Art Today - An Introduction To The Fine and Functional Art (Art Ebook)
Art Today - An Introduction To The Fine and Functional Art (Art Ebook)
Art Today - An Introduction To The Fine and Functional Art (Art Ebook)
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Art Today
Frontispiece, following page. The church for St. John's Abbey, begun in 1952 in College-
Minnesota, exempHfies the Benedictine tradition that ". . at its best challenges us
.
ville,
forms which will be valid for centuries to come."
to think boldly and to cast our ideals in
front of the stained glass facade of the church.
A vigorous concrete "bell banner" stands in
RAY FAULKNER
STANFORD UNIVERSITY
EDWIN ZIEGFELD
TEACHERS COLLEGE, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
GERALD HILL
22754-0813
Printed in the United States of America
Preface to tlie
Fourtli Edition
ART TODAY was chosen as the title of this book because its emphasis is
on the many ways in which the arts aEect present-day living. The past few
expression of the ideals of cultures that are remote from us in time or space.
As you look through the book you will see that many historic masterworks
are included because of their lasting significance. We believe that familiarity
with historic art not only gives great esthetic pleasure but increases our
understanding of contemporary trends.
Our approach is a direct outgrowth of experiments at the University of
details, Art Today based on a syllabus of the same name written by Ray
is
help than we can mention by name. The staffs of the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, and American Craftsmen's Council
the
cerns generously cooperated in our search for new materials. Once again,
Sarah Key Faulkner spent countless hours in discussing and solving the prob-
lems that always arise in a revision, and in clarifying tangled passages. To
these and many others we are indeed grateful.
R. F.
E. Z.
Stanford, California
New York, New York
January 1963
Contents
Illustrations ix
3. Art in Religion 85
Introduction 171
8. Fabrics 226
Introduction 401
Glossary 545
Index 559
Illustrations
Chapter 8—Fabrics
226. Weaving
228A. Eighteenth-century coverlet
228B. HaUman: Plexiglas wall hanging
229A. Tawney: Transparent hanging
229B. Fischer: Tapestry
231 A. Foiu-harness hand loom
23 IB. Plain weave
23 IC. Satin weave
231D. Twill weave
232A. Texturized Fiberglas
232B. Rayon satin weave
232C. Weave and cotton
of ricrac, metallic,
232D. Cleon: "End of Summer," rug
233. Structures of felt, woven, and knitted fabrics
Illustrations - xvii
But the houses we build are more than shells to keep out wind and rain,
these, and in all of our other "useful" objects, an appeal beyond convenience
and utility.
interpreted broadly, refers not only to a group of special products but also
to the manner in which any activity can be performed. There can be artistry
in gardening or woodworking, in furniture arrangement and table setting.
The primary purpose of this book is to make art significant in daily
living. Each of us is faced with the selection of many objects,
and the pleasure
these give depends largely on how well they are chosen. We also have such
Editor's Note. Illustrations are identified by the page number on which each one appears.
XXI
For the Reader
on
problems combining and arranging of furniture in a room, pictures
as the
too, we have opportunities to see sig-
a wall, or plants in a garden. Then,
sculpture, and beautiful handcrafts.
nificant buildings, great paintings and
understand them. All of
The pleasure these give us depends on how well we
expressing and enriching our own
these activities offer possibilities for
experiences of others. While our
personalities and for understanding the
a broad foundation of
emotional reactions are of great value, we also need
knowledge of why art is pro-
knowledge on which to base our judgments,
all the esthetic considerations that
duced, of what and how it is made, and of
go into its production and appreciation.
arises out of human needs, these deserve
primary considera-
Because art
recognized, the effort to meet it raises several
tion. But when a human need is
they be best
questions: What materials are most appropriate and how can
organized? Hence, the first
used? How will the form, color, and texture be
can read and talk about it, see and appreciate it, or produce it. Each of these
acti\'ities contributes to the depth and breadth of your understanding. True
art appreciation is more than knowing the names and dates of important
artists and their works. It involves attitudes, emotions, and personal prefer-
ences as -ivell as kno^vledge. It is our hope that this book will be a catalytic
agent in helping you to react ^vith your oi\ n mind and spirit to the visual
richness that surrounds you, and that it also ^vill stimulate you to make your
environment a better one in which to live.
Tlie Problem of
Hximaxx INeedls
The love for homes and home life in
seventeenth-century Holland is por-
trayed in Pieter de Hooch's "Scene in
a Courtyard before a Small House."
(Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam)
we spend on them. The total value of all homes in this country has been
estimated at more than 250 billion dollars, and approximately one million
new homes are built each year. But our homes are significant far beyond
their dollar cost. They are seldom at the masterpiece level that is remem-
bered in art history, but almost everyone tries to give his living quarters
some individuality and grace. In creating a home environment, even if we
3
4 - Art in the Home
furniture in a rented room or hanging a
pic-
are limited to rearranging the
dealing with a phase of art of great conse-
ture or two on the walls, we are
quence today.
A SMALL APARTMENT
the first home that we can really call
For many of us a small apartment is
our own. As such it has a special
meaning and special problems. The first
has adequate and well-arranged space to
step is finding an apartment that
important, the apartment
make home life pleasant and convenient. Equally
individualities in furnishing it. There are
should allow us to express our
choose and money for furnishmgs is
seldom many apartments from which to
arrange furniture thoughtfully and
usually limited, but we can select and
5A and B, and 6A and B illustrate one of
use color imaginatively. Figures 4,
problem.
the many ways of solving this everyday
apartment has approximately 400 square feet of floor space, which
The
to rent nor maintain. Two
is adequate for two persons but neither costly
conveniently near the entrance door.
closets and a compact kitchen are
dining. The square dining
Beyond these is an L-shaped space for living and
area opens spaciously into the living
room yet maintains its own identity.
of meals. A bed-
A "pass-through" from the kitchen simplifies the serving
there is clearly defined space
room and bath complete the apartment. Thus,
life. Group living, which
includes con-
for the three major phases of home
or television programs, entertain-
versing and casual reading, enjoying radio
is centered in the living room
but
ing friends, and playing quiet games,
Preparing and serving meals takes
spreads easily into the dining alcove.
kitchen and adjacent dining space. Sleeping
and dressing are
place in the
provided for in the secluded bedroom and bath.
excellent.
.>, * "^ ^ , *
'1'
(A) Above. The conversation center of the living room has comfortable seating arranged
around a table nearthe windows.
(B) Below. A place for concentrated work is adjacent to, but somewhat separated from,
the group-living area.
^
6 - Art in the Home
Efficiency, though, is far from the only goal, for a home ought to stimu-
late the eyes, hands, and spirit. Several factors make this apartment visually
satisfying. Each object unhesitatingly expresses its purpose and materials,
and that is one good preliminary step to^vard beauty. Then there is the
basic unifying idea of straightforward simplicity to be seen in the pre-
dominantly uncomplicated shapes and plain surfaces. But monotony is
avoided by introducing variety where needed: the coffee table, the radiator
grilles, and the desk chair have subtly related, intricate patterns; the glisten-
ing white lamps are forceful contrasts; and the two framed prints in the
living room as well as scenic wallpaper in the dining alcove add their own
special interest. Finally, the rooms have a feeling of balance, rhythm, and
emphasis, characteristics without which there is little hope of lasting appeal.
Color and texture contribute to the apartment's livability because they,
too, were purposefully planned. The chief color in the living-dining area is
a warm, cheerful apricot that compensates for the apartment's limited sun-
shine. Light and neutral on the walls, this color becomes richer on sofa.
S - Art in the Home
coffee table, draperies, and the study-area furniture. The lounge chair and
the wall color but much grayer. This
one-color scheme
rug are tan, related to
creative research that led to the Techbuilt houses, their aim was to design
of the plans, the individuality of the interiors, and the handsome exteriors,
illustrated on pages 8, 9, 10, 14, 15, 22, and 23, are exceptional. Unlike
custom-built houses that are designed for individual families and specific
sites, the Techbuilt houses were designed to appeal to many potential cus-
All of the space that will be required eventually is enclosed in the in-
Then, when more space is needed and funds are available, some or all
of the remainder is finished.
Two-story houses,* which are often high and boxy-looking, can be made
to fit comfortably into their setting. In essence, what Koch did was to
• Although some Techbuilt houses have only one story, those with two stories make the
most significant contributions.
10 - Art in the Home
Roof Panels
below ground level, and it costs very little more to excavate all of this
area and use the foundation to enclose the lower part of the ground
floor. Rooms below grade are warmer in winter and cooler in summer,
and modern technology can easily dispel the cold dampness of old-
fashioned basements. Attics are mostly wasted space, but if the walls are
raised five or six feet and adequate windows installed, the space be-
comes comfortably livable. The net result is that the side walls need be
only ten feet above the ground, which is little if any higher than that
of single-story dwellings.
Construction systems in which the exterior walls plus widely spaced
posts and beams hold the house up give remarkably flexible interiors
Prefabricated window units allow great freedom of choice. (Aluminum Window Manu-
facturers Association)
DOUBLE-HUNG
SINGLE-HUNG
CASEMENT AWNINa JALOUSIE VERTICAL SLIDE PROJECTED HORIZONTAL SLIDING
12 - Art in the Home
So far. this sounds very much like the typical, tiresomely standardized
geography,
We can now consider the Techbuilt houses in terms of use,
Use
then, the physical, psycho-
Houses are built for people to live in. Obviously,
logical, and spiritual needs of a
family should indicate the forms and ma-
builders, and prospective homeowners
terials of a home. How architects,
the statement of the problem.
wish that the solution were as simple as
is
placement.
Areas for Living. people have to live in one-room huts or apart-
Many
planned for entering and
ments, but most of us appreciate segregated areas
circulatingthrough the house, relaxing and entertaining, cooking and eat-
The Techhuilt Houses -
13
ing, sleeping and bathing, and outdoor activities. Storing our possessions is
also a real problem. Organizing these areas is probably the most important
single aspect of home design.
specific purposes, closed plans functioned well. They still retain the notable
advantages of giving privacy and minimizing the disturbance of conflicting
activities. Open plans, which have fewer floor-to-ceiling partitions, mini-
mize the separateness of areas used for relaxation and entertainment, eating
and cooking. Broad openings, partitions and storage dividers of less than
ceiling height, and folding or sliding doors are some of the devices that re-
late one part of the house to the others. Because open plans give a greater
sense of spaciousness and permit more flexible use of actual space, they
gained favor as houses became smaller and heating was improved. The Tech-
built houses, as well as the Wright and Johnson houses (Figs. 27 and 29),
exemplify current practices. The Japanese house (Fig. 3 IB) shows that
"modern" open planning has been enjoyed for centuries.
Relaxation and entertainment suggest large spaces and furnishings
adaptable to varied situations, and on this factor the Techbuilt houses rate
very high. In Fig. 14B an L-shaped living-dining space permits many differ-
ent furniture arrangements to suit the family, the occasion, or the season.
Nearby, but distinctly separate, is a "family room" for noisy activities.
life. In many Techbuilt houses, the kitchens are secluded from halls and
dining space by walls, but they open into the family room over a counter
(Fig. I4B). This not only facilitates serving informal meals in the family
room but gives those in the kitchen a pleasant outlook and opportimity to
supervise children's play.
Eating areas can easily be varied. The family room has been mentioned,
but it is only a few steps to the terrace adjoining it. The dining space is
appropriate for more formal meals, and the whole living-dining space is
T
and for privacy
the lower floor
and quiet on the upper floor
of the 1920 square-foot house.
DINING
FAMILY ROOM
u 8il&
12a lb -^
KITCHEN n
LiJi LIVING ROOM
12 1 24
The Techhuilt Houses - 15
where they are to be used and that each object be easily available. Techbuilt
houses have adequate cabinets in kitchens and closets in bedrooms. Other
rooms have ample space for movable storage units, which in most models
is supplemented by a special room for
putting accumulations out of the way.
Finally, the enjoyment of outdoor activities-garden'mg, entertaining,
and just relaxing— is a function of the way a house is related to its setting
and the manner which the landscaping is planned. With their intimate
in
relation to the ground, long low lines, and banks of windows and sliding
doors, Techbuilt houses are off to an excellent start. Garages, terraces, and
balconies can extend the house into the landscape (Figs. 8 and 22) in
one or more directions. Lawns, shrubs, and trees as well as flowers and
fences— whatever the owner wishes— can complete the composition.
Circulation. Short, pleasant routes from one part of the house to others
are desirable, but excess space in hallways is an extravagance in construc-
tion cost, upkeep, and occupants' energies. This important aspect of home
planning is beautifully handled in the Techbuilt houses. Look at the plans
tween the two levels, lead directly to small halls on both floors. From these
one can get to any room without walking through another room. Little
space devoted to circulation alone, but greater convenience is hard to
is
later in the chapter, but the possibilities for the arrangement of furniture
and equipment in a house are important considerations in terms of use.
In Koch's plans the rooms are large enough to take needed pieces of furni-
ture with some space to spare. Most rooms are dead-end rooms, with doors
in the corners and windows grouped, leaving uninterrupted and usually al-
The Techbuilt Houses - 17
cally controlled heating and cooling units automatically keep the rooms
at comfortable temperatures. Artificial lighting is planned for maximum
flexibility, efficiency, and pleasantness. Kitchen and bathroom equipment in-
an environment for convenient, gratifying home life. Thus our first criterion
The building {with its furnishings and equipment) should meet the
Geography
In the past, geographical factors strongly affected home design. The Ameri-
can Indians of the Pacific North^vest made sturdy houses of wood; those of
the Southwest built of adobe brick. The nomadic Plains Indians depended
on lightweight, easily transportable tepees made of poles and buffalo skins.
Each group used native materials to shape distinctive dwellings that were a
direct outgrowth of its mode of living in relation to the climate, the build-
ing materials, and the character of the landscape.
Today architectural concepts spread rapidly over the world. Building
materials, new and old, can be transported far from their point of origin,
and much work that was done on the site is now done more efficiently
in factories. New heating and cooling equipment together ^vith improved
insulating materials make the interiors of houses relatively independent of
the weather outside. These factors markedly lessen the differences among
houses in varied geographical settings. Thus, contemporary architecture
has less regional character than does most historic work— but this does not
mean that the same house is equally good everywhere.
These trends are illustrated in the Techbuilt houses. Soon after they
were developed they were seen on television by some twenty million people
and many others read about them in magazines and books. The interest of
many families in different geographical sections was aroused, Avhich was
exactly the challenge that the houses were designed to meet. Only the basic
shape and structure are standardized. Local materials suited to the climate
and site can be used for all and exterior surfaces. Windows of
interior
various sizes and shapes can be placed where wanted. The interior can be
arranged in many ways.
18 - Art in the Home
So far we have discussed geography in regional terms, but specific sites
are equally important. What is the shape and size of the lot? Is the land
flat or rolling? Are there trees, a lake, or a good vie\v? Which points of the
them to almost any piece of land. The typical two-story plans fit sloping
ground most naturally, and this is fortunate because there are many sloping
lots that often confuse builders. On flat lots the excavated earth can be
ground.
Orientation. Relating a house to the sun, wind, and views is important
desirable to
in home design. Generally, in the Northern hemisphere, it is
have the inajor rooms face south and east and to concentrate windows on
these sides. The winter sun, lower in the sky, sends
gains are numerous. The
warmth and cheer deep into the house, but an overhanging roof keeps
the high summer sun from the ^vindows (Fig. 18). Cold winter winds are
kept at bay. Outdoor living areas can be integrated with their interior
counterparts (Fig. 22). Entrance and stairway, storage and bathrooms can
be placed toward the north and west. This is easy to achieve with Techbuilt
plans (Figs. 14A and B, 15 A and B), which can also be oriented quite dif-
ferently for special situations.
From this discussion emerges the second criterion:
iMriL
Winter and summer sun position at noon in Chicago. In winter the sun is low and
stays well south of due east and west. In summer it is high and its arc is we 11 to
the
Community
Homes are usually parts of communities, seldom isolated dwellings. This
brings additional problems and potentialities. Building ordinances usually
regulate some factors to insure safe construction, adequate window area,
percentage of land covered, and location of house on lot. A few commimities
go further by prescribing minimum size and cost, occasionally even exterior
desion. In most situations, however, each man has free choice to have his
home look the way he wants it to. Usually he wants his home to be pleasantly
related to the general character of the community, but herein lies a difficulty.
which it is built. The simple rectangular shape and low pitched roof were
a natural consequence of the problem— giving middle-income families the
space they need and can afford in an economical but esthetically satisfying
form. By happy circumstance plus the architects' creative ingenuity, what
the community sees— the exterior design— was immediately liked by eminent
architects and the house-buying public. It is a frank statement of twentieth-
The home should express the time and place in which it was created.
Materials
the primary material. The beams running the length of the house and sup-
porting the second floor and roof attest its strength. Roof and wall panels,
made of plywood sheathing or grooved plywood siding bonded to insulated
wood frames, are remarkably strong for their weight and thickness. Wood
siding can be used on the exterior and sometimes on the interior as well.
Steel, which is much stronger and more expensive than wood, is used for the
posts that support the beams. Brick is a logical material for fireplaces and
can also be used for walls and floors, making these as durable as they are
handsome. Throughout these houses each material has been employed with
sympathetic understanding of its nature. None has been assigned tasks for
which it was unsuited, nor have its special qualities been hidden.
Our fourth criterion, then, is:
Individuality
such factors as family size, financial and social status, way of living, and
tastes and preferences. Although family size and income are the most
obvious determinants, others deserve equal consideration. For example,
families that entertain large groups often or enjoy such active relaxation as
dancing may need larger houses than do those who enjoy smaller groups and
quieter activities.
In addition, every person has a right to a home that expresses his per-
which merit as much space and equipment as the pocketbook permits. The
photographer wants his darkroom, and the weaver his loom. Others are
gratified by planning and cooking meals, arranging flowers, reading, or en-
joying music.
Techbuilt houses allow families great freedom to make the houses
really their own. The space within the shell can be divided to suit its
owners. It can be kept open or closed into separate rooms and, as family
wide choice in the materials that surface walls, floors, and ceilings. The
whole house, or any part of it, can be as formal or informal as desired. Al-
though this discussion has been limited to the two-level Techbuilt models.
The Techbuilt Houses - 21
the ideas pioneered in these have been expanded to include one-story houses,
custom designs, vacation houses, and even college dormitories and commer-
cial structures. In sum, Techbuilt houses can be personalized in innumer-
able ways— not only when they are built but in the years ahead.
Thus our fifth criterion is:
Beauty
Does the matter of beauty really come last? Is it not the first consideration?
relates to its background and to the space it occupies. This came from de-
signing interior space for furnishings, then selecting pieces with character
and placing them so that they can be appreciated. Walls, ceiling, and floor
are broadly treated. Floor-to-ceiling glass opens one side of the room to the
terrace. Walls of tan grasscloth and brick painted white show to advantage
the painting and the worth-looking-at outlines of the furniture. The floor
of used brick, which continues into the terrace, is accented with a rug made
from strips of blue and beige carpeting. The white ceiling is restfuUy plain.
22 - Art in the Home
(Fig. 23)— in another Techbuilt house— emphasizes the natural colors and
textures of red brick and red-brown cypress to suggest warm, informal group
living. No dull conformity vitiates this space, any more than it did the living
room discussed above. The rectangular cabinets and sofa fit compactly
against the avails- but the -svire-framed chairs stand free as lively, sculptural
accents.
In these rooms, paintings, sculpture, and accessories make their unique
contributions. Since prehistoric times man has found spiritual satisfaction in
The exterior design of Techbuilt houses grows directly from the plan
and the system of construction. The gently sloping roof, which extends be-
yond the walls, relates the structure to the landscape. Windows and doors,
organized as large units, contrast effectively with the opaque walls. Verticals,
that is invigorating.
Thus, the sixth criterion becomes:
Wright chose his materials and shaped his home so that "it was not easy to
tell 'ivhere pavements and walls left off and ground began." Local stone, laid
by country masons with "the quarry as a pattern," reaches out to form
garden courts and rises in the lower walls of the house and the massive
chimneys. "This native stone prepared the way for the lighter plastered con-
struction of the upper wooden walls. . . . And the lines of the hills were the
lines of the roofs . . . the plastered surfaces of the light wooden walls, set
back beneath broad eaves, were like flat stretches ofsand in the river below
and the same in color, for that is where the material that covered them
came from." Exterior wood was treated to give the "color of gray tree trunks
in violet light," and the shingled roofs were allowed to weather a natural
gray.
This is a northern house in a land where spring brings a profusion of
wild flowers and Avinters have their special beauty. Mr. Wright said, "I
wanted a home where icicles by invitation might beautify the eaves. So there
were no gutters. And when the snow piled deep on the roofs and lay drifted
in the courts, icicles came to hang staccato from the eaves. ." . .
The exterior, however, is but a prelude to the interior where one can
experience for himself what Wright meant when he wrote, "... architec-
ture spiritually (virtually) conceived as appropriate enclosure of space to be
lived in. . . . The enclosed space ... is the reality of the building. . .
."
Floors and walls of wood or the same stone seen outside and the great fire-
places that are integral with the structure shelter and secure the occupants.
