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Louis
Henri Sullivan
(1856-1924),
American architect, whose brilliant early designs for steel-frame
skyscraper construction led to the emergence of the skyscraper as the
distinctive American building type. Through his own work, especially
his commercial structures, and as the founder of what is now known as
the Chicago School of architects, he exerted an enormous influence on
20th-century American architecture. His most famous pupil was the
architect Frank Lloyd Wright, who acknowledged Sullivan as his master. The
son of a dancing teacher, Sullivan was born in Boston on September 3,
1856. After studying architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, he spent a year in Paris at the École des Beaux-Arts and
in the office of a French architect. Settling in Chicago in 1875, he
was employed as a draftsman, then in 1881 formed a partnership with
Dankmar Adler. Together they produced more than 100 buildings. Adler
secured the clients and handled the engineering and acoustical
problems, while Sullivan concerned himself with the architectural
designs. One of their earliest and most distinguished joint
enterprises was the ten-story Auditorium Building (1886-89) in
Chicago. This famous showplace incorporated a hotel, an office
building, and a theater renowned for its superb acoustics. The
Wainwright Building, also ten stories high, with a metal frame, was
completed in 1891 in St. Louis, Missouri. In 1895 the Sullivan-Adler
partnership was dissolved, leading to a decline in Sullivan's
practice. The Carson Pirie Scott (originally Schlesinger & Mayer)
Department Store, Chicago, regarded by many as Sullivan's masterpiece,
was completed in 1904. His architectural practice declined alarmingly
after that; his last buildings are a series of small banks in the
Midwest. All are admired for their superb fusion of bold architectural
forms with Sullivan's characteristic sumptuous ornament. Outstanding
are the Security Bank (originally National Farmers' Bank; 1908) in
Owatonna, Minnesota, and the People's Savings Bank (1911) in Cedar
Rapids, Iowa. Concerned with aesthetics as well as being a working
architect, he expressed his ideas in lectures and writings, including
the classic Autobiography of an Idea (1924, reprinted 1956).
His famous axiom, “Form follows function,” became the touchstone
for many in his profession. Sullivan, however, did not apply it
literally. He meant that an architect should consider the purpose of
the building as a starting point, not as a rigidly limiting stricture.
He himself employed a rich vocabulary of ornament, even on his
skyscrapers. He died on April 14, 1924, in Chicago.
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Carson
Pirie Scott Department Store
The
work of 20th-century American architect Louis Sullivan was
influenced by the movement known as Art Nouveau. This picture
shows the front facade of the Carson Pirie Scott department store
in Chicago (1899-1904), designed by Sullivan. The elaborately
decorative cast-iron is characteristic of the architect's love of
detail. Above the first two floors, the design of the remaining
twelve is a contrast in simplicity, with geometric windows evenly
spaced within the structural steel skeleton. |
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