fbpx
Wikipedia

Raymond Hood

Raymond Mathewson Hood (March 29, 1881 – August 14, 1934) was an American architect who worked in the Neo-Gothic and Art Deco styles. He is best known for his designs of the Tribune Tower, American Radiator Building, and Rockefeller Center. Through a short yet highly successful career, Hood exerted an outsized influence on twentieth century architecture.[1][2]

Raymond Hood
Born(1881-03-29)March 29, 1881
DiedAugust 14, 1934(1934-08-14) (aged 53)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materBrown University
MIT
École des Beaux-Arts
OccupationArchitect
BuildingsTribune Tower, 330 West 42nd Street, Rockefeller Center, Daily News Building

Early life and education Edit

Early life Edit

Raymond Mathewson Hood was born in Pawtucket, Rhode Island on March 29, 1881, to John Parmenter Hood and Vella Mathewson. John Hood was the owner of J.N. Polsey & Co., a crate and box manufacturing company. The family lived at 107 Cottage Street in a house designed by John Hood and local architect Albert H. Humes.[3] In a 1931 profile of Hood in The New Yorker, writer Allene Talmey described the Hood home as "the ugliest place in town."[4] In 1893, the Hood family visited the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, an experience that may have sparked Hood's interest in architecture.[3]

Education Edit

In 1898, Hood graduated from Pawtucket High School. Later that year Hood enrolled at Brown University. At Brown he studied mathematics, rhetoric, French, and drawing. In 1899, seeking more opportunities to pursue an architectural education, Hood enrolled at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[5]

At MIT, Hood studied under Constant-Désiré Despradelle, a prominent proponent of the Beaux-Arts style.[6] Hood excelled at creating meticulously rendered architectural drawings,[7] and after graduating worked as a draftsman for Cram, Goodhue and Ferguson.[8] During his time at Cram, Goodhue and Ferguson, Hood purportedly worked on the 1899 design of the Classical Revival Deborah Cook Sayles Public Library.[3]

 
Hood in 1906

In June 1904, Hood returned to Pawtucket before leaving for Europe with the intention of studying at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Hood failed his first attempt at the entrance exam in October 1904 though was accepted after his second attempt in 1905.[3] His capstone diplôme project at the École was a city hall for Pawtucket, his hometown. The project, which was never realized, fused classical features with modern technology.[9]

Career Edit

 
The Tribune Tower in Chicago (1924) references the Rouen Cathedral
 
The Daily News Building in Manhattan (1929), rendering by Hugh Ferriss

In 1911, Hood returned to the US, taking a job at the office of Henry Hornbostel in Pittsburgh.[4]

In 1916, Hood designed an ambitious plan for downtown Providence; the project's defining feature was a 600 feet (180 m) civic tower, whose pedimented base occupied the entire southern edge of Exchange Place. The plan, which was likewise never realized, was published in The Providence Journal under the headline "A Striking Plan for Dignifying Civic Centre."[10]

Chicago Tribune Tower Edit

In 1922, New York architect John Mead Howells, who had met him at the École des Beaux-Arts, invited Hood to become his partner in the Chicago Tribune building competition in which Howells had been invited to compete. The neo-Gothic design submitted by Howells and Hood won the competition beating the designs of prominent competitors, including Eliel Saarinen, Walter Gropius, and Adolf Loos.

The design proved pivotal in Hood's career, catalyzing his emergence as a preeminent architect of the era.[11][4]

American Radiator Building Edit

Among the commissions received by Hood in the immediate wake of his design for the Tribune Tower, was a design for a new New York office tower for the American Radiator Company. In his 1924 design for the building, produced in collaboration with architect Jacques André Fouilhoux, Hood moved towards a looser interpretation of Gothic architecture, cladding the structure in black brick. The design was additionally noted for its revolutionary use of lighting. According to art and architectural historian Dietrich Neumann, the design "helped to introduce a new age of color and light in American architecture."[3]

Approach Edit

Hood did not consider himself an artist, but saw himself as "manufacturing shelter",[12] writing:

There has been entirely too much talk about the collaboration of architect, painter and sculptor; nowadays, the collaborators are the architects, the engineer, and the plumber. ... Buildings are constructed for certain purposes, and the buildings of today are more practical, from the standpoint of the man who is in them than the older buildings. ... We are considering effort and convenience much more than appearance or effect.[13]

Hood's design theory was aligned with that of the Bauhaus, in that he valued utility as beauty:

Beauty is utility, developed in a manner to which the eye is accustomed by habit, in so far as this development does not detract from its quality of usefulness.[14]

Despite this paean to utility, Hood's designs featured non-utilitarian aspects such as roof gardens, polychromy, and Art Deco ornamentation. As much as Hood might insist that his designs were largely determined by the practicalities of zoning laws and the restraints of economics, each of his major buildings were different enough to suggest that Hood's design artistry was a significant factor in the final result.[12]

While a student at the École des Beaux-Arts, Hood met John Mead Howells, with whom he later partnered. Hood frequently employed architectural sculptor Rene Paul Chambellan both for architectural sculptures for his building and to make plasticine models of his projects. Hood is believed to have coined the term "Architecture of the Night" in a 1930 pamphlet published by General Electric.[15]

Hood died at age 53 due to arthritis[16] and was interred at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Sleepy Hollow, New York.

Influence Edit

Hood's buildings were featured in works by Georgia O'Keeffe (Radiator Building—Night, New York, 1927), Diego Rivera (Frozen Asssets, 1931), and Berenice Abbott (McGraw-Hill Building, 1936; Fortieth Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenue, 1938), and Samuel Gottscho (Rockefeller Center and RCA Building from 515 Madison Ave, 1933).[3]

Works Edit

Built works Edit

Unbuilt works Edit

  • Pawtucket City Hall, Pawtucket, RI, 1911
  • Providence Civic Center, Providence, RI, 1916
  • Providence County Court House, Providence, RI, 1924; competition
  • Polish National Alliance Building, Chicago, IL, 1924; Hood's design won the competition but was never built
  • Ridgewood Municipal Building, Ridgewood, NJ, 1926; Hood's design won the competition but was never built
  • Central Methodist Episcopal Church, Columbus, OH, 1927
  • Rockland County Courthouse, New City, NY, 1929; competition
  • Girard College Chapel, Philadelphia, PA, 1930; competition[23]

Exhibitions Edit

In 1984, the Whitney Museum hosted an exhibition of Hood's work entitled "City of Towers." Curated by Carol Willis, the exhibit featured Hood's sketches and blueprints.[24]

In 2020, The David Winton Bell Gallery at Brown University, Hood's alma mater, held an online exhibition titled "Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper." The exhibition focused on a selection of Hood's built and unbuilt skyscrapers, and included about 70 of his architectural drawings, photographs, models, and books.[25]