But there is no feeling of tight, boxlike confinement because, "... in the
constitution of the whole, in the way the walls rose from the plan, and the
spaces were roofed over, was the chief interest of the house. . . . The rooms
went up into the roof, tentlike, and were ribanded overhead with marking
strips of waxed soft wood. The house was set so that sun came through the
openings into every room sometime during the day. Walls opened every-
home for Mr. Wright's mother, it was expanded into a home for the Wright family, a studio,
a farm, and a school of architecture. Only a portion of the Wrights' living quarters, which date
back to 1925, is discussed here.
fThis quotation and those that follow are taken from Frank Lloyd Wright's statements
as published in An American Architecture (New York: Horizon Press, 1955); and The Natural
House (New York: Horizon Press, 1954).
26 - Art in the Home
The Homes of Tivo Architects - 27
Taliesin North (1925—), Frank Lloyd Wright's home in Wis-
consin, is rugged architectural poetry.
(A) Opposite, above. Architecture and landscape are joined
in the predominately horizontal masses through which a great
stone fireplace rises. {From An American Architecture, pub-
lished by Horizon Press, Inc., Nezu York 10, N.Y.)
(B) Opposite, below. Each surface that encloses the living
room is clearly defined by material, shape, and direction, but
all participate in a magnificent fugue of "interweaving ele-
ments, indicating a flow of volumes from one to the other."
(Photograph by Bill Hedrich, Hedrich-Blessing)
Right. The plan of the living room shows how Mr. Wright
destroyed traditional boxlike confinement.
where to views as thewindows swung out above the tree-tops. ." Talie- . .
sin, literally and spiritually, rises "out of the ground into the light."
Although this house has well-planned circulation and areas for living,
ittranscends such practical matters in fulfillment of Wright's philosophy of
Organic Architecture. In dictionary phraseology, organic means, "Possessed
of a complex structure coinparable to that of living beings; . . . forming a
totality in \vhich the relations of the parts involve relations to the whole,"
and "forming a complex, self-determined whole." In Taliesin North the
visible forms are so completely integrated with
the specific purpose of the building
the materials from which it is coiistructed, and
the eiwironment of which it is a part
that the structure develops a life pattern of its own.
in diameter that secludes the bathroom and opens into a fireplace. The
"living room" is furnished with five pieces of impeccably beautiful furniture
resting lightly on a white wool rug that, in turn, seems to float at anchor
on the polished brick floor. Its boundaries are intimated by an unframed
painting suspended from an iron stand and by a large plant. The plan is
We have been looking at this house, though, out of its full context, for
enclosed with brick as the main house is open with glass. Differing from
each other in every respect save basic shape, these three imits complement
each other and the space in which they exist. Man-made landscaping is
ting are intimately related in a way that is distinctly different from Taliesin
North and is new in the story of architecture.
rather than fixed enclosure. Regularity, precision, and simplicity are key-
30 - Art in the Home
notes. Regularity comes from repetition and standardization of predomi-
technology. Sim-
nantly rectangular forms. Precision comes from machine
is unnecessary.
plicity is achieved through the elimination of everything
that
of "less more." Interest comes from the total composition of space and
is
materials and works
enclosing planes, which are sparingly accented with rich
of art.
implies, the International Style developed out of
wide-
As its name
from local
spread twentieth-century technology and ideals rather than
architecture" that aims
traditions or geographic environments. It is a "world
coordinate basic, generalized human needs and the
techniques of stand-
to
attempt to create
ardized industrial production. Philip Johnson made no
design and furnishings
the informality and "naturalism" inherent in the
Wright and Techbuilt houses. Nor was he concerned with such
factors
of the
economical heating and cooling. But he achieved what he
wanted-a
as
own terms.
A Japanese Home
(Figs. 31A
Evolved over several centuries, the traditional Japanese house
sheltered openness.
and B) is serenely calm and has a remarkable feeling of
simple and clear, yet intricately complex in details and
space
It is basically
standardized mod-
relationships. Like Techbuilt houses, it is designed on a
woven mats measuring about three by six feet not only cover the
floor
ule:
regularity allows the
but determine the building's proportions. This basic
composure. Slid-
designers to introduce variety and surprise without loss of
relate it to the garden.
ing panels flexibly subdivide interior space and
house
The natural colors of wood, plastic, and woven reeds further tie the
natural setting and produce a singleness of effect amid variety. The
to its
size and shape of each unit is so beautifully in scale with the occupants
A Museum of
traditional Japanese house built by native craftsmen in the garden of the
Modern Art, New
York, shows the unsurpassed awareness of materials and structure,
space and texture that have evolved through centuries of building with wood. Sliding
Shoji panels enable the occupants to open the house to the landscape or securely enclose
the interior. Similar mo\able panels, subtly varied, also flexibly subdivide the space
(Photographs by Ezra Stoller)
inside.
(A) Above.An impeccable sense of order unites dixerse, asymmetrically disposed ele-
ments that suggest a flexibility and change quite unlike the static finality of the Dutch
exterior (Fig. 3).
(B) Below. In the interior, the continuing lines of the exposed structure, broad open-
ings, and refined details produce a feeling of spaciousness that far transcends the actual
dimensions.
the exterior. A logical center of interest, the centered fireplace projects into
the room. Its importance is underlined by the sensitively shaped moldings
and its soft green color, ^vhich differentiates it fiom the oak floor and the
white plaster walls and ceiling. Notice, though, that its color extends onto
the wall at the left and carries around the room in the cornice ^vhere walls
and ceiling meet. The furnishings bring diversity of many sorts. Draperies
and upholstery are bright cherry red, a color that is echoed in the Oriental
rug. Mahogany chairs and tables are gracefully and comfortably curved.
Intricate pattern, color, and shape are introduced in the rug, tea set and
other decorative objects. Views into other worlds are offered by the paint-
ings. The Brush-Everard house is consistent yet diversified, as was the spirit
of the age. It stands today as a unified expression of eighteenth-century liv-
ing in Virginia.
Some day you will probably be faced with the problem of furnishing
one room or a whole house. Here is one way of tackling it.
36 - Art in the Home
Decide What Activities Will Take Place in Each Area
put. Answer such questions as
Analyze the uses to which each space will be
in the room? Relax? Read? Talk?
Listen
these: What will you want to do
The importance that you attach to each phase of your life should affect
just emphasis. For specific help on this matter you will want to study
Chapter 14.
the house from road and neighbors. In contrast, the garden of Mary Arden's
house (Fig. 33A) is a picturesque profusion of flowering plants, trees, and
vines in harmony with the informality of the architecture and stone wall.
Clearly, it is a garden for a climate in which flowers prosper and for persons
who enjoy horticultural pursuits. Quite different from either of these, the
"tos:
in
but is a con-
(A) Above, left.owners' first sketch plan indicates what they wanted
The
£usinE assemblage of unrelated elements. , . ,
Church has the same elements, but they are purposefully organized in a
handsome design.
The isolated terrace facing the hot afternoon sun was moved to make
it directly accessible from and sheltered by the house. It terminates in
an outdoor living room with built-in and movable furniture and a roof
against the elements.
The service yard, cutting garden, and tool storage were relocated to bring
them close to kitchen and carport. A low hedge hides the inevitable
clutter without sharply dividing these areas from those for group living.
The picayune stepping stones, which made both walking and lawn
maintenance difficult, were replaced with ample pavement encircling
the house and lawn.
them in terms of home life today, and apply to each the criteria stated in
this chapter.
Second, look in the follo^ving sections of this book for further ideas
about color, design, and materials that apply to the home. Part I, with
its emphasis on human needs, serves as a foundation for the more intensive
study of materials, form and color, and design. See how many direct applica-
tions to your own home you can make of the facts and principles in
Parts
II and III.
Art and Life in Arnerica: Oliver W. Larkin (New York: Holt, Rinehart and
Winston, 1960).
A penetrating study of the development of American art, including the
home.
The Art of Home Landscaping: Garret Eckbo (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1956).
Clear, concise, and authoritative.
At Home with Tomorrow: Carl Koch (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
1958).
An account of the Techbuilt house and the experiences that led up to it.
Builders' Homes for Better Living: A. Quincy Jones and Frederick E. Emmons
(New York: Reinhold, 1957).
Ranges from the "planned environment" to the "building business."
Gardens Are for People: Thomas D. Church (New York: Reinhold, 1955).
The Natural House: Frank Lloyd Wright (New York: Horizon Press, 1954).
vast cities, are made up of individuals with some common interests and some
kind of communal government. The remote, fast disappearing farm com-
munities were housed in small groups of buildings, with a blacksmith shop
in a corner of a barn, root cellars for the storage of fruits and
vegetables
need arose, the barbershop, hospital, bakery, and tailor shop. Only occa-
sionally were there journeys to town to trade and barter for the few essen-
tials not produced on the farms. Although these communities ^vere to a large
extent self-sufficient, they were dependent on the vagaries of nature
for
their well-being.
42
Williamsburg Again: The Community - 43
the barber— renders his own specialized service. A single hitch in this vast
complexity, such as an electric power failure for even a few minutes, affects
hundreds of thousands of these interdependent persons.
Between the extremes of small communities and gigantic metropolises
are communities of many sizes. These may be villages or cities held together
polis, extending for hiuidreds of miles and even crossing state boundaries,
Through public buildings, city and regional plans, parks, painting, and
sculpture, each community has magnificent opportunities to take care of its
4000 more came to stay in the taverns and inns. Some came on governmental
business, others to see the newest fashions from London or to be amused by
the market. Colonel Spotswood boasted that his supper guests at the Gov-
ernor's Palace numbered and Governor William Gooch said: "The
400,
gentlemen and ladies here are perfectly well bred, not an ill dancer in my
government."
Out of the busy life of eighteenth-century America came the commu-
nity of Williamsburg. Common goals banded the citizens together to pro-
duce arts that expressed their actions, philosophies, and ideals. The builders
of Williamsburg were English colonists imbued with the eighteenth-century
attitudes of the mother country. Since their way of living and the geographi-
cal conditions resembled those in England, they adapted the architecture
44 - Art in the Community
noble thoroughfare 99
Duke of Gloucester Street, the main avenue, is a
the east end it is terminated by the
feet wide and almost a mile long. At
the most important
Capitol, which, as the major public building, was given
At the west end it forks into main roads to Richmond and James-
position
this strategic intersection stands the
College of William and
town, and at
major thoroughfare is lined
Mary. Between these two public buildings the
important residences. Parallel
with other community buildings, shops, and
for residences. Be-
to Duke of Gloucester Street are several narrower streets
farms providing the food for
yond these-in the eighteenth century-were the
the community. Between the College
and the Capitol is Palace Green, a
Governor's Palace and providing
broad lawn extending two blocks to the
of the Colony's most important politi-
a dignified approach to the residence
cal personage.
simple, and its rectangular pattern resem-
The plan of Williamsburg is
streets in this Colonial capital were not merely traffic arteries but played
their part in giving the city a simple grandeur that typifies eighteenth-
century living. For its purpose and its time, the plan was both beautiful and
useful.
tells you at once that it was more than an ordinary home, that it was the
official center of hospitality for eighteenth-century Virginia.
How was this achieved? Many factors contribute. First, its location at
the end of Palace Green gives it a distinguished setting. Second, its size
forecourt wall leading up to the richly ornamented gate. Finally, the main
building is masterfully designed. Symmetrical and precisely ordered, it is
saved from monotony and stiffness by the rightness of its proportions and
the grace of its detail. The building is a simple rectangle which gains stabil-
ity and repose through its horizontality. The roof is a truncated pyramid
that serves as a transitionbetween the lower portion and the cupola. The
verticality of the windows, chimney, and cupola tempers the dominant
Both of these devices direct attention toward the central doorway. Re-
ornament enriches the total composition.
strained, judiciously placed
The design of the building suggests comparison with musical practices
of many eighteenth-century European composers who favored the "Theme
and Variations." They would begin with a simple tune of their own, or a
well-known popular song or hymn, and then without disturbing a hair in
their powdered wigs treat the original tune in many and varied ways.
Williamsburg architects handled architectural forms in a similar way. No-
tice, for example, how the truncated pyramid is repeated and varied in the
roof of themain building, the dormers and chimneys, and the roofs of the
two smaller structures. Echoing and varying an important shape bestows
importance on the basic shape and helps unify the design, a fact also well
known to contemporary architects and composers.
Just as conversation in the glittering drawing rooms was
characterized
and airy cupolas. Throughout Williamsburg the graceful design and the
adroit use of ornament are so effective that today, as we look at the whole
community, we are transported across the intervening centuries to that
age in ^vhich reason and functionalism underlay imaginative yet ordered
beauty.
The Governor's Garden (Fig. 46B) carries the precision, formality, and ele-
gance of the Palace into the landscape. It, too, is basically rectangular, but
the diagonal hedges echo the roof lines and the rounded shrubs recall the
cupola. The Garden, like the Palace, expresses the love of orderly and
elaborate surroundings of people who wore powdered wigs and lacy jabots.
brick as a foil for the refined white ornamentation; cupolas and spires;
formally placed openings; windows with small panes of glass; and restrained
ornamentation.
ours. It though, well worth our study, not as something to copy or imitate,
is,
CONTEMPORARY COMMUNITIES
the changes in our country have
Since the days of Colonial Williamsburg,
civilization was concentrated on the
been phenomenal. At that time our
business and our cities were
Atlantic coast. Agriculture was our major
few and small. The nineteenth century
brought tremendous expansion of
population; equally significant was
our geographical boundaries and of our
of cities. Twentieth-century changes have
been
the growth of industry and
population doubled, and our cities bore the brunt
equally spectacular. Our
the increase was more than 22-fold); and
of the increase (in Los Angeles,
million to over 70 million. In
our labor force increased from around 29
skyline (the tallest buildmg
1900 New York City did not have its famous
only in the homes of prosperous
was 29 stories), electric lights were common
city dwellers, and telephones
were few. Radios for home use came in the
respects, though, transportation
1920s and television in the 1940s. In many
developments have had the most profound effects
on community life. Trol-
Air-
ley cars replaced horsecars and
in turn are being replaced by busses.
city, elevators take us to the
planes and fast trains speed us from city to
buildings. In 1895 only four automobiles
were registered in this
tops of tall
million.
country. In 1900 there were 14,000, but by 1940 there were 31.5
trucks crowded our streets and high-
In 1960 a total of 70 million cars and
ways.
What are the results? Cities have mushroomed, but very often without
expert planning. Minimum thought has
been given to appropriate locations
Greenbelt, Maryland
Washington, D.C., is one of
Greenbelt, located at Berwyn, Maryland, near
1930s by the Federal Government to
three similar towns planned in the
provide a good environment for home and
community life. The character
in the following statement.
of these communities is described
Contemporary Communities - 49
and country are broken down. To the city worker it offers a home in health-
his job. To the small
ful country surroundings, yet within easy reach of
offers better facilities and a steady
farmer living in the greenbelt area, it
market within a few hundred yards of his own fields. For both of them,
it combines the conveniences and
cultural advantages of a city with many
has been
advantages of life on the land. Such a union of town and country
made possible by technology, transportation improvements and a host of
other factors. We need only to make use of the tools which are lying at
hand.*
the advantages ofsuburban home life. Although this seems like a twentieth-
Cyrus of Persia in
century idea, an excerpt from a letter written to King
559 B.C. proves otherwise. "Our property
seems to me the most beautiful
BE.
to meet con-
The entire of Greenbelt, Maryland, was designed in the 1930s
community
(Photographs courtesy of Farm Security Admimstratton)
temporary needs.
(A) Above. The plan is organically related to the
topography and the lives of the
minimize noise
(B) Dwellings are arranged in economical superblocks that
Below
automobile The homes face parks and are near woodlands.
nd the dangers of
and traffic.
Contemporary Communities - 51
then, if necessary, a new one separated from the original by farm or wood-
lands would be started. Greenbelt would delight Ebenezer Howard, were
he still living, because it incorporates many of his ideas, especially the sur-
At Greenbelt the rural setting provides space for the National Agricul-
tural Research Center, one of the world's greatest farm laboratories. Here
scientists develop new crops and new farming methods that contribute
16,000 acres was planned by experts, and for the first time since Maryland
was settled, the soil is being used scientifically to increase its fertility.
Figure 50A shows the community plan, which handsomely fits both the
topography and the citizens' needs. The layout resembles a horseshoe. Shop-
ping and recreation areas bordering on the lake
facilities, a theater, schools,
"superblocks." As shown in Figs. 50B and 64B, superblocks are much larger
than ordinary city blocks: instead of twenty or thirty dwellings in each
there may be two hundred served by a relatively small amount of pavement.
Streets are costly to build, expensive to maintain, and dangerous to cross.
Much of this land might far better be used for parks, as in Greenbelt.
The advantages of superblocks go far beyond dollars-and-cents economy
because they provide opportunities for infinitely better living. In Greenbelt
two gains stand out: almost all dwellings face on parks and are served by
streets with minimum traffic.
The architects, too, solved their problems well. The residences are
they not detached
multi-dwelling structures. Why, one might ask, are
apartment buildmgs are
homes? These are the reasons: row houses and
dwellings use
much less expensive to build, heat, and maintain. Grouped
light, air, and views superior to
land advantageously-each living unit has
those in many subdivisions, and the land saved is developed
single-dwelling
within walking distance
as parks. Multiple housing also brings more families
of schools, churches, stores, and recreational areas.
The interiors of the buildings were planned for
maximum livability
as straightforward ex-
at moderate cost, and the exteriors were designed
interiors. Architects, home economists,
and industrial de-
pressions of the
simple, comfortable, durable setting
signers joined their talents to develop a
inexpensive.
for modern living that was surprisingly
center serves shopping, educational and
recreational
The community
helter-skelter mixture of stores and traffic,
the harmoniously re-
needs No
lated shops and theater are grouped around a paved and planted court
a pleasant view of the lake beyond. Nearby yet
separated from
that affords
the shopping center is the school with its playgrounds extending to the lake.
ing the structures, and creating a new organization of land and buildnigs.
until
To most of these projects have been primarily residential and,
date,
recently, were designed for a restricted income
group-low, middle, or high.
Many have been monotonous, barren, almost brutal blocks of masonry
implicit human use.
grandiosely arranged in space for which there is no
Ideally, they increasepopulation density but not city congestion, for they
near their places of
encourage people to live in well-lighted housing units
work, education, and worship.
section of San Francisco, comprising 19.7 acres of
land adjacent to
A
the city's financial core yet with magnificent
views of the bay, had become
invited nine groups
decrepit. The San Francisco Redevelopment Agency
proposals for using this land.
of architects, builders, and financiers to submit
many
The design of the winning team (Figs. 54 and 55) is remarkable in
*
respects:
The pioposed Guldcu Gale Redevelopment (1960) near San Francisco's financial center
{Courtesy of
combines varied types of liousing witli parks, stores, and an office building.
San Francisco Redevelopment Agency)
rectangularity of
Above. An aerial view of the architects' model shows that the basic
has been acknowledged but humanized by many open spaces and the in-
the city's plan
formal placement of buildings.
the groupmg of
Opposite. When viewed from normal eye level, one sees how well
courts and parks avoids
high-rise apartment buildings and two-story town houses around
regimented monotony.
106 two-story town houses, each with its private garden. All types of
The Redevelopment Agency's hope that this project would "provide San
Francisco with distinguished architecture" and the Architectural Advisory
Panel's wish for a plan that would "make the greatest contribution to an
environment for the totality of human experience— physical, cultural and
spiritual" have at this stage been realized.
56 - Art in the Community
The Kentucky Dam and Powerhouse (Figs. 57A and B), gigantic as they
are, only hint at the size of the largest, most comprehensively planned devel-
opment in the United States. Regional planning is the phrase used to de-
scribe large-scale planning of this sort. The Tennessee River, whose valley
trolled and frequently destructive force into a chain of lakes reaching from
the Southern Appalachians 700 miles to the Ohio River. Twenty-one dams
hold spring floods in great reservoirs to develop electricity and to create
navigable waterways for inexpensive transporation. To accomplish this, 1 13
million cubic yards of concrete, rock, and earth— 38 times the cubage of the
Pyramid of Khufu in Egypt (Fig. lOOA)— were put in place. The most appar-
ent results are the massive dams and powerhouses from which power lines
carry electricity over the countryside; but these are only symbols of the im-
pact TVA has had.
The purpose of the TVA is simple: to put a river to work for the peo-
ple. Its astoundingly varied results include new houses, and fresh paint on
old ones; electric water pumps in backyards, and refrigerators in houses;
new private industries, and the revival of some gone into decay; less tax
delinquency, and more money in the people's hands; new public-library
service, more hospitals, and better schools; improved methods of farming and
reforestation of valleys. In sum, a new release of human and natural energy.
Important as this is, the TVA would not find its place in an art book
were it not that city and regional planners, architects, landscape architects,
and sculptors cooperated with experts in all branches of
designers, painters,
contemporary technology to produce forms expressing the concept of a river
working for people. The Kentucky Dam and Powerhouse testify that TVA
architects rose to the challenge. TVA architecture is not "decoration of
engineering," nor is it naked, accidental, or unrefined. It is rather a truly
many of which are prefabricated, are pleasantly domestic. Schools and com-
munity centers are friendly, informal structures at home in their geograhical
settings. Highways permit speed, parks invite relaxation. In short, the forms
express their functions. The designers of land and buildings have given
the citizens imaginatively conceived, functional space for their activities.
Appropriately, they have enriched this space with photo-murals, paintings
(Fig. 79B), and sculpture.
