| Henry Hobson Richardson |
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| 1838 births | |
| richardson, h. h. | |
| 1886 deaths | |
| architects | |
| richardson, henry hobson | |
| american architects | |
| harvard university alumni | |
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in Boston is one of Richardson's most famous works.]] Henry Hobson Richardson ( September 29 , 1838 – 1886 ) was the outstanding American architect of his day, one of a half-dozen of America's most influential architects. He was born at Priestly Plantation in St. James Parish, Louisiana . Richardson worked both around Boston and in Chicago and left an imprint in both cities. A southerner from Louisiana who went to Harvard College , he was packed off to the Ecole Des Beaux Arts in Paris in 1860, but didn't finish, as family backing failed during the U.S. Civil War. He returned to the U.S. in 1865, already inspired by John Ruskin and William Morris . Richardson developed a powerful style, improvising upon the Romanesque of southern France. The term " Richardsonian Romanesque " has sometimes misled people to assess it somehow as one of the Victorian revival styles, but Richardson worked on the whole without detailed historical references. Richardson's work stands out for his boldly clear, simple and articulated but picturesque massing and roofline profiles, his mastery of rustication, his somber polychromy. When you see an 1880s building with massive rusticated,semi-circular arches supported on clusters of squat columns, round arches over clusters of windows on massive walls, you are seeing Richardsonian Romanesque. If a single work of Richardson's had to be selected over others it would have to be Trinity Church in Copley Square , Boston (1872-1877), part of one of the outstanding American urban complexes, across from the Boston Public Library by Charles Follen McKim , Richardson's former draftsman, confronted by the Hancock Place office tower by I. M. Pei . .]] A series of small public libraries donated by patrons for the improvement of New England towns makes a small coherent corpus that defines Richardson's style: libraries in Woburn , North Easton (''illustration, left''), Malden , Massachusetts, and the very fine Thomas Crane Public Library (Quincy, Massachusetts) . These buildings seem resolutely anti-modern, with the aura of an Episcopalian vicarage, dimly lit for solemnity rather than reading on site. They are preserves of culture that did not especially embrace the contemporary flood of newcomers to New England. Yet they offer clearly defined spaces, easy and natural circulation, and they are visually memorable. Richardson's libraries found many imitators in the " Richardsonian Romanesque " movement. Richardson had a frequent collaborator in Frederick Law Olmsted who devised the landscaping schemes for half a dozen of his projects. Other works that may be familiar:
Richardson's work was contemporary with the residential Queen Anne Style , with which his work had little affinity, except for the species known as the " Shingle Style ," which evidenced his sense of massing and picturesque composition. Richardson's legacy is less in the styles of Stanford White and Charles Follen McKim, who each worked in his office as young men, but moved into a different, historicist Beaux-Arts Mode , as it is in Louis Sullivan , who developed highly personal non-historic surface decoration and passed on to his student, Frank Lloyd Wright , Richardsonian lessons of texture, massing, and the expressive language of stone walling. Unexpectedly, H. H. Richardson found sympathetic reception among young Scandinavian architects of the following generation, the one known best in the English-speaking world being Eliel Saarinen . Following Richardson's early death in 1886 at age 48, the style that he had pioneered was picked up by a variety of other architects whose works are grouped under the name of Richardsonian Romanesque . The style was applied to various types of buildings, churches, public buildings such as city halls, county buildings, court houses, train stations and libraries, as well as residences. The style died out in the first decade of the Twentieth Century. H. H. Richardson was not the father of modernism. But he was the grandfather of modernism. In a remarkable instance of continuity, the successors of Richardson carry on today as outstanding innovative exponents of International Modernism and Brutalism , with recent emphasis in corporate structures, campus master planning, healthcare facility planning and work for secondary schools {Link without Title} . IMAGES   |
Image:Robert Treat Paine Estate - Exterior ViewJPG
| "http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/encyclopedia/entry/Robert_Treat_Paine_Estate" class="copylinks">Robert Treat Paine Estate , Waltham, Massachusetts |
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Image:RichardsonNEatonLibraryjpgLibrary, North
| "http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/encyclopedia/entry/Easton,_Massachusetts" class="copylinks">Easton, Massachusetts |
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Image:Woburn, Massachusetts, Library With Statue Of Benjamin ThompsonJPGLibrary,
| "http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/encyclopedia/entry/Woburn,_Massachusetts" class="copylinks">Woburn, Massachusetts |
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Image:Thomas Crane Public Library, Quincy, Massachusetts (Front View)JPG
| "http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/encyclopedia/entry/Thomas_Crane_Public_Library_(Quincy,_Massachusetts)" class="copylinks">Thomas Crane Public Library (Quincy, Massachusetts) |
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Image:Stanford University 1980jpgThe Inner Quad At
| "http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/encyclopedia/entry/Stanford_University" class="copylinks">Stanford University |
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