August 19–November 13, 2011
Opening:
September 2, 6–9pm
1401 Presque Isle Ave.
Marquette, MI 49855
John Lautner (1911–1994) is considered one of the visionary architects of the twentieth century. Born in Marquette, Michigan, Lautner received a liberal arts degree from Northern Michigan University before leaving to study with Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin. He settled in Los Angeles where he became well known for designing innovative structures, particularly residential buildings that demonstrated a true sensitivity to location, space, structure and the wishes and needs of the clients he worked with. Lautner received the Gold Medal of the American Institutes of Architects in 1993.
This is the first exhibition in Lautner’s hometown and highlights a range of Lautner’s residential architectural styles through drawings, floorplans, models, photography and video. The exhibition will focus on eight of Lautner’s residential designs that span his career and highlight his ability to create a range of spaces, from intimate to grand. Buildings include Carling (1947, Los Angeles, CA); Hatherall (1958, Shadow Hills, CA); Concannon (1960, Beverly Hills, CA); Chemosphere (1958–60, Los Angeles, CA); Garcia (1962, Los Angeles, CA); Sheats/Goldstein (1962–63, Beverly Hills, CA); Harpel #2 (1966, Anchorage, AK), and Marbrisa (1971–73, Acapulco, Mexico).
The exhibition includes sketches, drawings and plans created by Lautner’s firm, on loan from the Getty Research Institute and the John Lautner Foundation; models created by the Hammer Museum at UCLA and a new model of the demolished Concannon residence created by Hayke Zweede with assistance from Ko Jacobs, Tycho Saariste and Jan-Richard Kikkert; photographs by renowned architectural photographer Julius Shulman and contemporary architectural photographers Alan Weintraub, Zachary Cornwell, Francois Dischinger and Joshua White. There will also be excerpts from two documentary films on Lautner (Spirit in Architecture and Infinite Space) and previously unreleased audio of Lautner discussing his designs, provided by Sprit in Architecture director Bette Cohen.
Related events:
Friday, September 2, 5pm / Frank Escher: lecture
Frank Escher is principal in the firm Escher GuneWardena Architecture, which oversaw the restoration of one of John Lautner’s most well known residential buildings, the Chemosphere. From 1991 to 1994 Escher worked with John Lautner as editor of the first monograph on the architect, John Lautner, Architect .
Sunday, September 18, 3pm / Tycho Saariste & Jan-Richard Kikkert: lecture
Jan-Richard Kikkert and Tycho Saariste are practicing architects based in the Netherlands. Since 2007 they have been researching Lautner’s buildings and developed a course about the architect at the Artez Academy of Architecture at Arnhem. The course included a research trip to Los Angeles with students to view over 80 Lautner buildings in ten days.
Friday, September 30, 7pm / The Spirit in Architecture: John Lautner
Film screening & discussion with film director Bette Cohen
Bette Cohenis an award-winning filmmaker and film editor. She produced and directed the film The Spirit in Architecture: John Lautner, portraying the life and work of the architect.
Saturday, October 22, 2pm / Visual Acoustics: The Modernism of Julius Shulman
Film screening
Narrated by Dustin Hoffman, Visual Acoustics celebrates the life and career of Julius Shulman, the world’s greatest architectural photographer, whose images brought modern architecture to the American mainstream.
Thursday, November 3rd, 7pm, Marquette Regional History Center / Infinite Space: The Architecture of John Lautner
Film screening
Renown architectural filmmaker Murray Grigor explores Lautner’s dramatic spaces with choreographed camera moves, as Lautner himself provides the commentary, speaking with insight and wit in recordings culled from archival sources.
Support for this exhibition and related programs provided by the National Endowment for the Arts; Michigan Council for the Arts and Cultural Affairs; American Institute of Architects, Upper Peninsula Chapter; Michigan Architecture Foundation; the John X. and June A. Jamrich Endowment.