57
CITY PLANNING
make group living satisfying and effi-
Cities are living organisms created to
planning far more than
and we have become acutely aware that city is
cient,
regardless of topography or land
laying out identical rectangular blocks,
use.The chief concern of today's planners is with the lives of men.
The basic problem in city planning is the organization of land, streets,
science large in scale and
and buildings for group living. It is an art and
planning not only expresses
complex in nature. As with other art forms, city
produces it, but continuously affects the thoughts
and feel-
the culture that
we know, tends to foster undesirable
ings of people. Dwelling in slums,
home is not healthy, and
pauerns of behavior. Having smog invade one's
nerves. Well-planned communities pre-
fighting traffic jams is hard on one's
paintings or great architecture,
vent such evils-and they do more. Like
they raise the spirit of man.
in an
When cities were small and changed slowly, they developed
equally true of New England villages
orderly, organic, creative way. This is
and Italian hill towns. But simplicity vanished
when city growth became al-
society and the startling popu-
most malignant with the industrialization of
lation increase during the past two
hundred years. Prior to the nineteenth
persons lived in a community with a
century less than one out of every ten
out of every three persons do,
population of 5000 or more. Today almost two
nine out of ten will live in
and it is predicted that within a few decades
sizable communities. Some cities are
doubling their size every decade, and
large cities will be from five to ten
trends indicate that by the year 2000 our
downtown districts traffic is barely able
times their present size. In some
even though streets consume one-third of the land. The dispiriting
to crawl
equally serious. Fortunately, experts and
com-
drabness of many cities is
Land Use
residential, community, com-
There are four general types of land use:
usually have zones for these varied
mercial, and industrial. Communities
land uses so that conflicts are minimized.
first chance at the most desirable,
health-
1. Residential areas deserve
riiuns, parks and other recreational areas to serve several or all of the neigh-
borhoods. Today the major public buildings are often grouped as civic
centers in landscaped settings near the center of the community. Branch
60 - Art in the Community
recreational areas are most con-
libraries, high schools, parks and other
Wherever they are located^
venient when distributed throughout the city.
spirit o£ their cu.es and
sensitively the
community areas ought to express
citizens.
be a source of pride to their ,, , ,i , •
neighborhood, regional,
Commercial
3. areas are of three general types:
Circulation
When one realizes that more than 70 million automobiles are driven more
than one billion miles every twenty-four hours on our network of well over
3 million miles of road, the critical seriousness of the circulation
problem
becomes apparent. And the problem is as complex as it is big.
Even in horse-and-buggy days there \\ere roads that differed in size and
purpose, as did those in Williamsburg. Between towns there were main roads
fi-om which branched minor ones. But traffic was light, quiet, slow, and
Greeks, and
not continuous, history. Extensively used by the Egyptians,
Romans, they were so uncritically revived in the nineteenth century that
little thought was given to alternatives. Their distinguishing characteristic
two sets of parallel streets at right angles to each other. Figures 62
and
is
understand orderliness. Too often, though, they have been nothing more
of equal
than a rigid application of a cut-and-dried formula with all streets
width and all blocks of the same size and shape. When ruthlessly imposed on
such hilly sites as Duluth or San Francisco, the result would be laughable
\vere it not so expensive and dangerous.
Radial patterns are characterized by streets radiating from one or
2.
radial streets
more centers as illustrated in Paris (Fig. 64A). Usually, the
are important thoroughfares and are combined with a gridiron pattern.
Such plans tend to make traffic direct, to give impressive settings for monu-
ments and buildings, and to provide interest and variety.
a growing city are marked by circular boulevards, much like the growth
62 - Art in the Community
replaced old
rings of a tree. In some European cities these boulevards have
as Detroit and Greenbelt
walls moats, or canals. In such American cities
The distinctive characteristic is a
they were originally laid out as
streets.
Most of our communities are centric. At one end of the scale are the
small centric commimities— New England villages centered around their
commons, Williamsburg built around Duke of Gloucester Street, and
Greenbelt almost encircling its commimity and commercial center. When
communities remain small, either by chance or by intent, so that distances
from the center to the edges are short, centric plans fimction well. At
the other end of the scale are the vast metropolises centered on their
commercial and industrial districts. In these, even though the popidation
is densely concentrated, distances become great and traffic congestion at
the center becomes awesome. Sunlight, fresh air, and open gxeen spaces
are usually at a minimum.
In bygone days when moats and walls gave effective military protection,
when transportation and commiuiication between communities ^vere poorly
developed, and when cities by today's standards were small, concentration
around one center offered conspicuous advantages. And it still has its good
points. In New York City, for example, one finds in the few square miles
of the central district an almost fantastic concentration of varied business
and cultural opportiniities packed tightly together— and served by an almost
hopelessly tangled and congested transportation system.
(A) Left. Centric city plans tend to focus on one major center. Street patterns can be of
any type: this example combines radial and ring streets.
(B) Right. Decentralized city plans (right) reduce concentration by having a number of
centers. They, too, can have varied street layouts.
64 - Art in the Community
congestion by concentrat-
^%?Below. LeCorbusier's bold Voisin plan (1925) would relieve
widelyspaced buildings set in parks, and by providing
ing work space in monumental,
wide traffic thoroughfares.
City Planning - 65
in Fig. 64A. Quite as important as the provision for streets and subways
is the fact that ample residential areas conveniently adjacent to the com-
mercial zone would greatly reduce the need for home-to-work transporta-
tion.
Sixteen enormous skyscrapers would rise 600 feet from the centers of
the superblocks carved by the roads. Each of these glass-\valled, cruciform
towers would accommodate from 20,000 to 40,000 employees. Although
the population density in this section was far too great in 1925 with the
existing plan, the "Voisin" Scheine would increase it fourfold. In the exist-
ing plan, buildings cover fiom 79 to 80 percent of the land. In the new
scheme, buildings cover only five percent of the land and the remaining
95 percent would be given over to boulevards, parking areas, and parks.
Thus, it would be a 600-acre garden city providing a healthy, pleasant
working environment for a great many persons. \'isually it would be an im-
pressive, but somewhat overwhelming, twentieth-century organization of
aim was to raise the level of city-planning discussion from what he terms
"silly little reforms" to reasonable, twentieth-century standards and
princi-
ples. Among important principles to which it gives attention are these: de-
against living in large cities and also against commuting long distances to
portation routes so that, for example, Cadiz might be at one end of the
road and St. Petersburg at the other. In many parts of our country this
type of growth has been proceeding naturally along highways leading out of
large citieswhere communities once separated by natural greenbelts are
stretching out until they merge. Unfortunately, in most instances, lack of
planning has merely lined the highways with hamburger shacks, filling sta-
tions, and small stores behind which gridiron streets have been ruthlessly
impressed on the land. These have almost nothing in common with the con-
cept discussed below. Ribbon plans have several advantages: expansion can
proceed almost indefinitely by establishing new units, but each unit remains
an identity limited in size; open space for farms and gardens and for light
and air is adjacent to more densely settled sections; and much of the traffic
mobiles and trains that runs through a continuous greenbelt from one com-
munity to the others. Industry lines the leeward side of the traffic artery
so that smoke and fumes will not blow into the other areas. On the wind-
highway
In this idealized ribbon plan (1945), a landscaped railroad and an arterial
separate industrial areas (at the left) from shopping facilities, residences, and schools
topography and community factors would undoubt-
at the right. If actually carried out,
edly lead to a less rigid,monotonous street pattern. {From The New City by L. Hilber-
seimer, courtesy of Paul Theobald)
can have any shape and character indicated by specific local conditions.
Few communities fall exclusively into either of these types of city plans,
even the rare ^vholly new communities being laid out today, because the
plans necessarily have some features in common.
finished. As ways of living change, the planning of our cities must change,
and experts need the help of well-informed citizens to make and keep cities
desirable places in which to live and work. One of the most important
aspects o£ city planning, which is frequently overlooked by planners in-
volved with efficiency, economy, and large-scale schemes, is our very deep
need for cities that make us feel at home. For good living we need open
68 - Art in the Community
are illustrated in Figs. 69A and B, and 71. The first is a small, intensively
developed city park; the second is a much larger, informal park; and the
third is a parkway.
blocks in
Bryant Park occupies the remaining space of the two city
midtown Manhattan not covered by the New York Public Library. It
gives
lunch hour
workers in this area a pleasant spot to stroll or sit during
their
cisely patternedrows of trees. Because such parks are usually small and
the space is paved-turf
located in densely populated sections, much of
Seats, pro-
would not stand the wear and tear of large numbers of people.
sycamore trees, are orna-
tected in Bryant Park by the shade of large
land forms, even
mental and useful parts of the design. In such parks the
man's intensive use as are the
the plants, are as consciously shaped for
building materials in the nearby architecture.
markedly different
Large parks, such as Central Park, generally show a
and, consequently, they are
character. Nature becomes the guiding light
natural features of inter-
informally naturalistic. Such parks often include
buildings, are dominant. Lawns
est-lakes, hills, or rocks-and these, not
and meadows are diversified in shape and are bounded by bays and prom-
ontories similar to those seen in the countryside.
They are a refreshing
as it stands at
relief from a man-dominated environment. Central Park
the result of a hundred years of planning and effort. Initially
present is
Vaux, American pioneers
planned by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert
City Planning -
69
Parks and park\va\^ iii llll)^t large communities ,ii. ..died in size and character as is
demonstrated by examples from New York City. (Cuiiilesy of Nezo York City Park De-
partment)
(A) Above. Bryant Park is a small, formal open space in a congested commercial dis-
trict.
(B) Below. Informal in design, Central Park is an outdoor haven of 840 acres in a
city that has 81,000 persons per square mile.
70 - Art in the Community
in the naturalistic school of landscape design, the park has been con-
tinuously developed with few deviations from the original concept. Much
larger than most city parks. Central two and one-half miles long and
Park is
about one-half mile wide and has 32 miles of winding footpaths. Although
it is atypical in size, its effect on American park
design has been profound.
Probably no large park in this country has escaped some influence from
bring rural atmosphere into urban surroundings.
this early effort to
the parkway designer's concern does not stop with getting a paved
surface
for rapid automotive traffic. Otherwise, parkways raise the same problems
The result: new forms and new esthetic experiences. The precisely engi-
neered curves are seldom rigidly geometrical and confining, but have the
Grand Central Parkway is a sinuous, multi-lane highway well separated from smaller
roads that lead to recreation areas. Its free, organic form contrasts strikingly with the
Strict gridiron subdivision in die foreground.
72 - Art in the Community
COMMUNITY ARCHITECTURE
Valley
When we considered Williamsburg, Greenbelt, and the Tennessee
each was consistent with the
Authority, we noted that the architecture of
in which new build-
whole development. Often, however, the environment
integrity, and the architects are then
ings will be placed has no distinctive
confused mediocrity of their
challenged to create designs that rise above the
the architects of the two
surroundings. This was the situation faced by
groups of buildings discussed below.
Institute of Technology
Auditorium and Chapel, Massachusetts
of Technology was founded
In the century since the Massachusetts Institute
a number of architectural styles have
swept the country, and this campus,
like many others, has a motley collection of buildings. Thus, when architect
associates were asked to design a new
auditorium and
Eero Saarinen and his
enclosing a large space? The answers to these questions convinced him that
so complex and the possible
the functions of contemporary architecture are
many forms should be considered before a
building forms so varied that
final choice is made.
solution to every problem
Rejecting the "cult of the cube" as the best
look" and also be a
and believing that "each building must have its own
of the older buildmgs
"good neighbor," Saarinen observed that a number
with a thin-shell concrete
featured domes. Why not enclose the auditorium
dome? Intensive studies indicated that this would be the strongest and least
expensive construction, and historical architecture (of which Saarinen kept
enclosures are uniquely
himself constantly aware) attests that dome-shaped
satisfying and bring the audience into
close contact with the stage. The
the blue-gray ceiling, white acoustical panels float like clouds and direct the
sounds to the listeners. The seats are upholstered in black fabric, but their
backs are enameled in six shades of blue, green, and violet.
The brick chapel rests on low arches in a pool of water. Above the
skylight is an aluminum bell tower created by sculptor Theodore Roszak.
Inside the chapel one feels the ^varm enclosure of undulating brick walls
laid in varied patterns and the mystical quality of light coming from above
and below with no distracting glare. Above a white marble ceremonial table
is a golden metal screen, designed by Harry Bertoia.
Equally important is the open plaza that is an integral part of the total
In coping with our everyday art problems we often wish for the skills
of professional artists. Rest assured, however, that in spite of their ability
and experience, experts struggle as hard if not harder than laymen. Seldom
do significant works of art emerge fully developed from flashes of inspira-
tion. Usually they come from hard thinking, creative insights, many trials,
critical evaluations, and persistence. The few small sketches of the MIT
auditorium reproduced here give little hint of the intense, prolonged design
process. Saarinen has been known to use more than 170 feet of tracing paper
in one evening's work. His winning design for the United States Embassy
in London grew out of 2000 drawings. In planning his approach to another
competition, he declared that it was very simple. All that they had to do was
to make 100 studies of each combination of elements and select the one of
greatest merit. This would be followed by 100 studies of each combination
of the combinations!
As any major design project, there were hundreds of problems to be
in
solved: materials and construction, heating and ventilation, lighting and
acoustics, and costs. Then, too, the reactions of many diverse groups— the
Board of Regents, the faculty, the students, the alumni, and architectural
tecture is not just to fulfill man's need for shelter, but also to fulfill man's
belief in the nobility of his existence on earth. Our architecture is too hum-
ble. It should be prouder, more aggressive, much richer and larger than
>fr**"*^'
a billowing,
°\b) fi'it.. Barely touching the ground at three points, the Auditorium is
Many possibilities were explored before the final solution was reached. {Courtesy of the
Architectural Forum)
'^mt^KmmmM^sm
One of the first schemes {top), in which both From the beginning Saarinen wanted the Auditorium
buildings were domed, pro\ed too expensive. to be based on fluid, structural forms. An early sketch
In the next stage {center) the plaza was made {top) had a dome supported on side. An-
stilts at one
larger, and a tall tower became a strong verti- other trial shows a four-pointed dome held
{center)
cal accent. A later scheme {bottom) retained above the ground by buttresses. A later sketch {bot-
the enlarged plaza, discarded the tower, and tom) retains the four-pointed dome, but the supports
introduced a rectangular chapel. are buried in the ground.
76 - A.rt in the Community
tion, but with the unique challenge of making the buildings monumentally
symbolic of a world community. The shown in Figs. 77A and
results are
along the East River. In terms of use, it provides numerous rooms for official
conferences and lounges for employees. Visually, it becomes a base for the
towering Secretariat and a transitional link between it and the General
Assembly.
These buildings have been praised and condemned. Some critics admire
humanly monumental and cold. Be that as it may, one can hardly help re-
specting their orderly beauty and their vigorous yet peaceful quality.
They
concepts
represent another example of the International Style, and the basic
underlying their design are among those vigorously championed by Le
Corbusier.
Community Architecture - 77
The United Nations Headquarters in New York City (1950) shelters an extremely com-
plex world organization in three differentiated buildings. AVallace K. Harrison, Director
of Planning. {Courtesy of UNATIONS)
(A) Above. The tall Secretariat is a monumental rectangle of glass and marble; the
low General Assembly Hall (right) has cur\ed walls and a roof through which the dome
of the auditorium asserts itself; the Conference Building is a horizontal structure linking
the other two buildings together.
(B) BelouK The Auditorium has walls leaning inward and curving to the back of the
hall. Two abstract murals by Fernand Leger enliven the space.
78 - Art in the Community
COMMUNITY MURALS
Prehistoric painted community murals and carved statues as a neces-
man
that he did this before he
sary part of his Uving, and evidence indicates
Since those early days
gave much attention to the making of useful objects.
sculpture that
many people have enriched their buildings with murals and
accomplishments.
record significant events or vivify group ideals and
faces antedates the Spanish conquest. Thus, when the new University of
was natural that "artists" should make their con-
Mexico was planned, it
(A) Above. The Library of the University of Mexico, completed m 1953, is boldly en-
symbolically depicts the Spanish-Colo-
hanced with Juan O-Gorman-s mosaic mural that
significance extends far beyond their immediate locale. They belong not
of the people
only to the community in which they were created but
to all
COMMUNITY SCULPTURE
Paul, Minnesota, erected a new city and county
Some years ago the city of St.
building. At the end of the entrance hall, a dramatic rooin with a light
the city de-
floor, black marble walls, and a warm-colored metal ceiling,
to peace.
cided to erect a statue as a World War I memorial but dedicated
The artist commissioned to create the statue was Carl Milles, a Swedish
sculptor living in America.
statue (Fig. 81), over thirty feet in height, represents
an Indian
The
chief smoking a pipe of peace. The material is Mexican onyx, slightly
Milles, in answer to this paradox, stated that one of the sources of this
conception was an incident in his early experience when he heard an Indian
Any number of other subjects might have been used. Milles expressed peace
emphasized
by an intelligent handling of form, color, and texture strikingly
solemn and
by the background. Movement in the statue is upward to the
angry, or
calm face-aloof, impassive, detached-by no means warlike,
forceful sculpture, each and every part of it builds into the total pattern.
Each form expresses the spirit of the whole. Milles has given an organiza-
and quieting shapes surmounted by a countenance
tion of orderly, pacifying,
whose imperturbable expression is a fitting climax to this monumental
controversy arose
work. When the finished work was unveiled, an intense
groups took
over the appropriateness and beauty of the statue. Citizens'
sides and passed judgments. The furor reached
such proportions that work-
ers were stationed near the statue to jot down the comments of the visitors.
Community Sculpture • 81
"My! Ain't it big!" "What's the idea of having a warrior stand for
peace?" "A waste of taxpayers' money." "It is the most noble statue I've ever
seen, and I've been through all the galleries of Europe." "It expresses peace;
deep reverence." "The onyx is so warm and inviting that you want to touch
it." "I have never seen a statue more perfectly related to its background."
Hundreds of comments above were gathered. They indicated
like the
almost all possible reactions, from anger and annoyance to almost ecstatic
approval. Some people seemed upset because of the fear and distrust of some-
thino- new. Some were intrigued with the material; others with the statue's
size; others with its basic conceptions.
ment on it. Herein lies one of the great problems in community art. It ought
to express the community— but not in a thread-bare way. Art, like science,
has most vigor ^vhen it goes ahead, but forward-looking art is seldom ac-
art of the community, and in all other fields as well, should lead and educate
rather than being innocuous repetition of what most people already know
and feel.
as you can see by looking at Figs. 82A and B. For centuries, children
have enjoyed climbing over rocks, and mounds, but only recently have
logs,
known, but it is our guess that a community feast served from this 14-foot
carving would not be quite the same as one served from an iron kettle.
Both the play sculpture and the Potlatch Bowl bring the esthetic and prac-
tical together in a vital union.
CONCLUSION
How does the art of the community differ from the art of the home? Being
the expression of a larger group, it is less individual, less personal. It repre-
sents a city, not a family. The buildings house many persons and serve
functions that are many and complex. To express this, the architect makes
them impressive in design (United Nations Headquarters), the city planner
gives them important locations (Governor's Palace, Williamsburg) and pleas-
ant surroundings (Greenbelt). Since public buildings represent the spirit
of the community, they transcend purely utilitarian requirements. Rich
and sculpture embody the ideals and traditions of the
materials, paintings,
community. Future historians, prying into what will then be the past, will
use these buildings, this art, as a basis for understanding the present civiliza-
tion. Will our buildings impress them as original, creative, and vital, or as
the city laid out? Is the plan functional? Where could it be improved?
Look at your own public buildings. When were they designed-and by
84 - Art in the Community
whom? In what "style" were they built? To what extent do they express the
community? To what extent do they function efficiently? Is there evidence
of a changing attitude?
Thenlook at housing conditions. Are there shuns? If so, what has
caused them? Are the new residential sections thoughtfully laid out? Are
the apartment houses well designed?
Finally, look at the paintingand sculpture that belong to your com-
munity. \Vhere is it? Is it appreciated today? As always, study your own
situation, become familiar with all of its aspects, and then see
what you
can do to improve it.
Community art has a long history. Of the many books which have
been written about it, the following are suggested:
History Builds the Town: Arthur Korn (Chester Springs, Pa.: Dufour, 1953).
discussion of the effect of social structure on city planning from early
days
A
to the present.
3 Art in Religion
-
\V' hy, then, are they so different? Chiefly because they ^vere built more
than 500 years apart, and in that half millennium there have been drastic
85
86 - Art in Religion
varied in texture, create
Hand-chiseled stone and rough shingles, irregularly
the rugged picturesqueness that
sometimes comes with handcraftsmanship.
tallow candles. The
Soft light comes from small windows and flickering
bell ringer throws the weight of
his
single bell will sound only when the
and then leaps into the air
whole body against the short length of rope
with the rope as it huge mass of bronze into ponderous mo-
slowly sets the
tion.
lithe, resilient, and com-
The twentieth-century church at Imatra is
materials,
plex. It, too, defies wind and snow but with contemporary forms,
shapes, dynamically held to-
and construction techniques. Many diverse
as an educational and social
gether,indicate the church's manifold functions
center' as well as a place of worship. A slender bell tower rises audaciously
ground behind it. Precisely
above the large low building that hugs the
that are enlivened by an
smooth surfaces envelop intricately elegant forms
unexpected, but functional, placement of
windows. Ample light comes
glanced down the paths to seeaway the late ones were. But there
how far
meditation.
was no haste; Sunday was the day for rest and
still chiefly
Finland is a fast-moving, complex nation. Although
Today
has many industries and an active commerce served by an
agricultural, it
products, in these
mate, race and creed: although these powerfully affect art
Art in Religion - 87
Religious architecture changes with the spirit of the age. {Courtesy of Finnish National
Travel Office)
(A) Above. A fifteenth-century church at Sipoo, Finland, has massive forms of rugged
stone masonry expressive of a rural handcraft society.
