sullivan are held by the Ryerson & Burnham Libraries in the Art Institute of Chicago and by the drawings and archives department in the Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library at Columbia University. Fragments of Sullivan buildings also are held in many fine art and design museums around the world.

Preservation

During the postwar era of urban renewal, Sullivan's works fell into disfavor, and many were demolished. In the 1970s growing public concern for these buildings finally resulted in many being saved. The most vocal voice was Richard Nickel, who organized protests against the demolition of architecturally significant buildings.[14] Nickel and others sometimes rescued decorative elements from condemned buildings, sneaking in during demolition. Nickel died inside Sullivan's Stock Exchange building while trying to retrieve some elements, when a floor above him collapsed. Nickel had compiled extensive research on Adler and Sullivan and their many architectural commissions, which he intended to publish in book form.

After Nickel's death, in 1972 the Richard Nickel Committee was formed, to arrange for completion of his book, which was published in 2010. The book features all 256 commissions of Adler and Sullivan. The extensive archive of photographs and research that underpinned the book was donated to the Ryerson and Burnham Libraries at The Art Institute of Chicago. More than 1,300 photographs may be viewed on their website and more than 15,000 photographs are part of the collection at The Art Institute of Chicago. As finally published, the book, The Complete Architecture of Adler & Sullivan, was authored by Richard Nickel, Aaron Siskind, John Vinci, and Ward Miller.

 
Detail of the ornamentation of the Van Allen Building

Another champion of Sullivan's legacy was the architect Crombie Taylor (1907–1991), of Crombie Taylor Associates. After working in Chicago, where he had headed the famous "Institute of Design", later known as the Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT), in the 1950s and early 1960s, he had moved to Southern California. He led the effort to save the Van Allen Building in Clinton, Iowa from demolition.[15] Taylor, acting as an aesthetic consultant, had worked on the renovation of the Auditorium Building (now Roosevelt University) in Chicago.[16]

When he read an article about the planned demolition in Clinton, he uprooted his family from their home in southern California and moved them to Iowa. With the vision of a destination neighborhood comparable to Oak Park, Illinois, he set about creating a nonprofit to save the building, and was successful in doing so. Another advocate both of Sullivan buildings and of Wright structures was Jack Randall, who led an effort to save the Wainwright Building in St. Louis, Missouri at a very critical time. He relocated his family to Buffalo, New York to save Sullivan's Guaranty Building and Frank Lloyd Wright's Darwin Martin House from possible demolition. His efforts were successful in both St. Louis and Buffalo.

A collection of architectural ornaments designed by Sullivan is on permanent display at Lovejoy Library at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville.[17] The St. Louis Art Museum also has Sullivan architectural elements displayed. The City Museum in St. Louis has a large collection of Sullivan ornamentation on display, including a cornice from the demolished Chicago Stock Exchange, 29 feet long on one side, 13 feet on another, and nine feet high.[18]

The Guaranty Building Interpretive Center in Buffalo, on the first floor of the building now owned and occupied by the law firm Hodgson Russ, LLP, opened in 2017. The exhibit space was financed by Hodgson Russ, LLP, and co-designed by Flynn Battaglia Architects and Hadley Exhibits. It features a scale model of the building by David J. Carli, Professor of Engineering at the State University of New York at Alfred. The Center's exhibits were donated to Preservation Buffalo Niagara. The Center, the only museum dedicated to Sullivan, is open to the public.[19]

Sullivan in Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead

That the fictional character of Henry Cameron in Ayn Rand's 1943 novel The Fountainhead was similar to the real-life Sullivan was noted, if only in passing, by at least one journalist contemporary to the book.[20]

Although Rand's journal notes contain in toto only some 50 lines directly referring to Sullivan, it is clear from her mention of Sullivan's Autobiography of an Idea (1924) in her 25th-anniversary introduction to her earlier novel We the Living (first published in 1936, and unrelated to architecture) that she was intimately familiar with his life and career.[21] The term "the Fountainhead," which appears nowhere in Rand's novel proper, is found twice (as "the fountainhead" and later as "the fountain head") in Sullivan's autobiography, both times used metaphorically.[22]

The fictional Cameron is, like Sullivan – whose physical description he matches – a great innovative skyscraper pioneer late in the nineteenth century who dies impoverished and embittered in the mid-1920s. Cameron's rapid decline is explicitly attributed to the wave of classical Greco-Roman revivalism in architecture in the wake of the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition, just as Sullivan in his autobiography attributed his own downfall to the same event.[23]

The major difference between novel and real life was in the chronology of Cameron's relation with his protégé Howard Roark, the novel's hero, who eventually goes on to redeem his vision. That Roark's uncompromising individualism and his innovative organic style in architecture were drawn from the life and work of Frank Lloyd Wright is clear from Rand's journal notes, her correspondence, and various contemporary accounts.[24][25] In the novel, however, the 23-year-old Roark, a generation younger than the real-life Wright, becomes Cameron's protégé in the early 1920s, when Sullivan was long in decline.

The young Wright, by contrast, was Sullivan's protégé for seven years, beginning in 1887, when Sullivan was at the height of his fame and power. The two architects would sever their ties in 1894 due to Sullivan's angry reaction to Wright's moonlighting in breach of his contract with Sullivan, but Wright continued to call Sullivan "lieber Meister" ("beloved Master") for the rest of his life.[26] After decades of estrangement, Wright would again become close to the now-destitute Sullivan in the early 1920s, the time when Roark first comes under the likewise impoverished Cameron's tutelage in the novel.[27] Wright, however, was now in his fifties. Nevertheless, both the young Roark and middle-aged Wright had in common at that time that they both faced a decade of struggle ahead. After the triumphs earlier in his career, Wright came increasingly to be viewed as a has-been, until he experienced a renaissance in the latter half of the 1930s with such projects as Fallingwater and the Johnson Wax Headquarters.[28]

Selected projects

Buildings 1887–1895 by Adler & Sullivan:

 
Wainwright Tomb, St. Louis

Buildings 1887–1922 by Louis Sullivan: (256 total commissions and projects)

Banks

 
A portion of the western elevation of National Farmer's Bank, Owatonna, Minnesota (1908)

By the end of the first decade of the twentieth century, Sullivan's star was well on the descent[according to whom?] and, for the remainder of his life, his output consisted primarily of a series of small bank and commercial buildings in the Midwest. Yet a look at these buildings clearly reveals[according to whom?] that Sullivan's muse had not abandoned him. When the director of a bank that was considering hiring him asked Sullivan why they should engage him at a cost higher than the bids received for a conventional Neo-Classic styled building from other architects, Sullivan is reported to have replied, "A thousand architects could design those buildings. Only I can design this one." He got the job. Today[when?] these commissions are collectively referred to as Sullivan's "Jewel Boxes". All still stand.

