people

  • Frank Lloyd Wright gallery opening

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    It's a bit off the beaten path, but if you find yourself anywhere near Racine, WI (just a bit south of Milwaukee) you could not do better than to stop at the SC Johnson headquarters, where a new gallery devoted to the work of Frank Lloyd Wright is opening this week. The initial offering – a broad meditation on Wright's most popular Prairie-style work – will run for a year, to be followed by other exhibits focusing on various aspects of the architect and designer's work.

    Several buildings at the SC Johnson campus are Wright creations, so you'll want to schedule a tour to see those as well.

  • Christopher Vickers & CFA Voysey

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    I first encountered Christopher Vickers’ work when a friend showed me photos of a clock he built (he’s also reproduced another famous Voysey clock with which you may be more familiar). Based on C. F. A. Voysey’s original plans, the clock is built from 7,000-year-old bog oak, and is inlaid with (faux) ivory. The original was built by Voysey in 1921 for a client – the same one for whom Voysey designed the beautiful Holly Mount in Beaconsfield. Voysey was known for his clocks, of course; apparently, he loved the confluence of lettering, machine, and furniture that these tiny and complicated objects represented.

    Vickers is a scholar of all things Voysey, and 20th-century British design in general, with quite a bit of background on this great and often overlooked designer / artist / architect on his website; my own love of Voysey’s work springs mainly from my interest in typography and Voysey’s wonderful and expressive hand-lettering (see the wallpaper advertisement here, taken from Mr. Vickers’ site) – so seeing Vickers’ exceptional work, and through it his obvious love for the combined subtlety and detail that I’ve always appreciated in Voysey, really impressed and resonated with me.

    My favorite piece of Voysey-designed furniture in Vickers collection is this replica dining chair with arms, originally designed in 1902. Vickers’ reproduction sells for £1850, and appears to be completely true to the original.

    Other impressive bits of Mr. Vickers’ work include unique items of Arts & Crafts lighting; a number of beautiful and useful chests in a variety of sizes and configurations; beautiful and sturdy tables, including some based on Voysey designs for Hollymount and other homes; inlaid wooden boxes; cabinetry and shelving, including several that feature hardware hand-forged by Vickers; and a number of pieces of metalwork, produced in the Gimson-Cotswold tradition in just the way we like it: "by hammer & hand."

    Vickers’ work is art and craft, and some of the finest contemporary A&C furniture I’ve seen. If you’re interested, you can see pieces on display from September 10 to 24 at the 2nd annual Arts & Crafts Exhibition in Gloucestershire’s Prinknash Abbey Park; from September 13 to 28, you can actually visit his workshop in Frome, as it will be open to the public during Somerset Art Weeks. His work will also be included in the Ernest Gimson and the Arts & Crafts Movement exhibit in Leicester, November 8 2008 through March 1 2009.

  • Kevin O’Connor (This Old House) on Charles & Hudson

    Charles & Hudson is one of the few house-issue blogs I read regularly, and today provides another reason why you should too: yesterday, they published a very interesting interview with Kevin O’Connor, host of the television program This Old House.

    C&H: What is your take on the growth of online
    DIY sites especially independent publishers such as ourselves or
    Houseblogs.net? Do you ever refer to any particular online resources
    besides ThisOldHouse.com?

    Kevin: The growth in DIY is remarkable. On the one
    hand I love it because I think it’s vindication for all of us house
    lovers and do-it-yourselfers. There are a lot of great shows and web
    sites out there that never existed and that’s great.

    On the other hand there’s a lot of crap out there too. I can think
    of a dozen shows and web sites that wouldn’t hold my interest for a
    nanosecond.

    Wow, I sure hope he’s not talking about us.

  • Arts and Crafts Revival Society of Boston

    reader Carl Close Jr., an artist blacksmith at Hammersmith Studio, forwards the following notice and hopes that other craftspeople in his area will be interested in forming a latter-day craftsperson’s guild:

    Are you an artist or craftsperson that works in the Arts and Crafts style? I am a metalworker in the Boston area and want to start a group that fosters the ideals and philosophies of the founders of the Society of Arts and Crafts in Boston. I thought it might be fun to also have an exhibit called Then and Now, a show that could showcase past masters and what similar artists are doing today to revive the Arts and Crafts Movement. So if you are a wood carver, metalworker, potter, book artist, silversmith, furniture designer, pleinair painter or any other historically-styled craftsperson, and live in the Boston or New England area, please let me know if this would be of any interest. You can contact me off my website, hammersmithstudio.com, or write me email.