(B) Below. Built in 1956, a church at Imatra, Finland, acknowledges the machine age
without becoming rigidly mechanistic. Alvar Aalto, architect.
88 - Art in Religion
..life ,.^i
other they come directly, swiftly on well-paved highways. The stark white
and black of the new church and the striking tower command attention
appreciated unless one almost stands still. Each of these edifices expresses
tempo of period.
man's religious aspirations in the its
Virginia,
The Bruton Parish Church (Fig. 89A) built in Williamsburg,
and in materials
belongs in general character, in basic form and detail,
89
character.
The Mission Francis of Assisi (Fig. 89B) built in Taos, New Mexico,
St.
scarce.
Out of these conditions grew the churches of New Mexico. Their mas-
sively thick, almost unbroken walls look defensive, for there was need for
of heat, cold, and
defense against marauding enemies and against extremes
light. Literally raised from the earth,
the Mission church was made of
materials and
adobe (sun-dried mud) bricks and wood. It illustrates how
construction techniques affect architecture. Walls
could be no higher than
be no wider
was with unreinforced adobe brick, and the building could
safe
roof. The length was
than the length of timbers available to support the
such strict limita-
determined by the size of the congregation. But even with
tions, there was freedom to create a structure with spiritual significance.
I was prepared for anything, even to lose my job in the village which I
loved so much. So long as we planned, all seemed well, because few people
can really understand plans and charts. And everybody was glad that some-
thing was being done. They expected something which would some-
. . .
I always told them that the chapel would be something strange to them.
When the walls rose, there was giowing resistance. People from other
villages came and ridiculed those walls without windows and pinnacles.
In the evenings, half the village stood there with distrusting looks. He who
knows people realizes that they are afraid of nothing so much as the un-
usual, the strange, the new, the different. . . . Many expressed wishes for
vaults, a steep roof, steeple, organ loft. We ruled these out easily by point-
ing to their considerable expense. We told them why we wanted the priest
to stand among the people during his confession, why we had the windows
at the altar, why only one room with a "real" sanctuary in this little
chapel. . . But while we (Architect Schwarz and I) saw already the beauti-
.
ful and noble proportions, the touching simplicity, the "essentiality," they
noticed only the crude, the raw, the empty. But in the meantime, however,
they have lived in the chapel, have worshipped there, and now they object
if they have to go to another.*
A leap a third of the way across the world brings us to the design for
the Cleveland Park Synagogue (Fig. 93) that architect Eric Mendelsohn
discusses below.
The only available space large enough to carry a School for 1000 pupils was
across the ra\ine to the North of the peninsula providing, as it does, the
needed North-South exposure for the classroom-wings.
As the Administration has to serve both major parts of the building: Temple
Area and School Area, a bridgelike structure over the ravine seemed to be
the most natural device.
94 - Art in Religion
factual material with which the
These were the practical considerations, the
however, are not separated in our
architect had to work. Facts and ideas,
interact at the moment the building
program is studied
art. They start to
century architecture.
preceding church
TheWayfarer's Chapel (Fig. 96) differs from the
and to focus the worshiper's
and temple. Whereas they tend to be enclosed
the church, the Wayfarer's Chapel
opens it-
attention on the services inside
neither accident nor whim. Its form grew
self to its surroundings. This is
sermons by the sea. To accomplish this he has filled most of the Chapel's
wails and the roof with glass held in place by rigid frames of redwood. On
a dramatic rocky promontory overlooking the Pacific Ocean in temperate
southern California, this bold use of glass is indeed appropriate. Eventually,
a sheltering grove of redwood trees will not only temper the light and the
temperature but will echo in their trunks and branches the structure of the
building. Triangles repeated in the plan and the elevations symbolize the
Trinity, and they also make the Chapel far more dynamic than would more
static rectangular shapes.
extensive use o
First Presbyterian Church,
the Wayfarer's Chapel and the
beauti ul remmd us
that are at once strong and
glass and structural systems
are of our time
of medieval architecture,
but their spirit and execution
any of these buildings is superior
m
every way to
It cannot be said that
justified in having his own P-f--^^-/^/^;-
the others, but each of us is
for the
and temples,
tectural historyabounds with magnificent churches
religious. In Chapter 17.
examples
dominant edifiL of the past have been
further open our eyes to the od larat
from France, Greece, and Italy will
architecture. It is clear that no
smgle arclntectura
ing diversity of religious as
human need so universal and multiform. Differen
form can sitisfy a
as sacred centers.
respects, they were all built
these buildings are in specific
such specific
designers brought into umson
In each the creativity of the
environment with
and temporal and geographical
factors as religious beliefs
ideals of beauty.
contemporaneous building techniques and
Four Contemporary Religious Structures - 97
RELIGIOUS SCULPTURE
human head on which the ears are as high as a man,
When sculptors carve a
skyscraper, size
and when builders construct a tomb as high as a 48-story
alone makes the results imposing. If, however, such
monuments are to have
as their hugeness
enduring significance, their forms must be as powerful
Great Pyramid of
demands. The men who created the Sphinx and the
Gizeh in Egypt (Fig. lOOA), understood well the magnitude
of this
Khufu at
challenge and produced monuments that have become symbols of per-
Christ, the Pyra-
manence. Completed about 2600 years before the birth of
the most slowly
mid and the Sphinx are magnificent expressions of one of
has ever known.
changing religious-social-political systems the world
was built
The pyramids were built as tombs, and the Great Pyramid
to protect the mortal remains of the
Pharaoh Khufu. The largest of the
measures 755 feet on
Egyptian pyramids, it covers about thirteen acres,
Colossal blocks of limestone,
each side, and was originally 480 feet high.
some weighing thirty tons, were quarried with metal tools across the river,
ferried over on rafts, and then laboriously
hauled up ramps to their final
ten years
position. It estimated that this stupendous achievement took
is
by their ruler, and the material chosen for their message was stone. This
naturally led to generalizing and perfecting the features, to imbuing them
^vith dignity, and to giving them an architectonic quality in keeping with
the mass of stone from which they were carved. Both in size and in character
the Sphinx, like the Pyramid, is magnificently at home in this vast desert
setting where it stands as one of the world's most monumental religious
sculptures.
At first glance the Ancestor Figure (Fig. lOOB) seems to have little in
common with the Sphinx. The nineteenth-century Ancestor Figure is only
24V2 inches high and was made from perishable wood. It emerged from a
30
102 - Art in Religion
because they were
and limbs were simplified and made comparatively small
of secondary consequence. The shape of the
log from which the statue was
statue carved by
"Hermes with the Infant Dionysus" (Fig. 103 A), a
than the Sphinx,
Praxiteles around 350 b.c, more than 2200 years later
Religious Sculpture - 103
the brutal
physical beauty of "Hermes" and
In contrast to the sensuous
"Kings and
coiled force of "Coatlicue" is
the spiritual idealism of the
Cathedral (Fig. 103B). These
Queens" on the west portal of Chartres
ancestors of Christ and carved
between 1 145
statues, representing the royal
medieval sculpture away from the
and 1170, mark a turning point in
toward the realism of fully developed
intense asceticism of earlier periods
every way from "Hermes.
hey
Gothic sacred art. They differ in almost
1
compressed.
are unrealistically tall and slender,
and their bodies are tightly
complex architectural composition,
They are an integral part of a large, lime-
are carved from opaque, gray
while "Hermes" is freestanding. They
stone rather than creamy marble.
These are the most obvious differences,
has
others. In "Hermes" emphasis
but let us look at some of the many
features,
with its placid, generalized
been placed on the whole body;
so with the
just share of attention. Not
the head gets no more than its
large and
"Kings and Queens," in which the heads seem conspicuously
and somewhat individ-
rest of the figures,
more boldly carved than the
Religious Painting - 105
ualized in features and expression. The treatment of the bodies is just
the reverse— in the "Kings and Queens" the draperies fall in abstract folds
that no more than hint at what they cover; in "Hermes" there is a full,
unabashed exposition of a supple, muscular figure, and cloth that is heavily
modeled in realistic, three-dimensional curves. This is but one evidence
of fundamentally different ideas and, accordingly, different organizations:
an easy, graceful curvilinear treatment of forms-in-space as opposed to a
strict, formal rigidity. These variances are, of course, the result of two
religions that had relatively little in common.
RELIGIOUS PAINTING
The "Bewailing of Christ" (Fig. 106A), painted by Giotto in the Arena
Chapel at Padua, Italy, is one of Christianity's most powerful paintings.
Seldom has there been such mastery of expressive form and color, such
directand vital portrayal of passionate grief. After six and one-half cen-
turies, this fresco retains its immediate and its sustained impact. Why?
Because Giotto was one of those rare persons capable of deep understand-
ing of humanity and able to express this understanding with technical
mastery. The figuresand the composition as a whole are hard hewn and
angular, heavy in their downward movement. Notice that all of the im-
portant action takes place in the lower half of the panel and that the
body of Christ lies near the bottom. Mourners grouped in two asym-
metrical, rectangular units frame His body and express through their bodies
as well as their faces their irreparable loss. No extraneous details distract
from the tragedy, for Giotto knew full well the power of simplicity. Al-
though the composition is masterful, it properly plays a secondary role to
the purpose of the painting— a convincing presentation of a Biblical story.
The "Sistine Madonna" (Fig. 106B) was painted by Raphael in the early
years of the sixteenth century, approximately two hundred years after
Giotto's "Bewailing of Christ." In contrast to the earnest, spare severity
of Giotto's work, the "Sistine Madonna" combines a tender and lyrical
cherubs at the base. Because both Giotto's and Raphael's paintings came
from the Roman Catholic religion and both are Italian, they have an under-
lying similarity. Yet there are many differences. In the earlier one, the forms
are direct and forceful, show an angular, architectural sense of weight and
106 - Art in Religion
Prints)
107
solidity, and are tightly knit into compact groups. In the "Sistine Madonna"
the forms are much and have a gentle, flowing quality quite unlike
softer
is more open and ex-
anything in the earlier painting, and the composition
sides of human
panding. Its appeal is to the more tender and sentimental
nature. These differences, to be sure, arise in part
from the differences in
reflect the great changes
the personalities of the two painters, but they also
in social and religious thought that took place
from the fourteenth to the
sixteenth centuries in Italy.
sincere. Thus his paintings have an immediate appeal of color and design,
subject matter.
but they go far beyond that in their deep penetration of
Notice the infinite compassion and resignation conveyed
by the curved
Christ; the coarse mockery of the
of soldiers leering over His
figure
shoulders.
Wrath at man's inhumanity to man, today and in the past, compelled
has said, "The
Rico Lebrun to lay bare the horror of the "Crucifixion." He
'The poetry
awesomeness and cruelty should be in the forms themselves.
should be in the pity.' There is no end to horror and pain." Slashing
. . .
lonely and rejected. Thus Lebrun denounces the past and the present in one
paintings is for enter-
painting of shattering intensity. Neither of these two
fundamentals and
tainment or decoration. They show deep concern with
with communicating them vividly to us.
chapels at Leversbach and Palos Verdes, the Parthenon, and the cathedral
at Rheims? The sacred buildings, sculpture, and paintings in your own
town?
Religion is a realm of life through which man attempts to fmd meaning
for existence, to express his beliefs and ideals, and to relate himself to
his fellow men, his universe, God. Because the arts of religion
and his
grow from a search for relationships, one of their most significant character-
istics is that they belong to a group, seldom to an individual. In fact, one
itself, invariably seeks to express ideals and feelings that have qualities of
permanence and to express them in a way that will have lasting interest.
No contrast could be sharper than that between the sacred arts, which hold
significance for centuries, and posters and advertisements, which last for a
short time only. All of the great religions-Christianity, Judaism, Moham-
medanism, Buddhism-have persisted so vigorously because they arouse
in their followers awe and wonder and faith through emotions so deeply
rooted that no worldly rulers have final power against them, even though
many have attempted to uproot them. Religious art, dealing with ultimate
purposes, values, and goals of life, involves not only this life but life in
the hereafter. In this way it approaches the infinite, the timeless. And
naturally in dealing with such unknowns and unknowables as the after-
life, it becomes mystical and divine, greater than man, and therefore awe-
inspiring. These qualities have made religious art the most powerful art,
the most significant in the march of history.
110 - Art in Religion
Henry Kamphoefner
Churches and Temples: Paul Thiry, Richard Bennett, and
(New York: Reinhold, 1954).
religious structures.
Beautifully illustrated analysis of contemporary
Twenty Centuries of Mexican Art (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1940).
An excellent survey of a powerful art of the Americas,
much of which is
religious.
Eero Saarinen's stainless steel water
tower at the General Motors Technical
Center (1956) symbolizes the esthetic
concern of today's designer. (General
Motors Corporation)
own we
corner go the products build or process or grow. In this world of
manufacture and distribution we eat, sleep, and produce our kind much as
HANDCRAFT CULTURES
Self-contained, handcraft communities are not numerous these days, but
which craftsmen working
some still exist. In Guatemala there are villages in
simple machines supply the
with primitive looms, potter's wheels, and other
objects needed in the community.
textiles, utensils, and most of the other
they are sold or ex-
These are used by the families who make them, or
is not consumed in the
changed in the local market. Little is produced that
area.
their art products
These simple communities are highly integrated and
order that produces them. The
are as direct and unaffected as the social
sturdy cotton textile (Fig. 1 13A) from a remote
Guatemalan village is typical.
It is a carrying cloth-for carrying
bananas, beans, and babies. Humble m
abstract human and animal
purpose though it is, the cloth is enriched with
figures are a continuation of a tradition
developed in this
figures. These
weavers in this locality follow
village over the centuries. All of the other
markedly similar patterns. be sure, each weaver infuses his work with
To
variations, much as the singer of
subtle, often hardly noticeable individual
as with folk songs, these are
folk tunes makes the songs his own. But,
but have been improved
patterns that not only have stood the test of time
eliminated and strengths em-
over long periods. Weaknesses have been
phasized until the results are "right." Although no
two textiles are identical,
they are almost standardized.
they conform so closely to one another that
theme. When
They are comparatively minor variations on a traditional
a thoroughly satisfactory design has
been achieved, there is, at least in
simple cultures, littleimpetus to change. Of course, if there were no change
into monotonous, stereo-
at all, the vitality of the design would soon ebb
repetition. At the other extreme, change
without real need leads to
typed
senseless fads and fashions.
113
tion took time andwas thoughtfully used. Not so with the machine.
skill, it
Any object could be covered with curlicues in a few seconds. And because
it was so fast and
ornament became an obsession (Fig. 115B). It was in-
easy,
discriminately applied to everything; it became the symbol of "art"; and,
worse, it was often used to disguise cheap materials and poor workmanship.
Contemporary trends toward severe simplicity are in part the last vestiges of
a reaction against nineteenth-century abuse of enrichment.
Gradually conditions changed. Manufacturers found that quality, as
well as quantity and cheapness, were important. In achieving quality they
needed help, and a new profession was created.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN
Industrial design, the design of objects for machine production, is an in-
tegration of art, engineering, and merchandising. Although its foundations
go back to prehistoric man's first attempts to better his life by shaping tools
and equipment, industrial design as we know it today was born in the
1920's. Its beginnings were hesitant and superficial. "Art" was "applied" to
machine-made objects in a superficial "styling" of external appearances by
116 - Art in Industry
Often amounted to little more
persons who had "good taste" or "flair." it
or tablecloths, simplifying
than suggesting different colors for bath towels
the appearance of typewriters by covering the working parts, or giving furni-
problems? The
How do industrial designers approach and solve their
informa-
way in which one industrial designer handles a problem has been
tively discussed by a leader in this field, Raymond Loewy.* The hypotheti-
cream freezers who for twenty-five years had successfully sold the same model
manufacturer had seriously cut into his sales.
-until a new freezer by a rival
and called Mr.
Then he recognized the need for an experienced designer
Loewy in to help. Loewy set up a four-stage program:
The first step is fact-finding, a process that has two phases. One is
1.
be redesigned and com-
the getting of full information on the product to
parative information on the major competitors.
Although the client can
sales booklets
readily supply the designer with some of the data, such as
independent investigation is in order. The
and sales records, additional
first-hand information from
designer's representatives go into the field for
dealers and they also take several freezers into their shop for
and salesmen,
studied, but the
thorough comparative testing. Not only is the product
packing boxes, sales
whole promotional procedure is scrutinized-wrappers,
literature, and even the company's stationery
and trademark. The other
fact-finding phase is getting all the pertinent
information on the manu-
are revised. Again models are made, but this time they are finished to look
exactly as though they were ready to be used. These are studied in detail
from all points of view, even to the taking of photographs to see how well
the product will show up when printed or televised in advertisements.
Again there is a conference between designer and client and further design
revisions.
they are abused to the extreme: dropped, knocked, scratched, and subjected
to extreme temperatures. If they stand up well, final drawings lead to the
necessary changes in the manufacturer's plant and program. When the first
units are manufactured, the designer checks everything again but is now
able to pay special attention to such details as finish, color, trademark, and
packaging. Then full-scale production begins, and the freezers are soon
in the distributor's hands.
4. Promotion is the fourth step. Hotel ballrooms or convention halls
are rented in the larger cities and celebration parties are organized. After
refreshments, speeches, and music, the new product is dramatically un-
veiled to buyers from representative stores. Then the arts of advertising call
it to the attention of the buying public, and it succeeds or fails in terms of
how millions of potential purchasers react to it.
Although no two designers go about their work in exactly the same way,
all of them make intensive preliminary studies. And they create many pre-
liminary designs, as illustrated in the steps behind the creation of a new
electric iron (Figs. I18A and B). This design, too, went through many stages
before it reached its final form. Although the design of a very simple object
may take only a few weeks, the design of a new automobile often takes
several years.
Elecinc Company)
Designing an electric iron involves many steps. (Gt'iieial
design possibilities are explored in sketches, day and plaster studies,
(A) Above. Several
and a finished model. , . , , c ^u^
careful study in the placement ot the
,
the consumers' tastes, and the manufacturer'sAvill sell. At best ideas of ^vhat
the merger becomes a genuine integration, at worst a weak compromise.
Designers' ideals are varied: some aim merely to make life easier and more
comfortable, while others believe that their mission is to commimicate the
essential truths of our age. Although few of them merely pander to the
and has the ability to give them form." The designer can do this only
when he is sensitive to esthetic qualities, familiar with materials and manu-
facturing processes, and sympathetic to the needs of his fellow men.
What should a musical instrument look like? Admittedly this is far less
shape of a grand piano, the case and its supports can be designed in many
ways, as the instruments in Figs. 120A, B, and C demonstrate.
From eighteenth-century Rome comes the harpsichord supported by
Tritons, a vivid expression of the Baroque spirit which swept over Europe
in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Far removed from any-
120 - Art in Industry
place and period, an environment not suited to timid souls. We, too, seek
dynamic movement in many of our art forms, but ours is seldom if ever as
full-bodied and ingeniously complex as this harpsichord.
typifies one of the dominant characteristics of this age: all possible simplifi-
cations to mitigate the complexities of modern life.
Figures 122A, B, and C show three stages in the design of package sealers.
Covering a time span of only twenty-three years, they show how rapidly
and radically the shape of some objects has been changed by the industrial
designer. The function of the package sealer is simple: to dispense strips of
gummed paper used in wrapping packages. With the exception of two mov-
able parts— the frequently used handle and the infrequently used knob
to control the length of the strip— the mechanism can be enclosed. Obviously
the handle should be the dominant visual element, and it should be pleasant
122 - Art in Industry
{Egmont Arens)
(A) A model produced in 1918 somewhat
resembles a fanciful has exposed
bug,
working parts and tape, and almost con-
ceals the all-important lever.
to the user's hand. But there are other factors to consider. Package sealers
are small objects generally used in places where there is noise, some degree
of hurry and apparent confusion, and more than the usual amount of dust.
From these three models it is easy to pick the best, but let us look
at each in turn. The 1918 model is a lively looking little contraption laden
^vith the decoration associated with the nineteenth century. There appears
to be no real reason for its frisky shape, unless perhaps its demanding, busy
eagerness might stimulate its user to greater activity. Compare it with the
fust fivo musical instruments, in which the shape and ornament are not only
harmonious with the purposes of the object but are spirited and vital in
themselves. From several points of view, the package sealer leaves much to
be desired: the florid curves and trite ornament are unrelated to the object's
use; the complicated design would only add to the complexity of a pack-
age-wrapping atmosphere; and the working parts are exposed to dust and
invite minor accidents to its users' hands.