Lost buildings

 
Entrance from the 1893 Chicago Stock Exchange building, saved and reinstalled at The Art Institute of Chicago
  • Chicago Stock Exchange Building, Adler & Sullivan, 1893, demolished 1972
The trading room from the Stock Exchange was removed intact prior to the building being demolished and subsequently, was restored in the Art Institute of Chicago in 1977; the entryway arch (seen at right) stands outside on the northeast corner of the AIC site
  • Zion Temple, Chicago, 1884, demolished 1954
  • Troescher Building, Chicago, 1884, demolished 1978
  • Transportation Building, World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1893–94, an exposition building built to last a year
  • Louis Sullivan and Charnley Cottages, Ocean Springs, Mississippi, destroyed in Hurricane Katrina; Frank Lloyd Wright also claimed credit for the design
  • Schiller Building (later Garrick Theater), Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1891, demolished 1961[39]
  • Third McVickers Theater, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1883? demolished 1922
  • Thirty-Ninth Street Passenger Station, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1886, demolished 1934
  • Standard Club, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1887–88, demolished 1931
  • Pilgrim Baptist Church, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1891, destroyed by fire January 6, 2006
  • Wirt Dexter Building, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1887, destroyed by fire October 24, 2006
  • George Harvey House, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1888 destroyed by fire November 4, 2006

Gallery

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ The spelling of Sullivan's middle name (whether Henry or Henri) has caused confusion. According to Robert Twombly, Louis Sullivan – His Life and Work (Elizabeth Sifton Books, New York City, 1986), his birth certificate read Henry Louis Sullivan, although he was called Louis Henry. Sullivan helped propagate confusion over his middle name as well by announcing, in his book Autobiography of an Idea, which he wrote at the end of his life, at a time when professional failure and alcohol may have clouded his judgment, that he had been named Louis Henri after his grandfather Henri List (see footnote below). The latter spelling was in turn enshrined by the designers of his funerary monument (see picture in text).
  2. ^ Kaufman, Mervyn D. (1969). Father of Skyscrapers: A Biography of Louis Sullivan. Boston: Little, Brown and Company.
  3. ^ Chambers Biographical Dictionary. London: Chambers Harrap, 2007. s.v. "Sullivan, Louis Henry," http://www.credoreference.com/entry/chambbd/sullivan_louis_henry (subscription required)
  4. ^ O'Gorman, James F. (1991). Three American Architects: Richardson, Sullivan, and Wright, 1865-1915. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. xv. ISBN 978-0-226-62071-8.
  5. ^ Dewidar, Khaled (2017). "Violet Le Duc theories of Architecture". Researchgate. British University in Egypt. doi:10.13140/RG.2.2.36647.04006.
  6. ^ "Gold Medal Award Recipients". The American Institute of Architects. Retrieved March 12, 2016.
  7. ^ Sullivan, Louis H. Autobiography of an Idea. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, 2009 (reprint of 1924 edition), p. 31. This reference illustrates Sullivan's adoption of the "Henri" spelling of his middle name towards the end of his life.
  8. ^ Louis Sullivan at www.prairiestyles.com
  9. ^ Sullivan, Louis. "The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered", Lippincott's Monthly Magazine (March 1896)
  10. ^ Sullivan, Louis (1924). Autobiography of an Idea. New York City: Press of the American institute of Architects, Inc. p. 108.
  11. ^ Sullivan, Louis (1924). Autobiography of an Idea. New York City: Press of the American institute of Architects, Inc. p. 325.
  12. ^ Jeffrey Karl Ochsner and Dennis Alan Andersen, Distant Corner: Seattle Architects and the Legacy of H.H. Richardson (Seattle and London: University of Washington Press, 2003), 287-288.
  13. ^ Abbott, J. (2000). "Louis Sullivan, Architectural Modernism, and the Creation of Democratic Space". The American Sociologist. 31 (1): 62–85. doi:10.1007/s12108-000-1005-0. S2CID 144344744.
  14. ^ Cahan, Richard (1994). They All Fall Down - Richard Nickel's Struggle to Save American's Architecture. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons. p. 90. ISBN 0-471-14426-6.
  15. ^ Nickel, Richard; Aaron Siskind; John Vinci; Ward Miller (2010). The Complete Architecture of Adler and Sullivan. Chicago: Richard Nickel Committee. p. 428. ISBN 978-0-9660273-2-7.
  16. ^ Siry, Joseph M. (2002). The Chicago Auditorium Building - Adler and Sullivan's Architecture and the City. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. pp. 318, 398, 411. ISBN 0-226-76133-9.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on October 27, 2013.
  18. ^ "The City Museum in Saint Louis will do anything—even risk eternal damnation—to build its Louis Sullivan collection". Chicago Reader. May 30, 2018. Retrieved September 15, 2020.
  19. ^ "Visitors now welcome at landmark Guaranty Building". The Buffalo News. January 26, 2017. Retrieved August 31, 2017.
  20. ^ Life magazine; September 2, 1946; reply by editor to reader's letter, p.22
  21. ^ "My view of what a good autobiography should be is contained in the title that Louis H. Sullivan gave to the story of his life: The Autobiography of an Idea." Rand, Ayn (2009) [1958]. "Forward". We the Living. New American Library. pp. xiii. This is the total mention by Rand; she does not bother to tell the reader that Sullivan was an architect or anything else about him.
  22. ^ Sullivan, Louis H. (2009) [1924]. Autobiography of an Idea. Dover Publications. pp. 20, 213.
  23. ^ Rand, Ayn (1943). The Fountainhead. Bobbs-Merrill. pp. 34–35.; Sullivan, Louis H. (1924). The Autobiography of an Idea. pp. 324–327.
  24. ^ Rand, Ayn. The Journals of Ayn Rand Plume, 1999. Section 5
  25. ^ Rand, Ayn The Letters of Ayn Rand New York: Dutton, 1995. Section 3
  26. ^ Wright, Frank Lloyd (1949). Genius and Mobocracy. Duell Sloan & Pearce. pp. 66–67.
  27. ^ Wright, Frank Lloyd (1949). Genius and Mobocracy. Duell Sloan & Pearce. pp. 71–76.
  28. ^ Toker, Franklin. Fallingwater Rising. Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 14–15.
  29. ^ Architectural Plans for Wainwright tomb, The Steedman Exhibit. July 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ "Wainwright Tomb - St. Louis, Missouri - American Guide Series on Waymarking.com". Retrieved October 28, 2016.
  31. ^ Historic Americal Buildings Survey, MO-1637A, Wainwright Tomb.[permanent dead link]
  32. ^ Apple, R. W. Jr. "On the Road: St. Louis: The River Runs by It, History Through It" The New York Times (April 16, 1999)
  33. ^ Abeln, Mark Scott. "Two by Sullivan". Retrieved October 28, 2016.
  34. ^ Chase, Theodore. (ed.) Markers V Journal of the Association for Gravestone Studies Lapham Maryland: University Press of America, 1988, at Internet Archive
  35. ^ St. Louis' Historic Cemeteries Offer Final Rest for the Rich and Famous.[permanent dead link]
  36. ^ Tusculum College December 13, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ "Why a Minnesota bank building ranks among the nation’s most significant architecture", PBS NewsHour, June 15, 2022.
  38. ^ Twombly. Robert, Louis Sullivan: His life and work, Elisabeth Sifton Books, New York, 1986 p. 458
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on February 22, 2012. Retrieved October 28, 2016.