References Edit

Notes

  1. ^ "Spotlight: Raymond Hood". ArchDaily. March 29, 2020. Retrieved March 9, 2021.
  2. ^ "Architectural Archives | Weitzman School". www.design.upenn.edu. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Conklin, Jo-Ann; Duval, Jonathan; Neumann, Dietrich (2020). (PDF). Providence, RI: David Winton Bell Gallery. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 19, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c Talmey, Allene (April 11, 1931). "Man Against the Sky". The New Yorker.
  5. ^ "Raymond Hood: Early Life and Education". raymond-hood-exhibition.brown.edu. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  6. ^ "Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper: Early Life and Education, 2c". David Winton Bell Gallery. Providence, Rhode Island: Brown University. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  7. ^ "Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper: Early Life and Education, 2b". David Winton Bell Gallery. Providence, Rhode Island: Brown University. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  8. ^ "Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper: Early Life and Education, 2e". David Winton Bell Gallery. Providence, Rhode Island: Brown University. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  9. ^ "Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper, September 11, 2020 - December 18, 2020". David Winton Bell Gallery. Providence, Rhode Island: Brown University. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  10. ^ "Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper, September 11, 2020 - December 18, 2020". David Winton Bell Gallery. Providence, Rhode Island: Brown University. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  11. ^ "Raymond Hood: American Radiator Building". raymond-hood-exhibition.brown.edu. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  12. ^ a b Robins, Anthony W. (September 11, 1979). "McGraw-Hill Building Designation Report" (PDF). New York Landmarks Preservation Commission.
  13. ^ Woolf, S. J. "An Architect Hails the Rule of Reason - Design that is grounded in material and function ill make buildings more beautiful, says Raymond Hood" New York Times Magazine (November 1, 1931) quoted in Robins, Anthony W. "McGraw-Hill Building Designation Report" New York Landmarks Preservation Commission (September 11, 1979)
  14. ^ Griswold, J. B. "Nine Years Ago, Raymond M Hood Was Behind in his Rent ... Today - he holds the spotlight as a master shoman of stone and steel" American Magazine (October 1931) p.145, quoted in Robins, Anthony W. "McGraw-Hill Building Designation Report" New York Landmarks Preservation Commission (September 11, 1979)
  15. ^ "Architecture of the Night" General Electric Company (1930)
  16. ^ "Raymond Hood Dies; Was Noted Architect". Retrieved June 23, 2022.
  17. ^ Gray, Christopher (November 4, 1990). "Streetscapes: The Bleecker Street Cinema; The 'Lost' Frescoes of an Artist-Soldier". The New York Times. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
  18. ^ Leuthold, Bill (May 1978). The Architecture of Raymond M. Hood. The University of Florida.
  19. ^ Gray, Christopher (February 18, 2010). "Where the Orchestras Played and the Mice Presided". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved August 9, 2021.
  20. ^ Gray, Christopher (November 12, 1995). "Streetscapes: 3 East 84th Street;An Art Deco Precursor of the Daily News Building". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved August 5, 2021.
  21. ^ "Beaux-Arts Apartments, 307 East 44th Street" (PDF). New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. July 11, 1989.
  22. ^ "Beaux-Arts Apartments, 310 East 44th Street" (PDF). New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. July 11, 1989.
  23. ^ Hood, Raymond M. (Raymond Mathewson) (1931). Raymond M. Hood. Internet Archive. New York ; London : Whittlesey House, McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc.
  24. ^ Goldberger, Paul (January 3, 1984). "RAYMOND HOOD AND HIS VISIONS OF SKYSCRAPERS (Published 1984)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
  25. ^ "Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper, September 11, 2020 - December 18, 2020". David Winton Bell Gallery. Providence, Rhode Island: Brown University. Retrieved February 6, 2021.

Bibliography

  • Duval, Jonathan and Dietrich Neumann, Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper. Providence, RI: Bell Gallery, Brown University, 2020.
  • Frampton, Kenneth. "Storia dell'Architettura Moderna" 4a edizione, Zanichelli
  • Gargiani, Roberto. Rem Koolhaas/Oma. Grandi Opere-Gli Architetti, editori Laterza
  • Hood, Raymond M. (1931) Contemporary American Architects: Raymond M. Hood. New York: Whittlesey House, McGraw-Hill. ISBN 1135799431
    • Features a large collection of photographs of Hood's works.
  • Kilham, Walter H. (1973). Raymond Hood, Architect - Form Through Function in the American Skyscraper. Architectural Book Publishing Co Inc, New York.
  • Kvaran, Einar Einarsson. Architectural Sculpture of America. unpublished manuscript

External links Edit

  • Works by or about Raymond Hood at Internet Archive
  • Raymond M. Hood architectural drawings and papers, circa 1890-1944.Held by the Department of Drawings & Archives, Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library, Columbia University.
  • The Raymond Hood Photograph Collection at the New-York Historical Society