    Thank you – Carl Close, Jr, artist blacksmith

  • Signature Style in the San Francisco Chronicle

    The San Francisco Chronicle, for its various failings as a source of unbaised and serious local reporting, has some of the best feature articles on architecture of any regional paper in the country. Especially worth reading are Dave Weinstein’s Signature Style columns on local architects and properties – often with a very strong Arts & Crafts bent. Here are several that most closely relate to Arts & Crafts homes and their builders in Northern California:

  • Obituary: Steven Ballew, Sacramento Preservationist

    One of Sacramento’s most voiciferous advocates of architectural conservation, Steven Ballew, has died at 63. Thank you, Steven, for helping keep Sacramento’s urban neighborhoods beautiful. From the Sacramento Bee:

    He was known throughout Sacramento as a committed preservationist.
    Whether fighting private citizens who wanted to build garages under
    historic bungalows or forcing Kentucky Fried Chicken to conform to
    local design guidelines when building a franchise on Alhambra
    Boulevard, no battle was too big or too small for Mr. Ballew’s tireless
    passion.

    The couple married in 1989 and rented a bungalow on 37th Street, which
    spawned an interest in bungalow history and architecture. Mr. Ballew
    cringed when he saw similar houses with inappropriate repairs and
    modifications.

    He co-founded the Sacramento Bungalow Heritage Association, whose
    members gave lectures and organized field trips to teach people how to
    fix up their historic homes. That morphed into the Sacramento
    Preservation Round Table, an advocacy group that fights to preserve and
    restore historic buildings and neighborhoods.

    Much of Mr. Ballew’s passion for preservation was fueled by his
    appreciation of aesthetics, Susan Ballew said. His eye for order and
    perfection extended from his immaculate woodworking shop to the wooden
    shingles on the side of his home, whose corners he sanded individually
    so they would be slightly rounded.

  • Arts and Crafts in Boston

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    Architecture Radio
    is a wonderful online lecture series and covers an enormous range of topics – and I am ashamed to write that I did not know about this terrific resource until today. A relatively recent lecture (mp3; recorded at the Boston Public Library on 05.05, published 09.05) by Maureen Meister, author of Architecture and the Arts & Crafts Movement in Boston: Harvard’s H. Langford Warren (the first full-length study of this very important turn-of-the-century architect, educator and movement leader) and editor of H. H. Richardson: The Architect, His Peers and Their Era is devoted to the Arts & Crafts Movement in Boston.

    Old House Interiors writes of her book on H. Langford Warren that “(she) makes the point that some architects are influential
    because they have a lot of clients, while others exert their influence
    less directly – but more widely – through students… Warren’s own blend
    of Gothic, Georgian, and Colonial forms was perceived as the proper New
    England style long after his death in 1917. In serving the Society of
    Arts and Crafts for longer than anyone else, Warren further imprinted
    area taste.”

    Paraphrased the jacket of her most recent book: ‘Maureen Meister has taught art history courses at the Art Institute of Boston, Lesley University, Northeastern University and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston since 1982. In recent years she has lectured on American architecture at Tufts University.’ And she has a very nice voice, too.

  • Bernard Maybeck Roundup

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    Some new (and new-to-me) Maybeck-related links:

  • James Plachek & Berkeley

    PlacheklibrarygreenOne of the houses I grew up in is a 1917 wood-shingle quasi-bungalow at the base of the Berkeley Hills, near the Solano tunnel. The house was designed by James Plachek, who was responsible for the art-moderne Berkeley Library, Berkeley’s Heywood Building, Epworth Hall, the Grace Congregational,  and a number of other structures throughout the state, including the now-closed UC Theater (also 1917), where I worked on weekends and in the evenings after school in the late 1980s. Plachek built and remodeled a number of theaters between 1915 and 1930, including the Chimes in Oakland and the Lorin (now the Phillips Temple Church) at 3332 Adeline in Berkeley. In the mid 1930s, Plachek was focused primarily on large-scale WPA projects like the immense Moderne Alameda County Courthouse on the shore of Lake Merrit, shown here in Michele Manning‘s beautiful plein air pastel drawing.

    Before my father bought the house, the previous owners hired woodworker and light fixture designer Kip Mesirow, who made a number of alterations and improvements to Chez Panisse (in the same building where, coincidentally, my father lived as a student at UC Berkeley, before it was a restaurant) in the 1970s, and a collaborator of printmaker and illustrator David Lance Goines
    – to finish the attic and turn it into a beautiful, raw-redwood-wall
    master suite, a sort of mixture of rustic cathedral, nordic cabin and Japanese country house.

    Mesirow’s improvements to both my father’s house and Chez Panisse
    are a bit more Rennie Mackintosh and Wright  than Maybeck, embracing the austere
    and geometrical forms that Mackintosh loved and Wright emulated; these shapes
    repeat in much of the Chez Panisse style both in and out of the restaurant itself, most notably Goines’ many poster and cookbook designs for the restaurant and the lettering over the restaurant’s entrance. Goines even uses the Mackintosh rosette in a few of his own illustrations.