Bibliography

  • Columbian Gallery – A Portfolio of Photographs of the World's Fair, The Werner Company, Chicago, IL, 1894.
  • Condit, Carl W., The Chicago School of Architecture, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL, 1964.
  • Connely, Willard, Louis Sullivan as He Lived, Horizon Press, Inc., NY, 1960.
  • Engelbrecht, Lloyd C., "Adler and Sullivan's Pueblo Opera House: City Status for a New Town in the Rockies", The Art Bulletin, College Art Association of America, June 1985.
  • Gebhard, David (May 1960). "Louis Sullivan and George Grant Elmslie". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 19 (2): 62–68. doi:10.2307/988008. JSTOR 988008.
  • Hoffmann, Donald (January 13, 1998). Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Sullivan, and the skyscraper. Courier Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-40209-3. Retrieved March 27, 2011.
  • Morrison, Hugh, Louis Sullivan – Prophet of Modern Architecture, W.W. Norton & Co., Inc. New York City, 1963.
  • Nickel, Richard; Siskind, Aaron; Vinci, John; and Miller, Ward. The Complete Architecture of Adler & Sullivan, Richard Nickel Committee, Chicago, Illinois, 2010.
  • Sullivan, Louis, The Autobiography of an Idea, Press of the American institute of Architects, Inc., New York City, 1924.
  • Sullivan, Louis, Kindergarten Chats and Other Writings, Dover Publications, Inc., New York City, 1979.
  • Sullivan, Louis, Louis Sullivan: The Public Papers Ed. Robert Twombly, Chicago University Press, Chicago & London, 1988
  • Thomas, George E.; Cohen, Jeffrey A.; and Lewis, Michael J.; Frank Furness – The Complete Works, Princeton Architectural Press, New York City, 1991.
  • Twombly, Robert, Louis Sullivan – His Life and Work, Elizabeth Sifton Books, New York City, 1986.
  • Vinci, John, The Art Institute of Chicago: The Stock Exchange Trading Room, The Art Institute of Chicago, 1977.
  • Weingarden, Lauren S. Louis H. Sullivan: A System of Architectural Ornament [1924]. Art Institute of Chicago and Ernst Wasmuth Verlag (Germany); distributed by Rizzoli International (U.S.), Wasmuth (Germany), Mardaga (France), 1990.
  • Weingarden, Lauren S. Louis H. Sullivan: The Banks. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1987.

External links

  • Atlantic.com slideshow, "The Architecture of Louis Sullivan," with photographs by Richard Nickel and others
  • Article on fragments of Adler and Sullivan Buildings in Chicago
  • "Sullivan's Banks" documentary by Heinz Emigholz
  • Louis H. Sullivan Ornaments – digital photographs of ornaments with historic photographs of the original buildings
  • Louis Sullivan "The tall office building artistically considered" – Transcribed from Lippincott's Magazine (March 1896)
  • Works by Louis Sullivan at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