The 1932 model is simpler, and it is also homelier. Even though the
curves of the earlier model are neither appropriate nor inspired, they at
least make it look friendly. The mechanistic shapes of the second, however,
make one feel as though it should be operated by a mechanical robot, not
a human being. More of the parts are enclosed, and this is efficient, but the
angular eye-fatiguing and dust-catching forms almost look as though they
were designed to trap and bruise the human hand. Once thought to be
forthright expressions of a machine age, these shapes now seem clumsy and
inhuman. Machines, after all, have no character other than that given them
by their builders, and their produce is for us, not for machines, to use.
The last design is composed of two harmonious, interlocking forms and
an easy-to-use, comfortable handle that invites you to press it down. In fact,
the whole design suggests not only that it would fit your hand but that you
would enjoy running your hands over it. This is indeed desirable in an
object that is meant to be handled, and it distinguishes the last model from
the earlier ones. How would you describe these forms? To us they look like
humanized rectangles. The corners are rounded, and not all of the pairs of
sides are parallel. These modifications provide easy transitions from one
structural certainty of the right angle. This both strengthens the forms when
seen by themselves and relates them to the rectangularity that characterizes
most offices and their equipment. Although we know that in a lively culture
124 - Art in Industry
emotionally
The harpsichord-and-piano sequence brought us from the
harpsichord
charged, turbulent, sculptural quality of the eighteenth-century
of the nineteenth-cen-
through the vigorous yet controlled ornamentation
of today's design. The package
tury instrument down to the calm simplicity
sealers, too, show a trend toward restraint.
Notice that the last piano and the
one to sink in and settle down. It is neither casual nor formal, but some-
where between the two. Although large, its potential bulkiness is mini-
mized by the shell's thinness, the continuing curves, and the slender legs.
The two chairs at which we have looked were designed for machine
production. Now we turn to two that give clear evidence of their hand-
craft origin. Figure 127 A is an armchair designed by the Danish architect and
furniture designer Finn Juhl, and although it is now factory-produced in
this country, its character is that of a handmade object. Notice that in it,
as in the "Barcelona" chair, the parts are clearly articulated (distinctly and
systematically expressed). This is most noticeable in the separateness of the
structural frameworks and the upholstered cushions. Perhaps this is be-
cause both designers are architects who have a deep respect for structure
and who rely on exposed structure more than on surface treatment for total
effect. In Mies' chair, however, legs, seat, and back are continuous, while in
Juhl's chair the uprights and the horizontals are clearly differentiated. An-
other difference is the sculptural character of Juhl's frame. The parts shrink
and swell in response to their position and function, while in Mies' chair
they are consistently thin. In part, of course, this is because wood suggests
such shaping more than does metal. That explains why Juhl chose wood.
He chose the material that would lead naturally to the forms he had in
mind and then respected the nature of the material. Although machines
can produce these shapes, they had been made by hand long before man
dreamed of mechanical reproduction.
The fourth chair (Fig. 127B) is one of the many designs handmade by
native craftsmen in the Far East. As is the case with the familiar Windsor
chair, its designers are unknown. Through the experience of several gen-
erations of craftsmen working with materials they knew well, its design
evolved naturally. The result is a truly remarkable achievement. A frame-
work of lightweight bamboo is ingeniously structured for strength and then
wrapped with split cane. Seat, back, and sides are woven cane. Not only is
this chair shaped to fit the sitter's body, but it responds resiliently to differ-
ent positions. Although its structure is quite evident, it is less emphatically
distinct than that in the Danish chair because the back, seat, and sides are
126 - Art in Industry
chair
(B) Below. Eero Saarinen's lounge
(1948) was designed to promise
and to pro-
Asso-
vide complete physical comfort. {Knoll
ciates)
Industrial Design - 127
again at the electric iron or Juhl's chair. belong to a dynamic age. While
We
movement as in the Baroque harpsi-
we do not often seek such vehement
chord, neither do we derive pleasure from objects that look inert.
r^f T
^
I
Standardized, modular furniture and equipment bring economy and unity.
(A) Above. A few standardized parts can be combined into a number of interchange-
able units of furniture. Gerald Luss. designer. (Lehigh Furniture Corporation)
(B) Below. Wall hung storage, study, and sleeping units can be assembled as desired,
provide compact, cflicitnt room design. [Herman Miller Inc., Special Products Division)
130 - Art in Industry
many products are designed to create new needs
In the race for business,
needs the public is aware of. This situation
rather than to satisfy those
to
of a highly specialized nattire
and much equipment
causes many tools
enforced obsoles-
frequently leads to built-in or
be produced. And it also
automotive, ne^v models are put out each
cence In many fields, such as the
examples,
clothing and home furnishings are
year Other fields, of which
twelve-month period. To keep
may' introduce two or more new lines in a
number of possible improvements may be in-
sales high, only one of a
making a large number of products
corporated at any one time, thereby
obsolescent, every year.
seem old-fashioned, if not exactly
have
Morris had in mmd, he would undoubtedly
not exactly what William which are
accompUshments,
bl ^lealedthe amateur craftsman's
wUh
and to our individual economy.
boons to our mental health
INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE
phenomenon as significant as the Industrial Revolution should bring
a
A
new architecture. And it did. At first this new architecture was
as ugly as
Watts Bar Steam Plant (Fig. 135A), one of the Tennessee Valley Authority's
beauty regarded as a
structures, will show. It has a very real beauty, if is
structural devices.
Today we experimenting with materials and
are still
humanizing
Chapter 17. We are also
some of which are discussed in
shapes of rooms and machines
and their surfaces are being
Xie The
^oo.y^^^^^r^
Bright colors are replacing
Ide stimulating a'nd satisfying. and green create
refineries, red, blue, yellow,
in. browns and grays. In some
employees sense
est vl atmosphere. Not
only do these colors affect the
warn of poten-
him do his job. Bright colors
of w U-being, but they help
Industrial Architecture -
137
..iillllPS
iiL.^-
138
the generator
In the Pickwick Powerhouse, mighty
and impersonal machines dominate
the most believable symbols of power that
room as well they might, for they are among
Valley Authority)
this age has produced. {Tennessee
architectures aim
Beinc at the utilitarian end of the scale, industrial
toward economical output,
is efficiency. Design and construction are shaped
efficiency and economy differ
from those held a century
but our ideas of
Industrial Architecture - 139
must analyze and solve his problems with skills as rigorous as those of a
physicist.
Never Leave Well Enough Alone: Raymond Loewy (New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1951).
An entertaining account of how one industrial designer works.
service, or idea so that observers are impressed. Yet we know that express-
arts. Musicians compose symphonies or dance tunes and then hope for ap-
preciative audiences; dramatists write plays for the public to see and hear;
and painters express their ideas in form and color and then show their
140
Packaging and Display -
141
work. At the root of all art is expression for the benefit and satisfaction of
others. In short, art is expression and communication.
But the special problems of the commercial arts differ from those
of the other arts because the aims are different. Whereas the arts of the home
are aimed toward pleasant home life, the arts of commerce are directed
toward effective selling. And while the arts of the community and of reli-
Counters and shelves were lined with boxes and tubs, most of them wide
open, holding soda crackers, dried primes, and pickled herring. You asked
for a pound of soda crackers: the grocer reached into the cracker box,
measured out a pound, and stuffed them in a brown paper bag— but not
before handling them several times. You knew little about the quality
because you did not know the brand. And your trust in the grocer's scales
a high point in products packaged as gifts (Figs. 146B and 150B). In morea
material vein, packages can assure purchasers of the standard quality and
quantity of their protected contents, and they simplify the handling, storing,
and using of the many things brought into the home. Merchants also ap-
preciate the fact that packages are convenient to handle and store, take less
time on the part of the sales force, and can improve a store's appearance.
142 - Art in Commerce
are potent selling
Manufacturers have learned that distinguished packages
advertisements, and on tele-
factors-in stores, in newspaper and magazine
vision.
not simple and easy. The designer usually begins
Package design is
what to expect inside. But some products, such as cake mixes or lawn seeds,
treatment. With these, package designers
do not lend themselves to such
the end result, as in Fig. 143 A. A con-
often tempt the buyer with a picture of
covers most of the box. Its grass-
vincingly realistic representation of a lawn
color is accentuated by a band of orange
around the bottom. Five
green
blue-green oval proclaim the
words printed in very bright orange on a
size, shape, and material are sim-
product and who made it. Even though its
distinctive to cap-
ilar tohundreds of other packages, this one is sufficiently
urge, and be easily remembered.
ture attention, arouse the buying
lend themselves to transparent packaging, an
ideal solu-
Some products
tion because the purchaser can see
what he is buying and yet know that it
handsomely designed plastic hair-
has been protected. The package for the
purchase. Little more could be
brush in Fig. 143B invites attention-and
asked for such alluring luxuries
asked for hairbrushes, but much more is
restrictions of cost, size, and weight are of
as perfumes. For these, the typical
elegance. Of all of the con-
minor concern. Paramount is the expression of
tainers for perfume, none surpasses the
one illustrated in Fig. 150B, the
timelessness seldom found in packaging.
classic simplicity of which has a
suited to pictorializa-
products, such as disposable tissues, are not
Many
design is often the best solution. The
tion For these a distinctive abstract
history of one company's packages, of
which over six billion have been
1925 1926
1924
1929 1938
1928
KL^ersJE^Xl ml^
mml
"f^'i
~
\
1
\
M
i
'-
m
j0
Packaging and Display -
145
w-mMmSiMw^
provocative percussion
•
• • •
•
• •••
••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••
Even the simplest geometric shapes, it sensitively selected and arranged, constitute an in-
exhaustible source of expressive designs. {Command Records)
but dull, were superseded by the weakest of the seven designs— the company's
name is concealed in a loose arrangement of unrelated shapes. Visually the
1928 attempt is strong and straightforward, but the product's name is not
on the side most commonly seen in stores. This was partially remedied in
1929. In 1938 a "classic" evolved. A bold organization of rectangles that
acknowledges the box's shape forms an immediately recognizable and es-
thetically satisfying pattern. The brand name is clearly visible on the top
and four sides. Its time-tested value as a brand signature was terminated by
a package that was said to be "consumer tested and proved . . . modern,
decorative . . . greater acceptance in all rooms of the house . . . especially
appealing to women." The 1960 box is subtle, marked departure from
but its
More and more manufacturers are finding that their sales increase if
sales agents.
Coordinated "families of packages" are effective
in harmony with container designs
attract and hold
(A) Above. Colorful display cards
attention. (Martin Senour Paints)
lettering discreetly held ni a geometric
frame-
(B) Below. Floral designs and handsome
Katayama, designer. (Ntpon-Zakari)
work are varied yet belong together. Toshihiro
puj-wn-.'
Posters and Advertisements -
147
the round spots, and the paint brush motif that link products and advertis-
ing together. Far more refined, sprightly, and unexpected is the family of
Japanese packages designed to appeal to the discriminating customer.
Families of packages and coordinated displays that arouse the buying
urge are two of the devices producers employ to sell their ^vares. But these
are almost invariably augmented by advertising, a field at which ^ve shall
now look.
(Figs. 148A, B, and C) state their messages clearly— and Avith varied
means. If the poster proclaiming "Come on the Telephone" in its full size
and colors were located along your path, how would it affect you? Its brief,
urgent message would remind you of that important means of communica-
tion, the telephone. You would think of what the telephone can do and,
to guide your thinking toward two outstanding features, E. McKnight Kauf-
fer centered attention on the handiness of the telephone and the magical
ease with which it carries voices over great distances. This poster might make
you decide to install another extension in your home or to put in a call
at the nearest pay-phone, but its primary purpose is to bring to mind again
what a wondrous invention the telephone is. Advertising of this type is
phone) is thrust into the left side of the poster as though it were being
handed to you. This movement is carried downward at the right with the
words "Come on the Telephone." Or it could be analyzed this way (there
specific outline of the telephone that overlays and pulls forward the ex-
pressive but generalized black shape behind it. This progression from the
148 - Art in Commerce
Each of these posters grew from an and in each the idea was a
idea,
abstract shapes.
^^S^SMM
tJ-LAJSLEJ.
A
recently one company spent over 66 million dollars in one year to tell
been said that the best advertisements tell you luhat, why, where,
It has
when— and how inuch? In general this is true, but there are outstanding ex-
ceptions, examples of which are illustrated in Figs. 150A and B, and 151.
The design of a new type face was used by Sudler and Hennessey, Inc., to
illustrate their product and the felicity with which it might be used. In
this case the design of the advertisement itself suggests the answers to the
first t^vo questions; the next two are answered in the small block of informa-
tion worked into the format at the left. An example of pioneering advertis-
ing, it announces a new product and also reminds potential customers of
the company's services, but discreetly leaves the last question unanswered.
Used without change since 1939, the advertisement for Chanel No. 5
has come to be a classic. While it tells you what wnth. unforgettable clarity
and suggests why with a compelling phrase, the remainder is left up to you
to discover. The one-sentence advertisement for tea is basically similar al-
though it relies on words alone. It, too, is exceptional in that it has pro-
moted sales for more than sixty years. Rarely do advertisements last this
long. Both of these are reminder advertisements and one falls into the
prestige category. Both are starkly simple yet distinctive, and, therefore,
they stand out from the typically cluttered pages of magazines and news-
papers. Their effectiveness comes from long-continued, regular repetition.
But they would not have been repeated this long had they not been effective
in the first place.
Magazine and booklet covers and television program titles offer many
opportunities for creative commercial design as illustrated in Figs. 1 52
through 153B. Typical magazine covers, such as the one for Holiday, are
related to the contents of that issue. Occasionally, though, a design that
makes one wonder why it was used attracts attention, especially in spe-
152 - Art in Commerce
lOAY
S K (.
IB:
periodical into pictorial terms. {Courtesy of
Some covers translate the contents of the
Graphis, Graphis Press, Zurich) . .
,
broadcasting association annual
_
Television are a new field for the advertising artist. (Columbia Broadcasting System)
titles
(A) Left. Georg Olden's deceptively simple title for a television network feature ex-
presses the spirit of the program through inventive typography.
(B) Right. Jack Huper's promotional slide for a television show is packed with action
and suspense.
cialized journals. The bold figure 7, which overflows the cover of the
seventh issue of The Journal of Commercial Art, is a striking example. The
"house organs" published by many large companies offer even greater
freedom because these are distributed without charge. From S^vitzerland
and the Netherlands come the abstract yet pertinent designs suggesting over-
lapping, expanding sound waves for a broadcasting association annual and a
slender-framed steel tower for an electrical company's report.
Advertisements and titles for television programs have come a long
way from how efi^ectively the
the early uninspired announcements. Observe
CREATING ADVERTISING
Effective advertising is the result of a long process in which many experts
Marketing research seeks facts about potential consumers and about the
appropriateness of the possible advertising mediums (newspapers, magazines,
radio, television). Some of the questions to be answered are:
154 - Art in Commerce
Evaluation
advertising in selling
The final step is checking the effectiveness of tlie
COMMERCIAL ARCHITECTURE
In our century, commercial architecture has undergone a revolution. The
first stages ^vere little more than face lifting and "brightening up"
old
stores and offices. Ornament was scraped off; brighter colors were used; il-
lems connected with store and office design were freshly studied in the light
of contemporary human needs and habits. As with the home and the city,
new solutions emerged. Studying the illustrations on page 156 will alert you
to some of the changes.
o
Had you lived in Colonial Williamsburg and got dressed in your eight-
eenth-century clothes to go downtown for some shopping, you would have
seen stores like the Millinery Shop. It is a handsome building that quietly
suoo-ests that you pause, look in the windows, or go inside. Though much
smaller in size and more humble in purpose than the Governor's Palace,
the shop is imbued with the same spirit and is built from the same materials.
Notice how back from and raised four steps above the ample brick
it is set
sidewalk in a reserved manner. A modest sign and two oval pictures em-
phasizing women's hats tell the stranger what this building is. But almost
everybody knew what it was and it had little competition. It is a friendly,
The Camera Shop, tightly packed in with other stores, fronts on a busy
thoroughfare. It dynamically reaches out for your attention, pulls you in for
a closer look, and then almost compels you to consider the merchandise.
The laroe, legible sign tells you immediately what specific merchandise is
sold within. Even without the sign, the character of the form, space, and ma-
terials would communicate the fact that the merchandise is of a precise,
mechanical nature. Let us now study the other means used to induce the
ur^e to enter and buy. First, the entire store is a recessed display window
with only a wall of glass and a low planting box (for visual contrast and also
to protect the window) separating the shop from the sidewalk.
This appeals
toman's natural curiosity to see what is going on inside. Second, setting the
window a few feet back from the street intrigues the passer-by-man loves
to explore recesses, nooks, and crannies— and thereby causes him to stop for
a leisurely look. Two small display cases at the left give him sufficient rea-
son to pause near the door while making up his mind about going in. But
I
156 - Art in Commerce
^vares. No sign tells you what it is, for with an exterior as distinguished as
bubbles, suspended from above so that it floats between the walls, is a dis-
ciplined flight of fancy that inspirits the whole interior with gaiety. The
rectangularity found in the floor and in many of the cabinets throws into
prise.
(B) Below. The interior is voluminously
spacious yet has the intimacy that is appro-
priate for the display of small, costly objects.
\^
Commercial Architecture - 159
The Manufacturers Trust Company Building (1954) in New York City, designed by Skid-
more, Owings, and Merrill, is as open and inviting as the Morris store is closed and in-
triguing. (Skidmore, Oioings, and Merrill)
(A) Above. The exterior walls of glass and metal are reduced to their simplest struc-
tural terms but are beautifully proportioned.
(B) Below. The interior continues the feeling of uncluttered space announced by the
exterior. Surfacing materials are bathed by light from luminous ceilings.
160 - Art in Commerce
the integra-
As one moves through the store, led on but not coerced,
tion of beauty and usefulness become evident.
One becomes aware of the
cases and tables
predominant gold, gray, and white against which dark walnut
linens. Children as well as oldsters
act as foils for the glass, silver, china, and
the ramp while participating in its movement
through space. There
enjoy
and chairs experimenting with table
for comfortable sitting while
are tables
settings, either before or after looking at
the objects on display. Although
astonishing amount of display and
the store seems uncluttered, there is an
once, the visitor is not over-
storage space. Because it cannot all be seen at
rows of cases and
whelmed, as in the typical store, by seemingly endless
shelves. Instead, he sees a little at a time,
often in quite small spaces, which
gold in color, is the notable exception to the clean-cut, austere richness else-
where. Innumerable sheets of metal are suspended from a slender metal
frame^vork much as the glass Avails are suspended from the building's struc-
tural frame^vork. But no two luiits of the screen are identical. Some are
merely textured while others are imaginatively bent, ciu, and modeled. Al-
though predominantly rectangular, the individual units vary in size, shape,
and angle. ^Vhereas the building is regular and precise, the screen is intricate
artists' point of view, both offer powerful esthetic experiences alive Avith
creative vigor that is directly comminiicated to those sensitive enough to
editors of Life*
• The following quotations are reprinted by special permission from Life Magazine.
162 - Art in Commerce
5: PJe .?•«•!
flMail^
Commercial Architecture - 163
Commission that his novel "golf-tee" pillars were really strong enough to
support the building, put on a convincing demonstration. Propping up a
pillar at the building site, he had sand and cast iron piled on until the
weight reached 60 tons, a weight much greater than could be supported by
the same amount Next day
of material in a conventionally designed pillar.
the pillar was found unflawed. Note the round desks, which have cut-
. . .
The dynamic, vigorous curves of the exterior with the striking contrast
of the research tower risitig above the lower masses and the clear, clean, free
sweep of space in the interior are among the most conspicuous factors that
make this building an example of truly significant architecture. But these
are only external expressions of the inspired vision Frank Lloyd Wright
brought to his work. By no means did he ignore the great achievements of
the past, but his creative vigor led him to study each problem freshly. That
is a first step toward worthwhile art of any type.
i.niii.,1
' -' -
_^i I
'iUfT- *
Commercial Architecture - 165
distances from homes to "main streets" have increased. Family cars taking
hordes of shoppers to markets have resulted in exasperating traffic conges-
tion, especially in the centers of cities. New regional shopping centers and
the revitalization of downtown areas are the two major mid-century solu-
tions.
The basic aim of the Southdale Shopping Center (Figs. 164A and B)
near Minneapolis, Minnesota, is to make shopping a pleasant, invigorating
community event. The location of this gigantic, 82-acre superblock was de-
termined by population trends, income and purchasing power, and acces-
sibility. Parking for 5200 cars and 800,000 square feet of space for 72 stores
cost 20 million dollars. And this is but one unit of a master plan for 500
acres of land! More consequential than size and cost is the admirable integia-
tion of land-and-building planning with human needs. Extreme climate and
a limited site led to a roofed garden court three stories high and one block
long, enclosed on all sides by a variety of stores, and enriched with $50,000
worth of "art." Grooving trees and plants, sculpture and ornamental chande-
liers, a fishpond and two-story birdcage, and an "outdoor" cafe bring delight
to shopping expeditions. Ten arcades, also lined with shops, connect the
garden court ^vith entrances from the parking areas. It is indeed a far cry
ent 46 percent of the central district is devoted to streets and alleys, pedes-
trian and vehicular traffic are awesomely tangled. His plan has four goals:
1. To make the land more productive, obsolete buildings would be
gradually upgraded or replaced.