raymond, hood, member, michigan, house, representatives, raymond, hood, raymond, mathewson, hood, march, 1881, august, 1934, american, architect, worked, gothic, deco, styles, best, known, designs, tribune, tower, american, radiator, building, rockefeller, cen. For the member of the Michigan House of Representatives see Raymond W Hood Raymond Mathewson Hood March 29 1881 August 14 1934 was an American architect who worked in the Neo Gothic and Art Deco styles He is best known for his designs of the Tribune Tower American Radiator Building and Rockefeller Center Through a short yet highly successful career Hood exerted an outsized influence on twentieth century architecture 1 2 Raymond HoodBorn 1881 03 29 March 29 1881Pawtucket Rhode IslandDiedAugust 14 1934 1934 08 14 aged 53 Stamford ConnecticutNationalityAmericanAlma materBrown University MIT Ecole des Beaux ArtsOccupationArchitectBuildingsTribune Tower 330 West 42nd Street Rockefeller Center Daily News BuildingContents 1 Early life and education 1 1 Early life 1 2 Education 2 Career 2 1 Chicago Tribune Tower 2 2 American Radiator Building 3 Approach 4 Influence 5 Works 5 1 Built works 5 2 Unbuilt works 6 Exhibitions 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and education EditEarly life Edit Raymond Mathewson Hood was born in Pawtucket Rhode Island on March 29 1881 to John Parmenter Hood and Vella Mathewson John Hood was the owner of J N Polsey amp Co a crate and box manufacturing company The family lived at 107 Cottage Street in a house designed by John Hood and local architect Albert H Humes 3 In a 1931 profile of Hood in The New Yorker writer Allene Talmey described the Hood home as the ugliest place in town 4 In 1893 the Hood family visited the World s Columbian Exposition in Chicago an experience that may have sparked Hood s interest in architecture 3 Education Edit In 1898 Hood graduated from Pawtucket High School Later that year Hood enrolled at Brown University At Brown he studied mathematics rhetoric French and drawing In 1899 seeking more opportunities to pursue an architectural education Hood enrolled at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 5 At MIT Hood studied under Constant Desire Despradelle a prominent proponent of the Beaux Arts style 6 Hood excelled at creating meticulously rendered architectural drawings 7 and after graduating worked as a draftsman for Cram Goodhue and Ferguson 8 During his time at Cram Goodhue and Ferguson Hood purportedly worked on the 1899 design of the Classical Revival Deborah Cook Sayles Public Library 3 nbsp Hood in 1906In June 1904 Hood returned to Pawtucket before leaving for Europe with the intention of studying at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris Hood failed his first attempt at the entrance exam in October 1904 though was accepted after his second attempt in 1905 3 His capstone diplome project at the Ecole was a city hall for Pawtucket his hometown The project which was never realized fused classical features with modern technology 9 Career Edit nbsp The Tribune Tower in Chicago 1924 references the Rouen Cathedral nbsp The Daily News Building in Manhattan 1929 rendering by Hugh Ferriss In 1911 Hood returned to the US taking a job at the office of Henry Hornbostel in Pittsburgh 4 In 1916 Hood designed an ambitious plan for downtown Providence the project s defining feature was a 600 feet 180 m civic tower whose pedimented base occupied the entire southern edge of Exchange Place The plan which was likewise never realized was published in The Providence Journal under the headline A Striking Plan for Dignifying Civic Centre 10 Chicago Tribune Tower Edit Main article Tribune Tower In 1922 New York architect John Mead Howells who had met him at the Ecole des Beaux Arts invited Hood to become his partner in the Chicago Tribune building competition in which Howells had been invited to compete The neo Gothic design submitted by Howells and Hood won the competition beating the designs of prominent competitors including Eliel Saarinen Walter Gropius and Adolf Loos The design proved pivotal in Hood s career catalyzing his emergence as a preeminent architect of the era 11 4 American Radiator Building Edit Main article American Radiator Building Among the commissions received by Hood in the immediate wake of his design for the Tribune Tower was a design for a new New York office tower for the American Radiator Company In his 1924 design for the building produced in collaboration with architect Jacques Andre Fouilhoux Hood moved towards a looser interpretation of Gothic architecture cladding the structure in black brick The design was additionally noted for its revolutionary use of lighting According to art and architectural historian Dietrich Neumann the design helped to