louis, sullivan, other, people, named, disambiguation, louis, henry, sullivan, september, 1856, april, 1924, american, architect, been, called, father, skyscrapers, father, modernism, influential, architect, chicago, school, mentor, frank, lloyd, wright, inspi. For other people named Louis Sullivan see Louis Sullivan disambiguation Louis Henry Sullivan September 3 1856 April 14 1924 1 was an American architect and has been called a father of skyscrapers 2 and father of modernism 3 He was an influential architect of the Chicago School a mentor to Frank Lloyd Wright and an inspiration to the Chicago group of architects who have come to be known as the Prairie School Along with Wright and Henry Hobson Richardson Sullivan is one of the recognized trinity of American architecture 4 The phrase form follows function is attributed to him although the idea was theorised by Viollet le Duc who considered that structure and function in architecture should be the sole determinants of form 5 In 1944 Sullivan was the second architect to posthumously receive the AIA Gold Medal 6 Louis Henry Sullivanc 1895BornSeptember 3 1856Boston Massachusetts U S DiedApril 14 1924 1924 04 14 aged 67 Chicago Illinois U S OccupationArchitect Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Sullivan and the steel high rise 3 Later career and decline 4 Legacy 5 Preservation 6 Sullivan in Ayn Rand s The Fountainhead 7 Selected projects 7 1 Banks 7 2 Lost buildings 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly life and career EditSullivan was born to a Swiss born mother nee Andrienne List who had emigrated to Boston from Geneva with her parents and two siblings Jenny b 1836 and Jules b 1841 and an Irish born father Patrick Sullivan Both had immigrated to the United States in the late 1840s 7 He learned that he could both graduate from high school a year early and bypass the first two years at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology by passing a series of examinations Entering MIT at the age of sixteen Sullivan studied architecture there briefly After one year of study he moved to Philadelphia and took a job with architect Frank Furness The Depression of 1873 dried up much of Furness s work and he was forced to let Sullivan go Sullivan moved to Chicago in 1873 to take part in the building boom following the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 He worked for William LeBaron Jenney the architect often credited with erecting the first steel frame building After less than a year with Jenney Sullivan moved to Paris and studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts for a year He returned to Chicago and began work for the firm of Joseph S Johnston amp John Edelman as a draftsman Johnston amp Edleman were commissioned for the design of the Moody Tabernacle and tasked Sullivan with the design of the interior decorative fresco secco stencils stencil technique applied on dry plaster 8 In 1879 Dankmar Adler hired Sullivan A year later Sullivan became a partner in Adler s firm This marked the beginning of Sullivan s most productive years Adler and Sullivan initially achieved fame as theater architects While most of their theaters were in Chicago their fame won commissions as far west as Pueblo Colorado and Seattle Washington unbuilt The culminating project of this phase of the firm s history was the 1889 Auditorium Building 1886 90 opened in stages in Chicago an extraordinary mixed use building that included not only a 4 200 seat theater but also a hotel and an office building with a 17 story tower and commercial storefronts at the ground level of the building fronting Congress and Wabash Avenues After 1889 the firm became known for their office buildings particularly the 1891 Wainwright Building in St Louis and the Schiller later Garrick Building and theater 1890 in Chicago Other buildings often noted include the Chicago Stock Exchange Building 1894 the Guaranty Building also known as the Prudential Building of 1895 96 in Buffalo New York and the 1899 1904 Carson Pirie Scott Department Store by Sullivan on State Street in Chicago Sullivan and the steel high rise Edit Prudential Building also known as the Guaranty Building Buffalo New York 1894 Prior to the late nineteenth century the weight of a multi story building had to be supported principally by the strength of its walls The taller the building the more strain this placed on the lower sections of the building since there were clear engineering limits to the weight such load bearing walls could sustain tall designs meant massively thick walls on the ground floors and definite limits on the building s height The development of cheap versatile steel in the second half of the nineteenth century changed those rules America was in the midst of rapid social and economic growth that made for great opportunities in architectural design A much more urbanized society was forming and the society called out for new larger buildings The mass production of steel was the main driving force behind the ability to build skyscrapers during the mid 1880s By assembling a framework of steel girders architects and builders could create tall slender buildings with a strong and relatively lightweight steel skeleton The rest of the building elements walls floors ceilings and windows were suspended from the skeleton which carried the weight This new way of constructing buildings so called column frame construction pushed them up rather than out The steel weight bearing frame allowed not just taller buildings but permitted much larger windows which meant more daylight reaching interior spaces Interior walls became thinner which created more usable and rentable floor space Chicago s Monadnock Building not designed by Sullivan straddles this remarkable moment of transition the northern half of the building finished in 1891 is of load bearing construction while the southern half finished only two years later is of column frame construction While experiments in this new technology were taking place in many cities Chicago was the crucial laboratory Industrial capital and civic pride drove a surge of new construction throughout the city s downtown in the wake of the 1871 fire The technical limits of weight bearing masonry had imposed formal as well as structural constraints suddenly those constraints were gone None of the historical precedents needed to be applied and this new freedom resulted in a technical and stylistic crisis of sorts Sullivan addressed it by embracing the changes that came with the steel frame creating a grammar of form for the high rise base shaft and cornice simplifying the appearance of the building by breaking away from historical styles using his own intricate floral designs in vertical bands to draw the eye upward and to emphasize the vertical form of the building and relating the shape of the building to its specific purpose All this was revolutionary appealingly honest and commercially successful In 1896 Louis Sullivan