2. To have traffic flow freely, a loop highway would encircle the central
district with dead-end tributary streets leading to parking garages, bus and
taxi terminals.
beauty and excitement would be restored, stores and offices integrated with
civic, cultural, and entertainment facilities. Daring as the proposal is, it is
In these two centers we can see the economically realistic trend toward
humanizing commercial architecture. Also we can see examples of the two
166 - Art in Commerce
termmal..
pene.ra.e ,o parking garage, and bu.
Frin the bei. road dead-end .met.
mall., enriched «i.h pl.nr.ng
and ,ea,., ..ke dre place
°B) Mo*An'ple pede.rri.n
bumper-to-bumper traffic jams.
of
As you walk (H" ride along the streets of your community, look critically
at liie commercial buildings. Some are old and some are new. Many, perhaps,
have been redesigned, for better or for worse. Observe the small shops, the
supermarkets, the large department stores, the banks and office buildings.
Do they tell you what they are? If you are induced to enter them, is the
whole experience satisfying and worth repeating? Efficiency is likely to have
been the main concern of the designer, but in the long rim there are other
equally worthy goals of a more general nature. Does the building make its
The following books treat various aspects of commercial art and archi-
tecture:
Annual of Advertising and Editorial Art and Design (New York: Farrar, Straus);
Modern Publicity (New York: Studio) and Tlie Penrose Annual (New York:
Hastings).
Three annual publications on current developments in advertising.
Design for Point of Sale: Ladislav Sutnar (New York: Farrar, Straus, 1952).
Enlightening and stimulating approach to package design.
The Package: Mildred Constantine (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1959).
Provocative discussion of what packaging might be.
Shopping Towns USA: Victor Gruen & Larry Smith (New York: Reinhold,
1960).
Full of information on shopping center design.
Shops and Stores Today: E. S. Somake and R. Hellberg (London: Batsford, 1956).
An informative survey of what the English have accomplished in store de-
sign and organization.
many hitherto tn.explored pc
and skill enable artists to reveal
Invagination, sensitivity,
to create diverse
band saw inspired Jan de Swart
''t^O^^C^:!::. wood and a
by Jack Laun^n^^)
and extures possible in acrylic plastics. (Photograph
casting alunnntnn developed by Jan de Swart
(C) opposite, below. New techniques of
{Courtesy of the artist)
led to richly patterned wall panels.
PART II Tlie Problem of
M>« '
Introduction
but our needs are not fulfilled by ideas that exist in the artist's mind or as
sketches on paper. Only when these ideas or sketches are given form in tangi-
ble materials is a work of art fully realized. Thus, a second major art prob-
lem is that of selecting appropriate materials and handling them with re-
spect.
Each material has its own range of characteristics, its special possibilities
and limitations, its inherent beauty. Exploring the nature of materials and
discovering ways in which they can be worked is a constant challenge to
artists, as the illustrations in this section suggest. Wood can be
transformed
171
172 - Introduction
into countless shapes with a band saw, or it can be elaborately carved and
inlaid (Figs. 169A, 172). In the new field of plastics we are only beginning
to know the potential range of these materials (Figs. 169B and 173). Metal
can be cast into primitive, enigmatic shapes, or into delicately refined rep-
resentations of natural and abstract forms (Figs. 169C and 171).
Ho^v does an artist decide which material and which process he will use?
Mark ^vell that there is no single, rigid system for every artist and every
problem. At some point, though, he will probably consider how the object
is to be used and what character he feels it should have. Let us return aaain
to the problem of designing a chair. What materials— wood, metal, cane, or
plastic— are most suitable? That, of course, depends chiefly on the specific
purposes of the chair and where it is to be placed. Patio chairs are most
serviceable when they withstand weather and hard usage and are most satisfy-
ing Avhen they are in harmony with an outdoor setting. Weather-resistant
O
174 - Introduction
173)
enjoyment is a constant,
Thetransformation of materials for our use and
artists and a source of delight
to appreciative lay-
lively impetus to creative
on handcrafts and industrial
men In the next three chapters, with emphasis
some basic materials and the ways
design we will explore the qualities of
and 17 we will see how painters,
of working them. In Chapters 15, 16,
pigments, stone, metal, and plastics into
sculptors, and architects transmute
6 Wood, Metal,
-
and Plastics
WOOD AND METAL are two of nature's most abundant and useful re-
continuously finding new uses for and beauty in these astonishingly versatile
materials.
Observe they have been used in Fig. 176. Steel was chosen for the
how
slender but strong furniture frames and for the desk drawers. Finished
in
charcoal, they open the way to many a lively color scheme. The typewriter
a thick slab of walnut, richly grained, was selected for the durable
and
175
176 - Wood, Metal, and Plastics
friendly desk top. Less vigorously patterned plywood covers the adjacent
wall. Plastics, too, are discerningly used. The tops of the typewriter table
and the small tables in the lounge area are white laminated plastic sheets.
Reinforced with glass fiber, plastic was molded into the form-fitting seat
and back of the desk chair. Easily shaped, light^veight, and warm to the
touch, plastics are the logical material for the telephone case, the pen and
Each of these materials was chosen and worked to bring out its special
characteristics. But do not think that other choices would
have been wrong.
The furniture could have been made entirely of wood, in which case the
desion-and the effect-would have been different. The desk drawers and
plastic wall-covermgs
their enclosure might have been molded plastic, and
would be quite appropriate. In short, wood, metal, and plastics have enough
common characteristics so that we can choose from among them for many
objects. But they are by no means identical, and discerning designers create
forms appropriate to the material they have selected.
WOOD
Why is wood still pre-eminent in the manufacture of furniture? It is widely
available, and it is at least moderately durable, inexpensive, and easy to
^vork. But so are metal and either could be used as far as utility
and plastics,
The color of wood also varies according to the kind of wood and the
method of treatment. A few woods are naturally almost white or black,
some are grayish or greenish, but most are in the yellow, orange, and red
seo^ment of the color wheel. The oaks tend to be yellowish; rosewood, cherry,
and mahogany are red; walnut is brown. With bleaches and stains, however,
the natural color of wood can be changed, sometimes attractively and some-
times not.
Although grain and color are wood's most readily noticed qualities,
many other factors are important in selecting a suitable wood for a specific
relative hardness
weight
freedom from shrinkage, swelling, warping, and splitting
«li.it
,.
v;i.;;:i^;f:l;|^
>:;:i:'j:iiiiiii;i
and quar
(A) Above. Oak sawed in three
ways-end grain (left), plam-sawed (r..(.r),
patterns. {Forest Products Laboratory)
ter sawed (r;g/-n-reveals three
kinds of
r:a ed
grain pattern three-d>mer.sional. S
mrB./on, Etched plywood (left) makes the Parfcle ho.rd (nght)
grooves of varying widths.
ol wood . ^M l«s Lrallel ridges and
pressure, introduces new textures.
(Ur^Ued
tlTol Sr fibers Tnd chips bonded under
Company)
States Plywood Corporation and Columbia Hardboard
m
'^3*
W \
lb...-- J;
Iklky mA
Wood - 179
only average warpage. It is hard to work with hand tools, but not difficult
^vith power machinery. It holds nails and screws well, but has only average
cay, and has interesting grain but few knots. Its cost is moderately high.
Northern white pine is light and soft, is average in shrinking and swell-
ing, but warps very little. It is easy to work with hand tools and is average in
nail-holding power. Although stiff, it is not exceptionally strong or tough.
The axain is of little interest, but it has many small knots. Finally, it is not
expensive.
What does all of this mean to the craftsman, designer, and builder?
Briefly it indicates that the comparatively hard and strong, interestingly
grained white oak deserves consideration for such uses as flooring, the in-
terior trim of buildings, and furniture, as well as for implements and heavy
timbers. Northern white pine— softer, less strong and less expensive, without
special beauty of color or grain, but easily worked with hand tools— in the
better grades is used for those structural parts of buildings in which great
strength is not needed and for cabinetwork that will be protected by paint.
The poorer grades can be made into boxes and crates.
Finding the best wood for a job is a challenge! Here are some of the
ture. Its uniformly dense surface adds to its suitability for furniture, floors,
eighteenth century that the period has been called "The Age of Mahogany."
Although the several varieties of true mahogany differ from one another, all
are moderately hard and very strong; yet they are amenable to the most deli-
cate carving and can be polished to a high luster. The color ranges from
pale red to dark brownish-red, and beautifully figured patterns of grain
often occur.
Redwood is light and soft. But it is also strong, resists attacks of decay
and insects, shrinks little, and is easy to work. The colors resemble those of
mahogany. No one would suggest using it for delicately carved, highly pol-
ished furniture, but it is valued for outdoor furniture, interior and exterior
walls, and garden fences.
180 - Wood, Metal, and Plastics
quickly, and
Without proper treatment, most wood deteriorates rather
its surface is often too soft and
absorbent to resist wear and stains. Hence
waxes, the oldest preserva-
some kind of finish is usually needed. Oils and
soft surface many coats are properly applied.
tives, produce a beautiful if
Shaping Wood
in pole-shaped trunks and branches that can be
Wood usually grows
refined into columns, furniture legs, and lamp bases
squared into rectangular beams
table tops, and the like
. cut into planks or thin slabs for siding,
the lathe into bowls, plates,
. sawed into blocks suitable for turning on
and convoluted shapes
bent under heat and pressure
ornamented with carving and inlaid patterns
veneers or plywood
sliced into very thin sheets suitable for
. ground or split into small pieces and made into wallboards, paper, and
synthetic fibers.
respectful use of
Few show greater fitness to purpose and more
objects
Its design is based on two
of
materials than the Windsor chair (Fig. 181A).
pole-supplemented by two
wood's most appropriate forms-the slab and the
its supports, the writing
arm
pieces of bent wood. Projecting boldly beyond
remarkably strong for its weight. So does the
seat,
demonstrates that wood is
The basic concepts underlying the "Windsor" chair design are so sliong and hnidauitn-
tally right that they have inspired innumerable variations.
(A) Left. An eighteenth-century American writing chair is comfortable, sturdy, and
handsome. (Courtesy of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
(B) Right. Hans Wegner's oak spindleback chair is a contemporary Danish interpreta-
tion. (Pacific Overseas, Inc.)
slender legs carry this weight to the floor. Notice especially the very slender
spindles in the back, held in place by two thin pieces of bent wood. Although
extremely lightweight and airy, this structure will withstand the considerable
pressure of a sitter who leans against it. Not only is the wood strong in
compression (it holds its shape under pressure, as demonstrated by the
legs), but it is also strong in tension (it resists breakage when bent or pulled
as in the chair's back). Small wonder that wood has been extensively used
for furniture, for few materials, if indeed any others, are as strong, as easy
to shape, and as pleasant to see and touch. And the basic design of the
Windsor chair seems so right that contemporary designers continue to ex-
layer constructions
Veneer, Plywood, and Laminated Wood. These
of thin sheets of wood, thicker boards, or
paper greatly extend wood's reper-
tory.
as thin as 1/23 inch, produced
Veneers are sheets of wood, which can be
to thicker
by slicing, sawing, or rotary-cutting large logs. They can be glued
"veneered wood," to other veneers as in plywood and
lami-
lumber to make
nated wood, or to paper for wall coverings.
quality.
an unusually spontaneous but certain sculptural
Wood - 183
Designed for machine production, these chairs are based on three sig-
nificant technological developments. First, the wood is rapidly, precisely,
and
permanently molded under heat and pressure. Second, the parts of the
chair are joined by shock welding, a technique in which synthetic
resin
sheets are placed between the parts and sufficient heat is transmitted elec-
tronically to produce a bond stronger than the ^vood. Third, the wood is
as to shrinking, swelling, and warping. Its feel of warmth and intimacy make
it uniquely endearing to man.
184 - Wood, Metal, and Plastics
METAL
Bridge (Fig. 185) a masterpiece in metal that
The George Washington is
until
Aluminum, one of the most abundant metals, was not discovered
century. It is bluish-
1727 and was not commonly used until the twentieth
color and lighter in weight than most metals.
Exposed aluminum
white in
surfaces oxidize to a soft gray but do not deteriorate. Adding even very small
amounts of other metals greatly increases its hardness and strength. Because
bells.
prized from early times, known because it is some-
Silver was known and
it is the whitest of metals.
times found in a pure state and favored because
malleable metal. A single gram
Except for gold it is the most ductile and
can be beaten into leaves
can be drawn into a wire over a mile long, or it
is too soft for most uses,
only 0.00025 millimeter thick. In its pure state it
The George Washington Bridge (1931) in New York City takes full advantage of the
tremendous tensile strength of metal. Contrast the slender metal cables with the sturdy
stone columns of the Parthenon (Chapter 17). {Courtesy of Fortune Magazine; photo-
graph by Margaret Bourke-White)
186 Wood, Metal, and Plastics
Transforming silver and copper into "sterling silver" forks and spoons is accomplished by
hammering or pressing.
(A) Above. In making spoons, flat sheets of silver are cut to approximate shape and
then formed in a mold. {Gorham Company)
(B) Below. Spoons and forks of distinctive design. Notice that the ornament is logically
concentrated near the ends of the liandles and at the junctions of bowls and handles.
{Georg Jensen, Inc.)
188 - Wood, Metal, and Plastics
187B). . ,
or corrode.
even when thin, they do not
. They are long lasting, in part because,
break so readily as glass, ceramics, or wood.
comparatively light,
. They are heavy, dense, and homogeneous (wood is
Shaping Metal
many. In its solid state metal can be
The methods of fabricating metals are
bent
hammered, pressed, or rolled into thin sheets
1 13B). Iron, too, can be hammered and bent, especially when hot, into shapes
ranging from horseshoes to fireplace equipment and wrought-iron furniture.
2. Similar to hammering is the shaping of metals under pressure in a
mold. In Fig. 187A we see the stages in the manufacture of a spoon: dies for
the front and back are carefully made; and a sheet of silver, rolled to the
proper thickness, is cut in the shape of the spoon. Then an indefinite num-
ber of spoons can be stamped mechanically in a heavy press. Silverware can
also be made by hand, much more expensively than by machine, but with
the possibility of such individualized beauty as shown in Fig. I87B.
3. Casting is another way of shaping metal. In this process, molten
metals are poured into molds. The resulting products can be as unpreten-
tious as the cast-iron firelighter in Fig. 190B. Adapted from an old Cape Cod
invention, the pot holds kerosene or coal oil. The easily held, self-cooling
the place of kindling. But cast metal objects can also be richly ornamented,
as study of the Chinese bronze vessel (Fig. 190 A) will prove. Made more than
a thousand years before the birth of Christ, the bronzes of the Shang Dynasty
have never been eqtialled in craftsmanship, creative handling of complex
symbols, and sensitivity to design. The artisan who fashioned this vessel
imbued it with a powerful biu controlled intensity of feeling somewhat akin
to that in "Coatlicue" (Fig. 101).
enriched or
Metal objects can be highly
severely plain. .
PLASTICS
modifying his environment to
Plastics are one of man's greatest triumphs in
such materials as cotton wood
meet his needs. Chemists have transmuted
natural resms, salt, silica, coal tar,
and formaldehyde
pulp, soybeans, milk,
that resemble glass but are
into crystal-clear substances ^^^f'^^^'J^^}''
backs; dishes
brilliantly colored strips that can
be woven into chair seats and
stains. Wood
surfaces that resist scratches and
that do not break easily; and
useful
altered when transformed into
and especially metal are considerably
relation (except
plastics bear not the slightest
objects or works of art, but
chemically) to the raw materials
from which they were developed.
was made
The goes back to 1868. when celluloid
history of plastics
of cotton, nitric acid, and camphor) as
(from a highly improbable fusion
though, was rela-
a substitute for the ivory
used in billiard balls. Progress,
Since then, each year brings many
new develop-
tively slow until the 1920's.
and
meet our fantastically diversified
ments in substances tailor-made to bU-
production of plastics is now over six
specialized demands. The annual
lion pounds.
of plastics. J 1- 1
(Fig. 194A).
Plastics - 193
Vinyls, which can be flexible, rigid, or a foam, are used for upholstery,
draperies, floor and \vall phonograph records and lamp shades
coverings;
(Fig. 194B). They, too, are strong and tough, resist normal abrasion but not
Shaping Plastics
The ways in which plastics are shaped differ as much as do their character-
or pipes
blo^vn full of gas or air to make lightweight insulating materials
sprayed onto other materials
used to impregnate other materials to combine the virtues of both.
194
with the abundance of the raw materials from which they are made, are
great virtues, but they have many other assets when appropriately selected
and used. Many are surprisingly durable, yet are light in weight. Most of
them are pleasant to handle, yet they do not mar or scratch easily. Because
the color usually is integral with the plastic, it does not wear off, and with
proper care it does not fade. Only recently, though, have the significant
characteristics of plastics been thoroughly studied and the best uses for each
plastic become known to designers, manufacturers, and a iew consumers. A
number of plastics have many and varied uses, just as do a number of metals
and woods, but each plastic has its limitations as well as its strengths.
selves have so little intrinsic character and can be made to do almost any-
thing. As is usual under such conditions, designers at first bent their efforts
to making these new materials look like old and familiar ones— it is still not
uncommon to find plastic table tops which unconvincingly imitate Avood,
marble, or cloth. Gradually, though, the inherent possibilities of plastics are
being recognized and sympathetically revealed to make a ne^v and positive
CONCLUSION
Woods, metals, and plastics may be processed in a multitude of ways and
formed into an endless number of objects for human use. In enjoying
and appraising objects made from these materials, think about how well—
196 - Wood, Metal, and Plastics
-T^e-.::rrr::L^=r;::^;rrtSo„ „.
plastics.
7 Ceramics
- and Glass
IT IS LOGICAL to consider ceramics and glass together because they have
marked similarities. Both are made from decomposed rocks, and being inor-
ganic they do not rot or decay like wood, nor do they rust or corrode like
metal. They are shaped while in a plastic or liquid state, as are most metals
and plastics, and they are subjected to high temperatures. Generally, cer-
amics and glass have less tensile strength than wood, metal, and plastics—
they are likely to break if bent and to shatter if dropped on a hard surface.
All glazed ceramics are closely related to glass because glazes are really
glass; and porcelain, although rightfully classified with ceramics, has almost
as many "glass" characteristics as those associated with "clay." Both materials
197
198 - Ceramics and Glass
machine. Hand processes have
changed compara-
can be shaped by hand or
speed and economy.
tively little, but
industrialization has greatly increased
at one
medieval potter could be hardened
For example, a year's output of a
kilns. In one minute a
machme can make 1000
firm, ur some of our large
ago this would have taken two
men a whole
glass light bulbs; a few decades
'^'^'
between these two materials.
There however, important differences
are,
it can be
beh.g transparent (even though
Glass is usually thought of as be
opaque (although porcelains can
opaque), and ceramics are usually
sharp-pointed grains of sand that becom
tL'slucent). Glass made from
is
are made from clay
plastic or fluid only when fused at great heat; ceramics
Glass is shaped while
Lt become plastic or fluid when mixed with water. shaped.
undergo heat until they have been
very hot, but ceramics do not made
again be
reshaped, but fired clays can never
Glass can be remelted and
tensile strength of glass far
exceeds that of
plastic or fluid. Finally, the
rolled into large, thin sheets for
windows or
ceramics: glass can be drawn or
for textiles and insulation.
spun into thin filaments
CERAMICS
which include
"Objects made of fired clay" is a short definition of ceramics,
tiles, bricks, and drain tiles. We will, however
tableware, vases, sculpture,
ornamental ceramics, for it is with
confine this discussion to tableware and
daily living.
these that we have most contact in
vessels from
arose the art of fashioning
No one knows when or where ceramics
by heat, nor do we know how
the first
clay and hardening them
that some
early man must have noticed
were made. Inevitably, thotigh,
^^e soft clay along
fires hardened the
ground under them; and, then as now,
boulder. Some-
perhaps halfway over a round
riverbanks invited shaping,
clay made it
lining a wicker basket with
one might have learned that
discovered that when this clay-lined
more nearly water-proof, and then hardened
wicker burned away to leave a
basket was left in a fire, the
turning different
discovered that different clays,
clay pot. Somewhere it was
for colorful enrichment.
Glazing may have
colors in firing, could be used
surface
quartz pebbles develop a shiny
developed from the discovery that
if heated in wood ashes. . j- ^„„
processes in ceramics were discov-
Almost of the basic materials and
all
(Fig. 199A) was no-
artistry of ancient potters
ered centuries ago and the
steps ahead
reached the stage where significant
table Very early this art
our credit the discovery of new
became few and far between. We
have to
and mass
clays and new glazes, faster
and more accurate methods of firing,
Ceramics - 199
Clays, or thin flakes of decomposed granite-type rocks, are found all over
the world and vary as much as woods and metals. Some are coarse and melt
under high temperatures; such clays are suited only to thick, crude, low-
porcelains and some
fire ceramics. In contrast, the clays in exquisitely thin
electrical insulators have extremely fine
textures and will hold their shape
in the colors they
under great heat. Also, as mentioned above, clays differ
red, others tan or brown; some remain
gray
develop when fired: some turn
white. Notice, the next time a piece of ceramic
ware breaks
and a few become
in your home, the color of the clay under the glaze.
seldom completely
Because a single clay as found in its natural state is
are mixed together, often with
satisfactory for ceramics, one or more clays
flint, to give the desired prop-
the addition of such materials as feldspar or
erties. In order to be workable, especially
by hand, some degree of plasticity
requisite that the clay keep its shape while
is desirable. For all ceramics it is
drying and firing and that the particles fuse together in the kiln.
used and the
Ceramic wares can be categorized in terms of the clays
factors affect the use,
temperatures at which they are fired. Both of these
shape, glaze, thickness, durability, and
enrichment of the piece.
and terra-cotta
Earthenware includes bricks and floor tiles, flower pots
sculpture, and some vases, bowls, and dishes.