introduce a new age of color and light in American architecture 3 Approach EditHood did not consider himself an artist but saw himself as manufacturing shelter 12 writing There has been entirely too much talk about the collaboration of architect painter and sculptor nowadays the collaborators are the architects the engineer and the plumber Buildings are constructed for certain purposes and the buildings of today are more practical from the standpoint of the man who is in them than the older buildings We are considering effort and convenience much more than appearance or effect 13 Hood s design theory was aligned with that of the Bauhaus in that he valued utility as beauty Beauty is utility developed in a manner to which the eye is accustomed by habit in so far as this development does not detract from its quality of usefulness 14 Despite this paean to utility Hood s designs featured non utilitarian aspects such as roof gardens polychromy and Art Deco ornamentation As much as Hood might insist that his designs were largely determined by the practicalities of zoning laws and the restraints of economics each of his major buildings were different enough to suggest that Hood s design artistry was a significant factor in the final result 12 While a student at the Ecole des Beaux Arts Hood met John Mead Howells with whom he later partnered Hood frequently employed architectural sculptor Rene Paul Chambellan both for architectural sculptures for his building and to make plasticine models of his projects Hood is believed to have coined the term Architecture of the Night in a 1930 pamphlet published by General Electric 15 Hood died at age 53 due to arthritis 16 and was interred at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Sleepy Hollow New York Influence EditHood s buildings were featured in works by Georgia O Keeffe Radiator Building Night New York 1927 Diego Rivera Frozen Asssets 1931 and Berenice Abbott McGraw Hill Building 1936 Fortieth Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenue 1938 and Samuel Gottscho Rockefeller Center and RCA Building from 515 Madison Ave 1933 3 Works EditBuilt works Edit John Green Residence New York NY 1920 alteration to an existing apartment building Mori New York NY 1920 Hood designed a new facade for a restaurant that had opened in 1883 17 St Vincent de Paul Asylum Tarrytown NY 1924 with J Andre Fouilhoux Tribune Tower Chicago IL 1924 Raymond Hood House Stamford CT 1924 American Radiator Building New York NY 1924 Bethany Union Church Chicago IL 1926 Ocean Forest Country Club Myrtle Beach SC 1926 1927 McCormick Mausoleum Rockford IL 1927 18 William R Morris House Greenwich CT 1927 711 Fifth Avenue New York NY 1927 19 3 East 84th Street New York NY 1928 with John Mead Howells 20 Ideal House London UK 1929 Daily News Building New York NY 1929 Masonic Temple Scranton PA 1929 Beaux Arts Apartments 307 and 310 East 44th Street New York NY 1930 21 22 DuPont Building Wilmington DE 1930 additions with Godley and Fouilhoux Joseph Patterson Residence Ossining NY 1930 with Fouilhoux Rockefeller Center New York NY 1933 1937 where Hood was a senior architect on the Associated Architects Rex Cole Showrooms Bay Ridge and Flushing NY 1931 with Godley and Fouilhoux McGraw Hill Building New York NY 1931Unbuilt works Edit Pawtucket City Hall Pawtucket RI 1911 Providence Civic Center Providence RI 1916 Providence County Court House Providence RI 1924 competition Polish National Alliance Building Chicago IL 1924 Hood s design won the competition but was never built Ridgewood Municipal Building Ridgewood NJ 1926 Hood s design won the competition but was never built Central Methodist Episcopal Church Columbus OH 1927 Rockland County Courthouse New City NY 1929 competition Girard College Chapel Philadelphia PA 1930 competition 23 nbsp Pawtucket City Hall unbuilt nbsp Providence Civic Center unbuilt nbsp Mori Restaurant nbsp Providence County Court House unbuilt nbsp Polish National Alliance Building unbuilt nbsp Tribune Tower nbsp American Radiator Building nbsp Ocean Forest Country Club nbsp Ideal House nbsp Daily News Building nbsp Beaux Arts Apartments nbsp Scranton Cultural Center nbsp Rockefeller Center nbsp McGraw Hill BuildingExhibitions EditIn 1984 the Whitney Museum hosted an exhibition of Hood s work entitled City of Towers Curated by Carol Willis the exhibit featured Hood s sketches and blueprints 24 In 2020 The David Winton Bell Gallery at Brown University Hood s alma mater held an online exhibition titled Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper The exhibition focused on a selection of Hood s built and unbuilt skyscrapers and included about 70 of his architectural drawings photographs models and books 25 References EditNotes Spotlight Raymond Hood ArchDaily March 29 