wrote It is the pervading law of all things organic and inorganic of all things physical and metaphysical of all things human and all things super human of all true manifestations of the head of the heart of the soul that the life is recognizable in its expression that form ever follows function This is the law italics in original 9 Sullivan in 1919 painting by Frank A Werner Form follows function would become one of the prevailing tenets of modern architects Sullivan attributed the concept to Marcus Vitruvius Pollio the Roman architect engineer and author who first asserted in his book De architectura On architecture that a structure must exhibit the three qualities of firmitas utilitas venustas that is it must be solid useful beautiful 10 This credo which placed the demands of practical use above aesthetics later would be taken by influential designers to imply that decorative elements which architects call ornament were superfluous in modern buildings but Sullivan neither thought nor designed along such dogmatic lines during the peak of his career While his buildings could be spare and crisp in their principal masses he often punctuated their plain surfaces with eruptions of lush Art Nouveau or Celtic Revival decorations usually cast in iron or terra cotta and ranging from organic forms such as vines and ivy to more geometric designs and interlace inspired by his Irish design heritage Terra cotta is lighter and easier to work with than stone masonry Sullivan used it in his architecture because it had a malleability that was appropriate for his ornament Probably the most famous example of ornament used by Sullivan is the writhing green ironwork that covers the entrance canopies of the Carson Pirie Scott store on south State Street Such ornaments often executed by the talented younger draftsmen in Sullivan s employ eventually would become Sullivan s trademark to students of architecture they are instantly recognizable as his signature Another signature element of Sullivan s work is the massive semi circular arch Sullivan employed such arches throughout his career in shaping entrances in framing windows or as interior design All of these elements are found in Sullivan s widely admired Guaranty Building which he designed while partnered with Adler Completed in 1895 this office building in Buffalo New York is in the Palazzo style visibly divided into three zones of design a plain wide windowed base for the ground level shops the main office block with vertical ribbons of masonry rising unimpeded across nine upper floors to emphasize the building s height and an ornamented cornice perforated by round windows at the roof level where the building s mechanical units such as the elevator motors were housed The cornice is covered by Sullivan s trademark Art Nouveau vines and each ground floor entrance is topped by a semi circular arch Because Sullivan s remarkable accomplishments in design and construction occurred at such a critical time in architectural history he often has been described as the father of the American skyscraper But many architects had been building skyscrapers before or as contemporaries of Sullivan they were designed as an expression of new technology Chicago was replete with extraordinary designers and builders in the late years of the nineteenth century including Sullivan s partner Dankmar Adler as well as Daniel Burnham and John Wellborn Root Root was one of the builders of the Monadnock Building see above That and another Root design the Masonic Temple Tower both in Chicago are cited by many as the originators of skyscraper aesthetics of bearing wall and column frame construction respectively Later career and decline Edit Ornamentation on the World s Fair Transportation Building Chicago 1893 94 In 1890 Sullivan was one of the ten U S architects five from the east and five from the west chosen to build a major structure for the White City the World s Columbian Exposition held in Chicago in 1893 Sullivan s massive Transportation Building and huge arched Golden Door stood out as the only building not of the current Beaux Arts style and with the only multicolored facade in the entire White City Sullivan and fair director Daniel Burnham were vocal about their displeasure with each other Sullivan later claimed 1922 that the fair set the course of American architecture back for half a century from its date if not longer 11 His was the only building to receive extensive recognition outside America receiving three medals from the French based Union Centrale des Arts Decoratifs the following year Like all American architects Adler and Sullivan suffered a precipitous decline in their practice with the onset of the Panic of 1893 According to Charles Bebb who was working in the office at that time Adler borrowed money to try to keep employees on the payroll 12 By 1894 however in the face of continuing financial distress with no relief in sight Adler and Sullivan dissolved their partnership The Guaranty Building was considered the last major project of the firm By both temperament and connections Adler had been the one who brought in new business to the partnership and following the rupture Sullivan received few large commissions after the Carson Pirie Scott Department Store He went into a twenty year long financial and emotional decline beset by a shortage of commissions chronic financial problems and alcoholism He obtained a few commissions for small town Midwestern banks see below wrote books and in 1922 appeared as a critic of Raymond Hood s winning entry for the Tribune Tower competition He died in a Chicago hotel room on April 14 1924 He left a wife Mary Azona Hattabaugh from whom he was separated A modest headstone marks his final resting spot in Graceland Cemetery in Chicago s Uptown and Lake View neighborhood Later a monument was erected in Sullivan s honor a few feet from his headstone Monument for Sullivan in Graceland Cemetery Chicago Illinois note the alternative spelling of his middle name on the memorialLegacy EditSullivan s legacy is contradictory Some consider him the first modernist 13 His forward looking designs clearly anticipate some issues and solutions of Modernism however his embrace of ornament makes his contribution distinct from the Modern Movement that coalesced in the 1920s and became known as the International Style Sullivan s built work expresses the appeal of his incredible designs the vertical bands on the Wainwright Building the burst of welcoming Art Nouveau ironwork on the corner entrance of the Carson Pirie Scott store the lost terra cotta griffins and porthole windows on the Union Trust building and the white angels of the Bayard Building Sullivan s only work in New York City Except for some designs by his longtime draftsman George Grant Elmslie and the occasional tribute to Sullivan such as Schmidt Garden amp Martin s First National Bank in Pueblo Colorado built across the street from Adler and Sullivan s Pueblo Opera House his style is