Made from coarse surface
shales and clays, earthenware is fired at
low temperatures (1740 to 2130
degrees Fahrenheit). The coarser earthenware, such as flower pots and "pot-
terV' bowls or plates, comparatively rough and porous, red to brown
is
and211C). ^
frequently used for decorative pottery and
some of^ the ,
Stoneware is
fired, stoneware generally becomes tan or gray, and the clay particles are
partially to completely fused. The result is a smoother surface, impervious-
ness to water, and greater strength. The range of shape, glaze, and ornamen-
tation is and 206B).
great (Figs. 199B, 203 A,
Porcelain is used for high-grade dishes and ornamental wares. Usually
made from mixed clays containing goodly amounts of kaolin (very pure,
fine, \vhite clay) and feldspar (a mineral component of most crystalline
pinching and smoothing them together. When the coiled pot is nearly dry,
he may smooth and polish it with a pebble or spoon— or he may let the
202B). Dating back to at least 4000 B.C., the potter's wheel is a heavy flat disc
that is rotated by hand, foot, or motor. Few art processes are more exciting
to watch than a skilled potter raising a shapeless lump of clay into a sym-
metrical, thin-walled vase. A ball of clay is "thrown," or placed onto the
middle of the wheel, which is then rotated. When the potter has a squat.
202
(A) Right. A sculpture by Hui Ka
Kwong poises slabs of clay in a spirited
interplay of form and direction. (Courtesy
of the artist)
Then he forms a cylinder by pressing on the inside with one hand and on
the outside with the other. From this point on, the potter shapes his pot by
varying the pressure on the inside and outside. An almost unlimited variety
of round, symmetrical shapes is possible— the potter's skill, imagination, and
taste, and the available clays are the important controlling factors. The
cookie jar in Fig. 203A is a consummate example of wheel-thrown pottery.
The full flowing contours and the unobtrusive concentric rings show
clearly that a plastic material was shaped on a rotating wheel.
Although wheel-thrown pottery is typically symmetrical, some con-
temporary potters have experimented with less rigid forms. Creating spon-
taneously but with great technical mastery, Hui Ka Kwong combines, adds,
and subtracts; pierces, cuts, and glazes his forms into highly animated and
personal sculpture (Fig. 203B).
204 - Ceramics and Glass
production, ceramic objects are
Shaping Clay by Machine. For mass
models are made; then thousands of
designed in clay, plaster, or on paper;
or with a jigger (Figs. 205A
replicascan be turned out quickly in molds
through 206B).
a typical way making hollow ware-vases, coffee
of
Casting in molds is
"""
pot in a three-piece mold. Slip, a
Fi-ure 205A shows the casting of a
is poured into the top
of the mold. Being
thick mixture of clay and water,
con-
water from the slip that comes in
very "thirsty." the mold absorbs the
clay, which varies in thickness
with the length
tact with it. Thus a layer of
mold, builds up inside the mold.
When this
of time the slip is left in the
slip is poured out. Then the
piece is allowed
layer is thick enough, the excess
clay shrinks in drying, iteventually pulls away from the
to dry and, because
The removed
cast pot is from the mold, seam marks or other
plaster of Paris.
handles or knobs not cast with the
imperfections are smoothed out. and any
drying the mold can be used
main pieces are fastened on. After thorough
again. . , •
JOLLE Y ARM
BOWL BEING
JIGGERED
PLASTER OF
PAR I S MOLD
J I G G E R
Mass-produced ceramics are usually made in molds, or with jiggers and jolleys.
(A) Upper. In casting, liquid clay is poured into a plaster mold that absorbs the
water and leaves a layer of clay on the inside of the mold. After the clay has partially
hardened, the object is removed. (Josiah Wedgwood and Sons)
(B) Lower. Jigger and jolley. The mold on the jigger shapes the inside of the bowl or
plate; the template on the jolley arm shapes the outside.
206 - Ceramics and Glass
Cups and pitchers can have slender handles; bowls and vases can have thin,
flaring rims. As with other materials, a potter brings into imison the forms a
material first suggests, his skill in exploiting its potentialities, and the human
needs, specific and general, for which the object is made.
Drying and Firing. Clay objects must be dried carefully and slowly to
prevent warping or cracking. In drying they may shrink as much as ten per-
cent, and they may shrink another ten percent in firing. Before firing, they
are called green ivare, and at this stage they break easily and soften or even
disintegrate in water.
Firing at sufficient temperatures completely changes the character of
clay: this change is called maturing. As mentioned, various clays are fired
harden but not vitrify; and at the high heats needed to mature porcelains,
earthen\vare clays lose their shape. Successful firing demands careful control.
Most ceramic objects are fired twice. Biscuit firing hardens the ware,
and this is the only firing that such unglazed pieces as flower pots get.
Objects are glazed in glost firing. A few objects are hardened and glazed in
one firing, and some glaze effects or types of ornament require several firings.
Most ceramics are covered with glazes, which are glasslike coatings fused at
high temperatures to clay surfaces. The main function is to give clay objects
a hard, durable, easily cleaned, and usually waterproof surface. But another
and more exciting virtue is that of providing color and texture. Colors
range from soft earth colors to gemlike brilliance. They can be thick or thin,
shiny or dull, transparent, translucent, or opaque. Their surfaces can be
very smooth or have tmcounted kinds of textures. These qualities are de-
termined by the ingredients used in the glazes and by the temperatures and
methods of firing and cooling the pieces. Endlessly fascinating to potters,
glazes range from simple ones made from salt alone (Fig. 203A) to those that
are technically complex.
Glazes vary in the way they join the clay body. A broken piece of
earthenware shows that the glossy coating and earthy body are distinctly
different, but in porcelains the glaze and body are so similar chemically that
they fuse together. If glaze and body do not shrink at the same rate while
cooling, the glaze may craze or crack into many fine lines. Sometimes "crack-
ling" is deliberately planned as an attractive enrichment. In Fig. 208A the
long crackle lines emphasize through contrast the bowl's shape while adding
their own intricate tracery.
208 - Ceramics and Glass
Enrichment of Ceramics
shape and glaze alone, man
Although many ceramics are beautiful through
the other
for some ornamentation. As in
has often responded to the need
tellingly re-
arts ceramic enrichment is
most satisfying when it in itself is
expressive functions, the material,
and the
lated to the object's useful and
basic shape. i-
•
informal art, this design does not confine itself within rigid boundaries.
of the
In so doing, it tends to merge, rather than to differentiate, the parts
Figure 21 ID illustrates the Oriental's ability to adapt
and modify
plate.
imitative or losing
natural forms without either making them superficially
becomes a rich but
their organic qualities. The intricately elaborated
lip
part maintains
subordinate enclosure for the floral design in the well. Each
with the others. The plate subtly and
its identity and yet truly belongs
aa:r;i
% -7^
^!%^-
<^y'-'\ir^ -.<fr
>^5S
>;:?>
k^%Mb^
Clay is modeled ornamentation.
a natural material for carved or
Luca della Robbia's plaque, "Prudence," was made in fifteenth-century Italy.
(A) Left.
The sensitively modeled forms are emphasized by richly colored glazes. {Courtesy of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art)
(B) Right. Dirk Hubers' contemporary jar is deeply carved with a vigorous abstract
pattern. The naturally dark brown stoneware body is lightened with a spotted, cream-
colored matte glaze in the deep relief. (Courtesy of the artist)
more durable; but overglaze pigments have a greater color range, and all
gilding is done after the final olost-firin?.
Modeled or Carved. Clay in its plastic state invites being worked \vith
because it responds so readily to every pressure. While hand-thrown pottery
is still soft it can be given concentric raised or lowered rings and thumb-
print borders; it can be textured Avith about everything from modeling tools
and pocket combs to burlap and screen-cloth; or it can be impressed with
designs carved in wood or plaster. Also it can be modeled into sculptural
forms (Figs. 203B and 2 ISA).
the greatest test of the potter's art and science comes when he creates a
GLASS
has af-
used in uncounted ways. Throughout
its history, it
Today, glass is
ancient examples.
Like ceramics, glass has a long history as yet not completely disclosed.
And, again, we do not know just when or where man first made glass, but
producing such glassy substances as
we know that nature had for eons been
shaping of glass developed slowly, and some
obsidian. The making and
Thus some of the first vessels
processes resembled those used in ceramics.
glass
were made much like coil pottery by winding rods of hot, softened
By 1200 the Egyptians knew how to
a core of sand (Fig. 215A).
b.c.
around
invented until shortly before the birth
press glass, but the blowpipe was not
of Christ. Like the potter's wheel,
the blowpipe has changed remarkably
wi 1 not. This
will flow and becomes one that
ceases to be a substance that
like a
us were it not that glass actually looks
would be of little concern to
The Materials
ele
formulas include almost every chemical
Even though thousands of glass
composed of silicates such as -"^ ^^^^
nient known, glass is basically
at very high -^P-^^-^^^
-J
such as sodium or potassium fused
added to give special q^'^"-. ^^^
f^^^^ ^^^
substances, many others may be
^^^ J.^^
major categories as determined
by
majority of glasses fall into one of three
to silica,
their basic materials. In addition
and
ingredients of ordinary household
. soda and lime are the principal
window glass.
grade of glass.
. potash and lime are used in a finer
which has
. iead. from 25 to 50 percent
by weight, is used in crystal,
luster (Fig. 215C).
exceptional clarity, brilliance, and
-^s; copper
gold and copper oxides give
Colors come from various minerals: or
or cobalt oxides give blues; and
cadmium and uranium produce yellows
Glass - 217
oranges. Other effects, such as translucency, opacity, or bubbles, result from
chemicals or the way in which the glass is treated.
Shaping Glass
A material as plastic and ductile as hot glass can be shaped in many ways,
but there are two basic processes.
form by rolling, twisting, and shaping with tools while the glass is hot and
plastic. Because glass can be worked only at high temperatures, the object is
be blown into a mold or a series of molds of different shapes which make pos-
sible some sculptural effects difficult if not impossible in "offhand blowing."
Most blown glass nowadays is produced by machine (Fig. 218B) with,
of course, greatly increased efficiency.
Pressing (or Molding) Glass. Although the Egyptians pressed glass more
than 3000 years ago, the process was not fully developed until rather re-
cently. A mold is made, the right amount of molten glass is dropped into it,
and a plunger forces the glass into the desired shape. Done either by hand
or machine (Figs. 219A and B), pressed glass emerges in many shapes, often
with a textured surface (Fig. 219C). Although much pressed glass is of the
type shown in the illustration, many other kinds, such as glass sculpture, are
possible.
What shapes are most appropriate for this completely amorphous super-
cooled liquid with its chameleonlike qualities?
The primary factor is the unique manner in which glass and light inter-
act. When glass is transparent and colorless but thick, patterns of light
develop inside— as well on the surface of— the material. These patterns
as
can be serenely simple (Fig. 220) or complex and diversified (Fig. 223).
Even in constant light, the patterns in glass imply motion, perhaps because
we know that if the light changes or if we change our position the lights and
darks will actually change dramatically. Colored transparent glass not only
218 - Ceramics and Glass
Pressed glass shapes often have textural patterns, although this is not inherent in the
process. {Corniyig Glass Works)
(A) Above, left. In pressing glass by hand, a white-hot glob is dropped in the mold
and pressed into shape by a plunger.
(B) Above, right. Mechanized pressing of glass has greatly speeded up the production
of such items as casseroles, dishes, and glass blocks.
(C) Below. Typical contemporary machine-pressed glass.
220 - Ceramics and Glass
Enrichment of Glassware
As with ceramics, much glassware does not need ornamentation. The ma-
terial can be beautiful in itself and the basic shapes handsome. Certainly, no
added decoration is needed on such pieces as are shown in Figs. 215C and
223. But there are numerous ways of enriching glass which, when sensitively
carried out, may enhance the material and the shape to give us intensified
pleasure.
Laid-on Ornamentation. Additional pieces of glass can be added to, or
laid on, the basic shape for further enrichment of varied kinds. Notice in
Fig. 218C that they can be precisely regular, as are the rings around the de-
canter's neck, or they may have a globular, less formal quality as on the
base of the vase next to the decanter. They can be as ingeniously fanciful
Cut Glass. Like precious jewels, glass can be cut to increase its sparkle,
to provide decoration, and to create new shapes. The cutting is done by re-
volving stone or steel wheels fed with coarse abrasives; then the piece is
successively polished on stone and felt wheels until the surfaces regain their
original brilliance. When workmanship are good,
the design, material, and
cut glass produces a brilliance difficult to equal with any other material and
process. With the development of flaw-free glass and the trend away from
elaborate decoration, the saw-toothed, heavily patterned cut glass that graced
our grandmothers' sideboards fell temporarily from favor. But the technique
still holds possibilities— and much of our grandmothers' cut glass has a spirit
emery dust mixed with oil. The result is a shallow intaglio that, by optical
illusion, may seem to be in lo^v relief (see the engraved owl on the plate in
Fig. 218C). Although the engraving is seldom deep, the effects can range
222 - Ceramics and Glass
(Fig. 222B).
CONCLUSION
clay is still practiced
The ancient art of making durable vessels out of soft
of early potters
throughout the world by methods that differ from those
much slo^ver to progress, has recently enjoyed a
chiefly in efficiency. Glass,
tremendous development as a material of unique importance in science, in
art, and in architecture. Even though glass and ceramics are used for hun-
dreds of objects that affect our daily living, there is good indication that we
possibilities.
have only begun to explore their
Conclusion -
225
The following publications on ceramics and glass are worth reading:
Ceramics: Glenn C. Nelson (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1960).
Excellent illustrations supplement a well-organized discussion of ceramic
techniques.
Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Articles on Glass, Glass Manufacture, and Pottery and Porcelain.
Glass 1959: Corning Museum of Glass (Corning, N.Y.: Corning Glass Center,
1959).
Illustrated catalog of an exhibition of international contemporary glass.
How Much Do You Know About Glass?: Harlan Logan, ed. (New York: Dodd,
Mead, 1951).
Pleasant, informative reading.
Sunset Ceramics Book: Herbert H. Sanders (Menlo Park, Calif.: Lane, 1953).
One of the better "how-to-do-it" books.
8 Fabrics
-
226
The Materials -
227
THE MATERIALS
Most fabrics are made from fibers, which are slender threadlike filaments.
Plants and animals provide an abundance of natural fibers, and scientists
have recently given us a host of new man-made materials.
Natural Fibers
coverlet from
white ^od and linen, an eighteenth-century
T;1;V WoT: of bCrnd
precise, orderly organization of
varied repeated patterns. (Courtesy
New Hamprre has a
Gallery of Art, Index of
America?, Design)
of the National ,
Man-made Fibers
The world of nature offers weavers boundless inspiration with its multiplicity of organic
forms. (Courtesy of the American Craftsmen's Council)
(A) Left. A
portion of Lenore Tawney's transparent hanging of cotton, silk, wool, and
goathair shows her free experimental techniques in which meandering yarns seem to
drift through the fabric.
Right. Mildred Fischer uses varied techniques in weaving individualized wool
(B)
tapestries that express in abstract, universalized symbols her reactions to the colors and
patterns seen in skies and water.
forced through tiny nozzles (much like the spinnerets of silkworms and
spiders) into a chemical bath. This hardens the fine streams into continuous,
hairlike threads, which are then twisted into yarns and woven into textiles.
All rayons are strong, absorbent, and mothproof, but vary greatly in other re-
spects. They range from sheer to heavy, glossy to dull, and can be processed
to resemble cotton, linen, or silk. Often they are combined with other fibers.
Rayons are widely used for sheer curtains, draperies and upholstery, and
clothes.
Glass fibers were first woven into textiles in the 1890's but were not
seriously studied or widely used until the 1930's. While most glass is brittle,
glass fibers are pliable because they are extremely fine— from 100 to 400 fila-
ments are combined to make a fine yarn. Fiberglas, as the material is usually
called, is noninflammable, nonabsorbent, and strong. It can be sleekly smooth
230 - Fabrics
draperies as
or show many textures. It is used for thin curtains or heavier
laminated sheets, and for many indus-
reinforcing in plastic lamp shades or
trial purposes. .
them equally
Each textile fiber has its assets and drawbacks. None of is
MAKING FABRICS
were the forerunners of fabrics, but
at
and the bark of trees
Animal skins
they could make their own
fabrics,
some early time men discovered that then
needs. Felts probably came first,
which were more responsive to their
well as baskets woven of grass
and rushes.
knitted fish nets and textiles as
into yarns led to more pliable
and diversi-
The controlled spinning of fibers
have been few basic changes in
As with ceramics and glass, there
fied cloths.
stupendous
natural fibers, but there have been
the making of fabrics from
the three
technological developments. Today the fabric industry is one of
Weaving
of
usually at right angles, two systems
Weaving the process of interlacing,
is
crude
pliable materials. It can be done
on a piece of cardboard cut into a
a great
on the complex power looms of
loom on hand looms (Fig. 231), or
are known as
are called zvarp. the crosswise
mill The lengthwise threads
fundamental steps.
weft or woof). There are four
filling (also
Making Fabrics - 231
Plain weave, the simplest and strongest, accounts for about 80 percent of all
woven goods (Figs. 23 IB, 237A and B). In this weave, one filling yarn passes
over one warp thread and under the next as in broadcloth, burlap, or mus-
lin. The many variations include basket weaves, in which two or more warps
are crossed by two or more
I \ \ l'
filling yarns, as in monk's cloth, and rib weaves,
in which a rib is formed by having a warp thicker than the filling (or the (R) Plain Weave.
reverse) as in rep or poplin.
Floating yarn, or satin, weave from plain weave in that the filling
differs
yarns float over or under several or many warp
yarns (Figs. 23 IC and 232B).
This produces the smoothness of satin, in which long floats minimize the
over-and-under texture of most woven products.
Twill weave interlaces warp and filling yarns so that diagonal lines show on
the surface (Fig. 231D). Many flannels, gabardines, and serges are examples.
qualities
Machine-woven textileshave a fabulous range of expressive
soft and bidky. Marie Nichol's design, in wh.ch vert-
(A^LeU Texturized Fiberglas is
the textile's structural,
cal slfp/s oMainwave alternate with open weave, celebrates
Fiberglas Corporation)
nrrhitectural character. (Oiuens-Coming
Viscose rayon yarns in an irregular
saun -ave produc^ n
B S"'- Be-berg Lnd (Boh. KroU
of informal, meandering lines.
ever-changing silky texture with an overlay
Fabrics)
fibers
bronze metallic, and heavy cotton
"Tq L^Handw^en from silken ricrac,
fine, light and dark elements,
ilsabel
interplay of coarse and
•p£L ^b an inurcTte
Scott Fabrics Corporation) weave rug
j „„i„ ,Pvt„rpH nile-weave rue
(D) Right. Jos6 Clton's "End of
Summer" is a rough, deeply textured, pile
{Courtesy of V'Soske)
o£ vibrantly colored wool yarns.
Making Fabrics -
233
Two frequently seen elaborations of the basic type weaves are the pile
weave (Figs. 232D and 238B) and figure weave (Figs. 228A and 229B). The
pile weave has, in addition to the fiat-lying warp and filling, another set of
yarns that stand up in loops. These loops can be cut
as in velvet, or uncut as
in bath towels. Figure weaves have simple to
complex patterns as in coverlets,
brocades, and carpets. They can be produced on hand or power looms.
Ma-
chine weaving of this type is usually done on a Jacquard loom, a complex
mechanism in which the weaving is controlled by perforated strips of card-
board in intricate designs (they look much like the old player-piano rolls
and the principles are much the same).
Felting
Knitting
yarn (or set of yarns), moving in one direction only, is looped through itself
to make a chain of stitches. With pouer machines, knitting can be five times
as fast as weaving (Fig. 234B).
Below. Enlarged photographs show how the structure of felt (left) differs from that
of a woven fabric [center) and a knitted fabric {right). (Ciba Company, Inc.)
234 - Fabrics
iiMiM«.ifjii?t£i^r«MS
i^ttlllifiiaiiii
the world of fabrics. {Courtesy of Lar-
Lace-making and knitting open new dimensions in
Lace-making
atwiiptiNM
)esigneis are exploring the promises of a realm of new materials and processes.
(A) Lejt. A molded plastic wall covering gives a vigorous play of light and shade.
Courtesy of Laverne)
(B) Right. Luella Williams' wall hanging of grasses, reeds, seed pods, and natural linen
hows that humble materials can be invested with great appeal. {Courtesy of American
Iraftsmen's Council)
'ABRIC DESIGN
Ul fabrics have a purpose that is fulfilled through materials organized
nto a structure. The major factors in fabric design are therefore:
unctions
k. few handmade textiles are created for the sheer joy of making some-
hing, and some fabrics are developed in the hope that a use will be found
236 - Fabrics
sheeting, or as inspiring as a
hand-woven
bath w.th noncommittal plastic
which a fabric will
event. Thus, the ways in
tapestry created as an esthetic
in design.
be used and enjoyed are first factors
Materials
Fabricating Processes
physical
described earlier leads to different
Each of the fabricating processes
structural pattern, as can be seen by
and visual qualities. Each has its own
The patterns can be as simple
comparing the illustrations in this chapter.