2020 Retrieved March 9 2021 Architectural Archives Weitzman School www design upenn edu Retrieved March 8 2021 a b c d e f Conklin Jo Ann Duval Jonathan Neumann Dietrich 2020 Raymond Hood and the American Skyscrape PDF Providence RI David Winton Bell Gallery Archived from the original PDF on February 19 2021 a b c Talmey Allene April 11 1931 Man Against the Sky The New Yorker Raymond Hood Early Life and Education raymond hood exhibition brown edu Retrieved February 17 2021 Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper Early Life and Education 2c David Winton Bell Gallery Providence Rhode Island Brown University Retrieved February 6 2021 Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper Early Life and Education 2b David Winton Bell Gallery Providence Rhode Island Brown University Retrieved February 6 2021 Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper Early Life and Education 2e David Winton Bell Gallery Providence Rhode Island Brown University Retrieved February 6 2021 Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper September 11 2020 December 18 2020 David Winton Bell Gallery Providence Rhode Island Brown University Retrieved February 6 2021 Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper September 11 2020 December 18 2020 David Winton Bell Gallery Providence Rhode Island Brown University Retrieved February 6 2021 Raymond Hood American Radiator Building raymond hood exhibition brown edu Retrieved February 17 2021 a b Robins Anthony W September 11 1979 McGraw Hill Building Designation Report PDF New York Landmarks Preservation Commission Woolf S J An Architect Hails the Rule of Reason Design that is grounded in material and function ill make buildings more beautiful says Raymond Hood New York Times Magazine November 1 1931 quoted in Robins Anthony W McGraw Hill Building Designation Report New York Landmarks Preservation Commission September 11 1979 Griswold J B Nine Years Ago Raymond M Hood Was Behind in his Rent Today he holds the spotlight as a master shoman of stone and steel American Magazine October 1931 p 145 quoted in Robins Anthony W McGraw Hill Building Designation Report New York Landmarks Preservation Commission September 11 1979 Architecture of the Night General Electric Company 1930 Raymond Hood Dies Was Noted Architect Retrieved June 23 2022 Gray Christopher November 4 1990 Streetscapes The Bleecker Street Cinema The Lost Frescoes of an Artist Soldier The New York Times Retrieved April 7 2013 Leuthold Bill May 1978 The Architecture of Raymond M Hood The University of Florida Gray Christopher February 18 2010 Where the Orchestras Played and the Mice Presided The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 9 2021 Gray Christopher November 12 1995 Streetscapes 3 East 84th Street An Art Deco Precursor of the Daily News Building The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 5 2021 Beaux Arts Apartments 307 East 44th Street PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission July 11 1989 Beaux Arts Apartments 310 East 44th Street PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission July 11 1989 Hood Raymond M Raymond Mathewson 1931 Raymond M Hood Internet Archive New York London Whittlesey House McGraw Hill Book Company Inc Goldberger Paul January 3 1984 RAYMOND HOOD AND HIS VISIONS OF SKYSCRAPERS Published 1984 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 8 2021 Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper September 11 2020 December 18 2020 David Winton Bell Gallery Providence Rhode Island Brown University Retrieved February 6 2021 Bibliography Duval Jonathan and Dietrich Neumann Raymond Hood and the American Skyscraper Providence RI Bell Gallery Brown University 2020 Frampton Kenneth Storia dell Architettura Moderna 4a edizione Zanichelli Gargiani Roberto Rem Koolhaas Oma Grandi Opere Gli Architetti editori Laterza Hood Raymond M 1931 Contemporary American Architects Raymond M Hood New York Whittlesey House McGraw Hill ISBN 1135799431 Features a large collection of photographs of Hood s works Kilham Walter H 1973 Raymond Hood Architect Form Through Function in the American Skyscraper Architectural Book Publishing Co Inc New York Kvaran Einar Einarsson Architectural Sculpture of America unpublished manuscriptExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Raymond Hood Works by or about Raymond Hood at Internet Archive Raymond M Hood architectural drawings and papers circa 1890 1944 Held by the Department of Drawings amp Archives Avery Architectural amp Fine Arts Library Columbia University The Raymond Hood Photograph Collection at the New York Historical Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Raymond Hood amp oldid 1177547647, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.