unique A visit to the preserved Chicago Stock Exchange trading floor now at The Art Institute of Chicago is proof of the immediate and visceral power of the ornament that he used so selectively Original drawings and other archival materials from Sullivan are held by the Ryerson amp Burnham Libraries in the Art Institute of Chicago and by the drawings and archives department in the Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library at Columbia University Fragments of Sullivan buildings also are held in many fine art and design museums around the world Preservation EditDuring the postwar era of urban renewal Sullivan s works fell into disfavor and many were demolished In the 1970s growing public concern for these buildings finally resulted in many being saved The most vocal voice was Richard Nickel who organized protests against the demolition of architecturally significant buildings 14 Nickel and others sometimes rescued decorative elements from condemned buildings sneaking in during demolition Nickel died inside Sullivan s Stock Exchange building while trying to retrieve some elements when a floor above him collapsed Nickel had compiled extensive research on Adler and Sullivan and their many architectural commissions which he intended to publish in book form After Nickel s death in 1972 the Richard Nickel Committee was formed to arrange for completion of his book which was published in 2010 The book features all 256 commissions of Adler and Sullivan The extensive archive of photographs and research that underpinned the book was donated to the Ryerson and Burnham Libraries at The Art Institute of Chicago More than 1 300 photographs may be viewed on their website and more than 15 000 photographs are part of the collection at The Art Institute of Chicago As finally published the book The Complete Architecture of Adler amp Sullivan was authored by Richard Nickel Aaron Siskind John Vinci and Ward Miller Detail of the ornamentation of the Van Allen Building Another champion of Sullivan s legacy was the architect Crombie Taylor 1907 1991 of Crombie Taylor Associates After working in Chicago where he had headed the famous Institute of Design later known as the Illinois Institute of Technology IIT in the 1950s and early 1960s he had moved to Southern California He led the effort to save the Van Allen Building in Clinton Iowa from demolition 15 Taylor acting as an aesthetic consultant had worked on the renovation of the Auditorium Building now Roosevelt University in Chicago 16 When he read an article about the planned demolition in Clinton he uprooted his family from their home in southern California and moved them to Iowa With the vision of a destination neighborhood comparable to Oak Park Illinois he set about creating a nonprofit to save the building and was successful in doing so Another advocate both of Sullivan buildings and of Wright structures was Jack Randall who led an effort to save the Wainwright Building in St Louis Missouri at a very critical time He relocated his family to Buffalo New York to save Sullivan s Guaranty Building and Frank Lloyd Wright s Darwin Martin House from possible demolition His efforts were successful in both St Louis and Buffalo A collection of architectural ornaments designed by Sullivan is on permanent display at Lovejoy Library at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville 17 The St Louis Art Museum also has Sullivan architectural elements displayed The City Museum in St Louis has a large collection of Sullivan ornamentation on display including a cornice from the demolished Chicago Stock Exchange 29 feet long on one side 13 feet on another and nine feet high 18 The Guaranty Building Interpretive Center in Buffalo on the first floor of the building now owned and occupied by the law firm Hodgson Russ LLP opened in 2017 The exhibit space was financed by Hodgson Russ LLP and co designed by Flynn Battaglia Architects and Hadley Exhibits It features a scale model of the building by David J Carli Professor of Engineering at the State University of New York at Alfred The Center s exhibits were donated to Preservation Buffalo Niagara The Center the only museum dedicated to Sullivan is open to the public 19 Sullivan in Ayn Rand s The Fountainhead EditThat the fictional character of Henry Cameron in Ayn Rand s 1943 novel The Fountainhead was similar to the real life Sullivan was noted if only in passing by at least one journalist contemporary to the book 20 Although Rand s journal notes contain in toto only some 50 lines directly referring to Sullivan it is clear from her mention of Sullivan s Autobiography of an Idea 1924 in her 25th anniversary introduction to her earlier novel We the Living first published in 1936 and unrelated to architecture that she was intimately familiar with his life and career 21 The term the Fountainhead which appears nowhere in Rand s novel proper is found twice as the fountainhead and later as the fountain head in Sullivan s autobiography both times used metaphorically 22 The fictional Cameron is like Sullivan whose physical description he matches a great innovative skyscraper pioneer late in the nineteenth century who dies impoverished and embittered in the mid 1920s Cameron s rapid decline is explicitly attributed to the wave of classical Greco Roman revivalism in architecture in the wake of the 1893 World s Columbian Exposition just as Sullivan in his autobiography attributed his own downfall to the same event 23 The major difference between novel and real life was in the chronology of Cameron s relation with his protege Howard Roark the novel s hero who eventually goes on to redeem his vision That Roark s uncompromising individualism and his innovative organic style in architecture were drawn from the life and work of Frank Lloyd Wright is clear from Rand s journal notes her correspondence and various contemporary accounts 24 25 In the novel however the 23 year old Roark a generation younger than the real life Wright becomes Cameron s protege in the early 1920s when Sullivan was long in decline The young Wright by contrast was Sullivan s protege for seven years beginning in 1887 when Sullivan was at the height of his fame and power The two architects would sever their ties in 1894 due to Sullivan s angry reaction to Wright s moonlighting in breach of his contract with Sullivan but Wright continued to call Sullivan lieber Meister beloved Master for the rest of his life 26 After decades of estrangement Wright would again become close to the now destitute Sullivan in the early 1920s the time when Roark first comes under the likewise impoverished Cameron s tutelage in the novel 27 Wright however was now in his fifties Nevertheless both the young Roark and middle aged Wright had in common at that time that they both faced a decade of struggle ahead After the triumphs earlier in his career Wright came increasingly to be viewed as a has been until he experienced a renaissance in the latter half of the 1930s with such projects as Fallingwater and the Johnson Wax Headquarters 28 Selected projects EditSee also Category Louis Sullivan buildings Buildings 1887 1895 by Adler amp Sullivan Martin Ryerson Tomb Graceland Cemetery Chicago 1887 Auditorium Building Chicago 1889 Carrie Eliza Getty Tomb Graceland Cemetery Chicago 1890 Wainwright Building St Louis 1890 Wainwright Tomb St Louis Charlotte Dickson Wainwright Tomb Bellefontaine Cemetery St Louis 1892 listed on the National Register of Historic Places shown at right 29 30 31 is considered a major American architectural triumph 32 a model for ecclesiastical architecture 33 a masterpiece 34 and has been called the Taj Mahal of St Louis The family name appears nowhere on the tomb 35 Union Trust Building St Louis 1893 street level ornament heavily altered in 1924 Guaranty Building formerly Prudential Building Buffalo 1894 Buildings 1887 1922 by Louis Sullivan 256 total commissions and projects Springer Block later Bay State Building and Burnham Building and Kranz Buildings Chicago 1885 1887 Selz Schwab amp Company Factory Chicago 1886 1887 Hebrew Manual Training School Chicago 1889 1890 James H Walker Warehouse amp Company Store Chicago 1886 1889 Warehouse for E W Blatchford Chicago 1889 James Charnley House also known as the Charnley Persky House Museum Foundation and the National Headquarters of the Society of Architectural Historians Chicago 1891 1892 Albert Sullivan Residence Chicago 1891 1892 McVicker s Theater second remodeling Chicago 1890 1891 Bayard Building now Bayard Condict Building 65 69 Bleecker Street New York City 1898 Sullivan s only building in New York with a glazed terra cotta curtain wall expressing the steel structure behind it Commercial Loft of Gage Brothers amp Company Chicago 1898 1900 Holy Trinity Russian Orthodox Cathedral and Rectory Chicago 1900 1903 Carson Pirie Scott store originally known as the Schlesinger amp Mayer Store now known as Sullivan Center Chicago 1899 1904 Virginia Hall of Tusculum College Greeneville Tennessee 1901 36 Van Allen Building Clinton Iowa 1914 St Paul United Methodist Church Cedar Rapids Iowa 1910 Krause Music Store Chicago final commission 1922 front facade only Banks Edit A portion of the western elevation of National Farmer s Bank Owatonna Minnesota 1908 By the end of the first decade of the twentieth century Sullivan s star was well on the descent according to whom and for the remainder of his life his output consisted primarily of a series of small bank and commercial buildings in the Midwest Yet a look at these buildings clearly reveals according to whom that Sullivan s muse had not abandoned him When the director of a bank that was considering hiring him asked Sullivan why they should engage him at a cost higher than the bids received for a conventional Neo Classic styled building from other architects Sullivan is reported to have replied A thousand architects could design those buildings Only I can design this one He got the job Today when these commissions are collectively referred to as Sullivan s Jewel Boxes All still stand National Farmer s Bank Owatonna Minnesota 1908 37 Peoples Savings Bank Cedar Rapids Iowa 1912 Henry Adams Building Algona Iowa 1913 Merchants National Bank Grinnell Iowa 1914 Home Building Association Company Newark Ohio 1914 Purdue State Bank West Lafayette Indiana 1914 People s Federal Savings and Loan Association Sidney Ohio 1918 Farmers and Merchants Bank Columbus Wisconsin 1919 First National Bank Manistique Michigan 1919 1920 a remodeling of an existing bank building 38 Lost buildings Edit Grand Opera House Chicago 1880 demolished 1927 Washington Elementary School Marengo Illinois Adler amp Sullivan year needed demolished 1993 citation needed Pueblo Opera House Pueblo Colorado 1890 destroyed by fire 1922 New Orleans Union Station 1892 demolished 1954 Dooly Block Salt Lake City Utah 1891 demolished 1965 Entrance from the 1893 Chicago Stock Exchange building saved and reinstalled at The Art Institute of Chicago Chicago Stock Exchange Building Adler amp Sullivan 1893 demolished 1972The trading room from the Stock Exchange was removed intact prior to the building being demolished and subsequently was restored in the Art Institute of Chicago in 1977 the entryway arch seen at right stands outside on the northeast corner of the AIC site dd Zion Temple Chicago 1884 demolished 1954 Troescher Building Chicago 1884 demolished 1978 Transportation Building World s Columbian Exposition Chicago Adler amp Sullivan 1893 94 an exposition building built to last a year Louis Sullivan and Charnley Cottages Ocean Springs Mississippi destroyed in Hurricane Katrina Frank Lloyd Wright also claimed credit for the design Schiller Building later Garrick Theater Chicago Adler amp Sullivan 1891 demolished 1961 39 Third McVickers Theater Chicago Adler amp Sullivan 1883 demolished 1922 Thirty Ninth Street Passenger Station Chicago Adler amp Sullivan 1886 demolished 1934 Standard Club Chicago Adler amp Sullivan 1887 88 demolished 1931 Pilgrim Baptist Church Chicago Adler amp Sullivan 1891 destroyed by fire January 6 2006 Wirt Dexter Building Chicago Adler amp Sullivan 1887 destroyed by fire October 24 2006 George Harvey House Chicago Adler amp Sullivan 1888 destroyed by fire November 4 2006Gallery Edit Union Trust Building Wainwright Building Wainwright Building cornice Auditorium Building Chicago Stock Exchange Building Getty Tomb Bayard Condict Building Carson Pirie Scott store The Van Allen Building Gage Building on right Holy Trinity Russian Orthodox Cathedral exterior Holy Trinity Russian Orthodox Cathedral interior People s Federal Savings and Loan Association Peoples Savings Bank National Farmer s Bank of Owatonna Harold C Bradley House Wisconsin Merchants National Bank Grinnell Iowa Krause Music Store Farmers and Merchants Union Bank Columbus WisconsinSee also Edit Biography portalAmerican Prize for Architecture Richard Bock Tall The American Skyscraper and Louis SullivanReferences EditNotes The spelling of Sullivan s middle name whether Henry or Henri has caused confusion According to Robert Twombly Louis Sullivan His Life and Work Elizabeth Sifton Books New York City 1986 his birth certificate read Henry Louis Sullivan although he was called Louis Henry Sullivan helped propagate confusion over his middle name as well by announcing in his book Autobiography of an Idea which he wrote at the end of his life at a time when professional failure and alcohol may have clouded his judgment that he had been named Louis Henri after his grandfather Henri List see footnote below The latter spelling was in turn enshrined by the designers of his funerary monument see picture in text Kaufman Mervyn D 1969 Father of Skyscrapers A Biography of Louis Sullivan Boston Little Brown and Company Chambers Biographical Dictionary London Chambers Harrap 2007 s v Sullivan Louis Henry http www credoreference com entry chambbd sullivan louis henry subscription required O Gorman James F 1991 Three American Architects Richardson Sullivan and Wright 1865 1915 Chicago University of Chicago Press p xv ISBN 978 0 226 62071 8 Dewidar Khaled 2017 Violet Le Duc theories of Architecture Researchgate British University in Egypt doi 10 13140 RG 2 2 36647 04006 Gold Medal Award Recipients The American Institute of Architects Retrieved March 12 2016 Sullivan Louis H Autobiography of an Idea Mineola New York Dover Publications 2009 reprint of 1924 edition p 31 This reference illustrates Sullivan s adoption of the Henri spelling of his middle name towards the end of his life Louis Sullivan at www prairiestyles com Sullivan Louis The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered Lippincott s Monthly Magazine March 1896 Sullivan Louis 1924 Autobiography of an Idea New York City Press of the American institute of Architects Inc p 108 Sullivan Louis 1924 Autobiography of an Idea New York City Press of the American institute of Architects Inc p 325 Jeffrey Karl Ochsner and Dennis Alan Andersen Distant Corner Seattle Architects and the Legacy of H H Richardson Seattle and London University of Washington Press 2003 287 288 Abbott J 2000 Louis Sullivan Architectural Modernism and the Creation of Democratic Space The American Sociologist 31 1 62 85 doi 10 1007 s12108 000 1005 0 S2CID 144344744 Cahan Richard 1994 They All Fall Down Richard Nickel s Struggle to Save American s Architecture Hoboken John Wiley amp Sons p 90 ISBN 0 471 14426 6 Nickel Richard Aaron Siskind John Vinci Ward Miller 2010 The Complete Architecture of Adler and Sullivan Chicago Richard Nickel Committee p 428 ISBN 978 0 9660273 2 7 Siry Joseph M 2002 The Chicago Auditorium Building Adler and Sullivan s Architecture and the City Chicago The University of Chicago Press pp 318 398 411 ISBN 0 226 76133 9 Sullivan Collection in Lovejoy Library Archived from the original on October 27 2013 The City Museum in Saint Louis will do anything even risk eternal damnation to build its Louis Sullivan collection Chicago Reader May 30 2018 Retrieved September 15 2020 Visitors now welcome at landmark Guaranty Building The Buffalo News January 26 2017 Retrieved August 31 2017 Life magazine September 2 1946 reply by editor to reader s letter p 22 My view of what a good autobiography should be is contained in the title that Louis H Sullivan gave to the story of his life The Autobiography of an Idea Rand Ayn 2009 1958 Forward We the Living New American Library pp xiii This is the total mention by Rand she does not bother to tell the reader that Sullivan was an architect or anything else about him Sullivan Louis H 2009 1924 Autobiography of an Idea Dover Publications pp 20 213 Rand Ayn 1943 The Fountainhead Bobbs Merrill pp 34 35 Sullivan Louis H 1924 The Autobiography of an Idea pp 324 327 Rand Ayn The Journals of Ayn Rand Plume 1999 Section 5 Rand Ayn The Letters of Ayn Rand New York Dutton 1995 Section 3 Wright Frank Lloyd 1949 Genius and Mobocracy Duell Sloan amp Pearce pp 66 67 Wright Frank Lloyd 1949 Genius and Mobocracy Duell Sloan amp Pearce pp 71 76 Toker Franklin Fallingwater Rising Alfred A Knopf pp 14 15 Architectural Plans for Wainwright tomb The Steedman Exhibit Archived July 20 2011 at the Wayback Machine Wainwright Tomb St Louis Missouri American Guide Series on Waymarking com Retrieved October 28 2016 Historic Americal Buildings Survey MO 1637A Wainwright Tomb permanent dead link Apple R W Jr On the Road St Louis The River Runs by It History Through It The New York Times April 16 1999 Abeln Mark Scott Two by Sullivan Retrieved October 28 2016 Chase Theodore ed Markers V Journal of the Association for Gravestone Studies Lapham Maryland University Press of America 1988 at Internet Archive St Louis Historic Cemeteries Offer Final Rest for the Rich and Famous permanent dead link Tusculum College Archived December 13 2009 at the Wayback Machine Why a Minnesota bank building ranks among the nation s most significant architecture PBS NewsHour June 15 2022 Twombly Robert Louis Sullivan His life and work Elisabeth Sifton Books New York 1986 p 458 Home Archived from the original on February 22 2012 Retrieved October 28 2016 Bibliography Columbian Gallery A Portfolio of Photographs of the World s Fair The Werner Company Chicago IL 1894 Condit Carl W The Chicago School of Architecture University of Chicago Press Chicago IL 1964 Connely Willard Louis Sullivan as He Lived Horizon Press Inc NY 1960 Engelbrecht Lloyd C Adler and Sullivan s Pueblo Opera House City Status for a New Town in the Rockies The Art Bulletin College Art Association of America June 1985 Gebhard David May 1960 Louis Sullivan and George Grant Elmslie Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 19 2 62 68 doi 10 2307 988008 JSTOR 988008 Hoffmann Donald January 13 1998 Frank Lloyd Wright Louis Sullivan and the skyscraper Courier Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 40209 3 Retrieved March 27 2011 Morrison Hugh Louis Sullivan Prophet of Modern Architecture W W Norton amp Co Inc New York City 1963 Nickel Richard Siskind Aaron Vinci John and Miller Ward The Complete Architecture of Adler amp Sullivan Richard Nickel Committee Chicago Illinois 2010 Sullivan Louis The Autobiography of an Idea Press of the American institute of Architects Inc New York City 1924 Sullivan Louis Kindergarten Chats and Other Writings Dover Publications Inc New York City 1979 Sullivan Louis Louis Sullivan The Public Papers Ed Robert Twombly Chicago University Press Chicago amp London 1988 Thomas George E Cohen Jeffrey A and Lewis Michael J Frank Furness The Complete Works Princeton Architectural Press New York City 1991 Twombly Robert Louis Sullivan His Life and Work Elizabeth Sifton Books New York City 1986 Vinci John The Art Institute of Chicago The Stock Exchange Trading Room The Art Institute of Chicago 1977 Weingarden Lauren S Louis H Sullivan A System of Architectural Ornament 1924 Art Institute of Chicago and Ernst Wasmuth Verlag Germany distributed by Rizzoli International U S Wasmuth Germany Mardaga France 1990 Weingarden Lauren S Louis H Sullivan The Banks Cambridge Mass MIT Press 1987 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louis Sullivan Wikiquote has quotations related to Louis Sullivan Book The Complete Architecture of Adler amp Sullivan by Richard Nickel Aaron Siskind John Vinci and Ward Miller Atlantic com slideshow The Architecture of Louis Sullivan with photographs by Richard Nickel and others Article on fragments of Adler and Sullivan Buildings in Chicago Sullivan s Banks documentary by Heinz Emigholz Louis H Sullivan Ornaments digital photographs of ornaments with historic photographs of the original buildings Louis Sullivan The tall office building artistically considered Transcribed from Lippincott s Magazine March 1896 Works by Louis Sullivan at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louis Sullivan amp oldid 1150230067, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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