229B, for there is almost
as that in Fig. 23 IB or as intricate as that in Fig.
enrichment that can originate while the
no limit to the kinds of structural
Embossed patterns (Fig. 235A) on plastic
yarns are being fastened together.
patterns,
not, strictly speaking, structural
sheeting or vinyl-coated fabrics are
is being made.
but they are formed while the material
Applied Enrichment
is not necessary. Many
Once again, repeat that applied ornamentation
we
fabri-
appropriate materials sympathetically
fabrics need nothing beyond
holding
appreciate variety and stimulation, a
cated for visual appeal. But we
not ahvays achieved
intensity of expression
and releasing of attention, and an
such as printing, applique, and
without some additional ornamentation
embroidery.
Fabric Design • 237
^ k
Two American textiles are enhanced with li\ely printed designs in which dark and light
areas contrast strongly. The dominant \erticality in both designs is balanced by subordi-
nate horizontals, and there are many diagonal paths for the eye to explore. In both, the
background areas are not merely left-o\er space but vital components of the design.
(A) Lejt. An eighteenth-century hand-blocked cotton cloth shows conventionalized birds
and foliage organized as intertwining curvilinear shapes. Small leaves and flowers in the
background strengthen the feeling of continuity. {Courtesy of the Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston)
(B) Right. Alexander Girard's contemporary hand-screened "Cut-Out" is brisk and
staccato, preciseand geometric. Many new relationships are seen when the cotton batiste
is hung in folds. The design can be read as a white figure on a dark background
or a
dark figure against white. This shifting of attention from dark to light and back again
further animates tlie lively shapes. (Herman Miller Furniture Company)
Printed fabrics are so abundant that they deserve special attention (Figs.
237A through 240B). Little is known about when and where they were
begun, but evidence indicates that the Egyptians stamped designs on cloth
as early as 2100 b.c. Apparently, though, it was many centuries before this
process was widely known and used.
The three basic ways of printing designs on fabrics are block printing,
roller printing, and screen printing, processes that are almost identical with
those for printing on paper, discussed in Chapter 9.
Block printing, the oldest of the three, is done from blocks, usually of
wood, into which a design has been cut (Fig. 237A). A coloring agent is ap-
plied to the block, which is then pressed onto the fabric, and the raised
portion of the block prints the design. Each color requires a separate block.
238 - Fabrics
Emphasis on verticals and horizontals recalls the structmal pattern of a textile's interlaced
warp and filling. The designs can range from those boldly contrasting and open in
feeling to those that are densely packed with small details.
(A) Left. An arresting variation of crossbar plaid distinguishes "Festival," a hand-
printed linen from .Austria. It is easy to imagine that we are seeing the fibers of the
cloth greatly magnified. (Greeff Fabrics, Inc.)
(B) Right. In "Wanderlust," a hand-screened drapery material, buildings from all over
the world are subtly organized in horizontal and vertical bands. Seen from a distance it
looks like an abstract pattern of textures but closer inspection discloses a wealth of
evocative details. (Ellenhank Designers, Inc.)
though slower and more expensive per yard than roller printing, screen
printing permits larger repeats and heavier pigments that give the fabric
a handcraft look.
In looking at the diversified printed fabrics on pages 237, 238, 239, and
240 you might wonder if there are any valid principles for ornamenta-
tion applied to fabrics. It would be better to assume that there were none
than to devise constricting rules. But thinking about the distinctive qualities
of fabrics does provide some clues. Fabrics are essentially two-dimensional
structures that are typically continuous and pliable.
critically limited.
purposes of
consideration. b„. the intended
These major taclors deserve
consequential.
fabrics are sometimes more
well— most textiles are designed to be felt. Try applying the criteria listed
earlier to printed fabrics. Then, if you wish to learn more, read:
America's Fabrics: Zelma Bendure and Gladys Pfeifler (New York: Macmillan,
1947).
Thorough, authoritative presentation of fabrics, fibers, and processes.
Encyclopaedia Britannica
Articles on Cotton, Rugs and Carpets, Silk, Synthetic Fibers, Textiles and
Embroidery, Textile Printing, Weaving, and Wool.
Graplxic Processes
THE BOOK YOU ARE READING is an example of the art and science
of printing. The type face is called Baskerville; the black-and-white photo-
graphs were reproduced by halftone; and the color chart in Chapter 14 was
reproduced by the jour-color process. The text and the pictures were printed
by letterpress, a term that refers to printing done from a raised surface.
So accustomed have we become to the printed page— newspapers, maga-
zines, books— that we easily forget that machine printing on paper had been
known in Europe for only fifty years when Columbus discovered America.
Before man abandoned the old, laborious process of copying by hand the
books in which the world's knowledge was stored, the Egyptian and Greek
temples, already centuries old, were beginning to crumble.
243
Processes
Printing and the Graphic
which printing is based had long
But the principles and processes on
designs from woodblocks had been
im-
been known. In Egypt and in India,
and early in their history the Cheese were
pressed on textiles for centuries,
Chinese
familiar with block printing
on paper. There is evidence that the
Korean
in the eleventh century, and
that a
used movable type of clay and tin
until the mid-
1409. However, it was not
book was printed from cast type in mak-
dle of the fifteenth century in
Europe that Johannes Gutenberg began
of hand-letter-
. Black letter type, introduced by Gutenberg in imitation
lightface
standard
boldface
exirabeld
Letters also vary in width, and, again, there are four categories:
extended
standard
condensed
extra-condensed
In addition to different weights and widths, type faces can express innumer-
able ideas and feelings through their character, as is illustrated below.
DIGNITY or £PlaJulness
SIMPLICITY or COMPLEXITY
SPEED or SLOWNESS
STRENGTH or FRAGILITY
Advertisers and book designers use appropriate type faces much as painters
and sculptors use expressive forms and colors.
Any printing job demands many decisions: page size; type face; quality
of paper; kind and quantity of illustrations; and size of margins around
the printing. When sensitively and creatively handled, printing can be an
art in its own right. Look at the printing you see every day and ask ques-
tions such as these:
The printing of words is only one branch of this field, and we now turn
to the creation and reproduction of pictures by hand and machine.
Printing and the Graphic Processes
Relief printing is that in which the design stands above the gen-
eral level of the plate's surface (Fig. 246A). Rubber stamps and
ink.
pressure paper is forced into the depressions to absorb the
so that some
smooth surface treated chemically or mechanically
(Fig. 246C). Lithography is
areas will print and others will not
the only common example.
Prints with more than one color can be made by any of these methods.
Usually each color requires a separate plate and a separate printing, but dif-
ferent colors can be applied to one plate and printed together.
In creating handmade prints of any kind a typical early step is musing about
^vhat the print is intended to do. In the past almost all prints re-presented
a scene, interpreted an event or story (Figs. 250B and 254), or depicted spe-
cific emotions (Figs. 247 and 253) with recognizable objects. But contempo-
rary print makers have extended the scope by exploring less tangible experi-
ences and expressing them in abstract forms (Figs. 248B and 250A) much as
musical composers have always done. Graphic artists usually make pre-
liminary sketches on paper, and these range from rough sketches to detailed
drawings. Some transfer their drawings to the printing surface while others
'fmmmmimm^-
Ui^t..i
248 - Printing and the Graphic Processes
JfS^
^'':% g» KrrimmF""
'-
The Graphic Processes - 249
hang them on the wall as guides. Some make no preliminary studies but
work directly from nature or straight out of their heads responding only to
their feelings and the potentialities of the process they have chosen.
Wood engravings are almost always done on the eyid grain of hard,
fine-grained wood with burins (small steel rods ground to a square- or
lozenge-shaped cutting point). The prints typically have greater and more
refined detail than do woodcuts.
niques. Cardboard, chip board, composition board, plastics (Fig. 248B) and
plywood, as well as wood blocks, can be used. Innumerable textures can be
procured by imprinting the surface with such things as wire screen or nails
or by roughening it with carpenters' files or power tools. The block can be
coated with glue or shellac, which before it dries can be impressed with hair-
pins, lace, the bark of a tree, or whatever the artist deems suitable.
Instead of ctUting into the block, a composition can be built up with
pieces of cardboard (or many other materials) that are cut out, glued to
the block, coated with shellac, and printed in the customary way. Paper
reliefs, as made by Edmond Casarella (Fig. 250A), involve both building up
and cutting away. Variously shaped cardboard forms are glued to a rigid
base, and then other patterns are cut into them. This technique allows great
freedom, for the artist can add or subtract until he gets what he wants.
Multicolored prints, which can be made with any of these processes, call
250 - Printing and the Graphic Processes
many persons.
(A) Left. Edmond Casarella's
"Blue
cut, is an
Vein" (1957), a color paper-relief
arresting composition that shows the fluid
complexity possible with this technique.
Line engraving, drypoint, and etching are the major hand intaglio processes.
Fine detail and intricate textures are typical characteristics. The printed
lines or areas are slightly raised and a depressed plate mark shows that the
plate was pressed into the paper.
Line engiavings are also referred to as engravings in metal, steel en-
gravings, or copper engravings. Sometimes called the "severest form of print
making," engraving in metal gives clean, assured, sweeping lines. Engraving
in metal is done as follows:
Plates of copper, steel, or zinc are engraved with burins (or gravers)
that are pushed into the plate gouge out V-shaped channels. The
to
deeper a line is engraved, the wider it becomes, and the heavier it
prints. Typically, the lines are crisp and definite, become thicker toward
the middle, and taper toward the end.
The plate cleaned and heated; then the engraved lines are filled with
is
ink and the surface is wiped clean. The plate is centered, face up, on the
bed of a heavy press. Dampened paper is laid on top of it and blankets
of felt are placed over the paper.
When a heavy roller is pulled over the plate, paper, and felt, the pres-
sure forces the damp paper into the incised lines and the ink is trans-
ferred to the paper as slightly raised lines.
Calling cards and wedding invitations, postage stamps and paper money
are the most common examples of line engravings seen today. If you exam-
ine a dollar bill with a magnifying glass, you will see many fine textures-
parallel lines of varied widths, dots, dashes, and cross-hatching— that are
possible in this graphic process. In the past, engravings made by hand were
a major way of reproducing paintings and illustrating books: the lines can
expressive
Recently, line engraving has
been revitalized as a creative,
stereotypes, contemporary engravers
move from
process. Freed from binding
Often, as in Fig.
the energetic and impulsive.
fhe austere and controlled to
or other incised techniques,
and the
252 engraving is combined with etching
"intaglio."
prints are referred to as "mixed media" or simply
scraped off.
The Graphic Processes -
253
Guilder
,. ^ (1,,,., Healine the Sick" (1649), also known as "The Hundred
,
•
lines are hardly noticeable in the rich grays and blacks. But line is
the ele-
ment on which the composition is built and is a major factor in giving it a
flexible, lucid, almost transparent quality.
Other intaglio processes that you may come across used alone or more
often with other techniques include the following:
Aquatints are made by covering a metal plate with resin dust and
then heating it. Each particle of resin adheres to the plate
as a hardened
crystal, and the spaces between are etched with acid. Some areas are stopped-
out with varnish while others are exposed to the acid. Repeated many times,
this leads totextured areas that range from almost pure white to pure black.
Soft ground etchings (see Fig. 252) are made by coating metal plates
with a greasy ground that does not harden. A sheet of paper is laid on the
ground, and the draws with a pencil or impresses the ground with any-
artist
thing he wishes. \Vhen the paper is removed, some of the ground comes
with it. Then the plate is immersed in acid that eats into the metal in direct
proportion to the amount of ground that has been removed.
fate
grays and
• . ,, ,. "Thp Too-Hot Bath" (1839) shows the textured
-^ whidr
drawn portions insoluble m water,
"Urtc acid
n.akes the
the surface is chem-
makes the undrawn areas repellent to ink. Thus,
grease
so that part of it repels water, the rest repels
ically changed
metal plate) is moistened w
h
. When ready for printing, the stone (or nik. vo led
Printing
those parts not drawn on.
water, whic'h soa^s into
to those portions that are not wet. Paper
over the surface, adheres only
exerted, and a print is
produced. The greasy par
is applied, pressure
the part that is wet
of the plate s surface
holds the greasy ink, and
lowered notice-
surface is neither raised nor
Repels U; and although the
gray is possible.
black, and all values of
ably a print with white,
The Graphic Processes -
257
been extensively produced and developed only since the 1930's. But they
represent a branch of stencil printing, which has a long history. These are
the steps:
Almost all pictures seen in books, magazines, and newspapers are repro-
duced by one of the photomechanical processes. These processes permit
reproductions to be printed in almost unlimited quantities. As the name
implies, light plays an important part in these highly mechanized methods.
In all of them, the design or picture, known as the copy, is photographed
onto a photosensitive plate that is acted on by chemicals to prepare it for
printing. Of the important types, line cut, three-color, halftone, and jour-
color ^re relief; photolithography is planographic; and photogravure belongs
to the intaglio group.
Line cut is the simplest of the photomechanical processes. Its most dis-
tinctive characteristic is that the prints have but one value, usually but not
necessarily black (Figs. 246 and 261 A). Thus it is a process suitable for repro-
ducing any picture or design in which there are no shaded areas-pen-and-
ink drawings, woodcuts, or wood engravings. Though highly mechanized
and complex in detail, it is basically simple. It resembles the method by
which an etching plate is prepared and is often called "zinc etching."
or comic
used in newspaper advertisements
Textures and stippUng, often ^om
rangtng
"prefabrtcated" textures or screens
ir" are produced by
-"'effects (Ftg.
crosshatchings, st.ppUngs, and
d s and parallel Hues to (d.cussed be-
be distinguished from /.«//.o...
261 A) Line cuts can readily
variation or shadmg.
low) because thescreens in line cuts show no
method of prtnttng adver-
the simplest, least expensive
Three-color is
square
glass plates
^^
";^^
;
inch). Better
-—
have 60 lines to the inch (3600
newspapers per inch,
with from 120 to 150 rulings
comm rcial reproduction uses screens can see the
as 200. Although you
and "ne color work may have as many
you will need a magnifying
li ^newspaper halftones with the naked eye.
alass to see them in finer printing.
•
•••••••••••
••••••••••«
•••••••••••
The Graphic Processes -
261
BBaBBaaaaai
aaBaaaaaaaa
aaaaaaaaaaa
aaaaaaaaaaa
•
••••••••••••
aaaaaaaaaaa
aaaaaaaaaaa • •••••••••••
(A) Above. Line cuts can be enriched with ready-made, repetitive textures that are avail-
able in hundreds of patterns. [Para-Tone Company)
(B) Below. Halftones, greatly magnified, show the vari-sized dots that are hardly vis-
ible at ordinary size. A coarse screen was used for the example on the left; a fine screen
for that on the right. (S. D. Warren and Company)
262 - Printing and the Graphic Processes
to pass and
first through a blue filter which permits only the yellow rays
green
thus gives a record of all the
yellow in the original; second through a
obtain blues.
filter to obtain reds;
and third through a red-orange filter to
the hues eliminated, recording
The fourth plate is made with practically all
only the major values. The printer
now has four plates, one of which is used
last black.
to print only yellow dots,
another red, another blue, and the
can be duplicated. .
.A
Misch Kohn's "Lion" (1957) freely combines etching, aquatint, and engraving to produce
an intaglio print based on unconstrained lines and textures. {Courtesy of the artist)
CONCLUSION
Printed words and pictures are one of the most potent means of communica-
tion among men. Newspapers, magazines, and books quickly carry facts and
ideas, verbally and pictorially, to millions of people in all parts of the
world. Scientists and working together, have developed the repro-
artists,
hand in limited editions. Happily, the exact opposite has come true. Perhaps
because we see so much that is mechanized we find new delight in hand
prints. They are original works of art, which give them an immediacy and
individuality that are treasured because these qualities are rare. Contem-
porary print-makers have engendered and maintained a remarkable level of
creativity. Freed from the economic necessity of producing something that
will please millions of dissimilar observers, they have revealed new, pene-
trating insights into our world. Although many of us cannot easily afford
original paintings, nearly everyone can enjoy original prints in his home or
place of work.
264 - Printing and the Graphic Processes
readings are suggested.
For additional information the following
Macmillan, 1959).
Printmaking: Gabor Peterdi (New York:
of printmaking techniques.
Clear and thorough treatment
Rinehart and Winston, 1958).
Printmaking Today: Jules Heller (New York: Holt,
detailed description of the handprint processes.
Handsomely illustrated,
lO Plxotography
-
265
266 - Photography
migratory workers during the depression of the 1930's, Miss Lange says of
her "Migrant Mother" (Fig. 267):
same direction. There she sat in that lean-to tent with her children
. . .
huddled around her, and seemed to know that my pictures might help her,
and so she helped me. The pea crop at Nipomo had frozen and there
. . .
was no work for anybody. But 1 did not approach the tents and shelters of
other stranded pea-pickers. It was not necessary; I knew I had recorded
the essence of my assignment.*
Sometimes called the easy art, photography at its lower levels of achieve-
ment offers beginners some degree of success more quickly than do the other
arts. "You press the button, we do the rest" describes how easy it is— to do
only a small part of the work! Professional photographers know that tech-
nical mastery takes time but is far less difficult than is the cultivation of
individualized seeing and thinking in terms of the ^vhole photographic act.
• From Popular Photography, Vol. 46. No. 2, February. 1960, pp. 42-13. 126.
268 - Photography
basi-
means "light-writing ) is
The technique of photography (which a hght-
is focused on
The light from the object to be recorded
cally simple.
so that additional
sensitive surface in a darkened box. and this image is fixed
have
further change. Years of research
exposure to light will not produce
possi-
extended the scope of photographic
increased technical control and
photographers has
bilities, while at the same
time the leadership of master
mechanics.
shown how far creativity can rise above
pictures with sharp detail, under poor light, or of moving objects, more
precise controls are necessary, and there is a vast array from which to choose.
Folding, miniature (35 millimeter), and reflex cameras, as well as many
specialized types, are all developments of the box camera. As the price
mounts lenses improve, shutters can be set for many speeds, view finders
and focusing devices get better.
The most important part of a camera is the lens— even though it is not abso-
lutely necessary. A pinhole will produce an image in moderately sharp
focus, but the image will be so faint that an extremely long exposure or
very bright illumination is required. A larger hole will admit more light,
but the image will be fuzzy. A good lens, in contrast, gathers and concen-
trates much light to produce a sharply focused image quickly. As lenses get
larger, less light on the subject or less time for the exposure is needed,
which permits good photographs of dimly illumined subjects or those mov-
ing rapidly. Good lenses must be precisely ground and free from defects
so that they approach that most remarkable of lenses, the one in the human
eye.
Of the lenses designed for special work, telephoto and wide-angle are
the most common. Telephoto lenses, often used by wild-life photographers,
have a telescopic effect that allows the photographer to station his camera
at considerable distances from his subject. When photographers cannot
back far enough away from their subjects to include all that they wish,
wide-angle lenses are the answer. They are much used by architectural pho-
tographers who wish to record a large section of a small room.
light.
is open can be
controlled. A window shade allows
oathers while the shutter
covering more or less
us to increase or decrease the light entering a room by
acts in much the same way.
Whereas
window. The iris of the eye
of the
opening, the better cameras have
dxa-
cheaper cameras have one fixed
of the
or any size up to the diameter
phragms that can be made very small
lens.
4=^^i
IN FOCUS IN FOCUS SMALL APcRTURE FILM
34
Nearby and distant objects can be in focus if the diaphragm is adjusted to make the
aperture small. {Reproduced by permission from This Is Photography)
taken at such slow shutter speeds that the figures were blurred. In order
to "stop" the action of a fast runner, shutter speeds up to Vhoo of a sec-
ond may be necessary. (The exact speed is also determined by how
brightly the subject is illumined and how fast the film is.) But at such
speeds only that part of the picture on which the photographer has
carefully focused his camera will be sharp.
Long exposures (^vith smaller openings) produce greater depth of
field (the distance between which near and far objects are in sharp
focus). Figures 278 and 280 show considerable depth of field.
In some scientific work, speeds are needed that far exceed those possible
with mechanical shutters, and it is then necessary to provide a sudden burst
of intense light for as little as Viocooo of a second (Fig. 285B).
the subject in terms of the amount of light reaching them. When developed,
those particles struck by light turn black to produce the negative. Under the
emulsion is the support, which provides a strong yet flexible transparent
base for the emulsion. The bottom layer, or anti-halation backing, absorbs
any excessively bright light.
Color sensitivity describes how well the film responds to different colors.
Ordiyiary film, which is sensitive only to ultraviolet and blue light,
272 - Photography
satisfactory
light needed to get a
. Film speed refers to the amount of
image, and this in turn determines
how large the aperture and how
long the exposure should be. , j
•
j
silver bromide used
. Graininess comes chiefly from the large grains of
in high-speed films. It is usually noticed only in enlargements.
film's sensitivity to subtle differences
of hght m
. Contrast describes a
produce harsh contrasts of lights and darks;
the subject. Some films
many shades of gray.
others differentiate between
are the basic
The story of color film long and complex, but these
is
This process is
and developing a negative. In a dark-
similar to exposing
with a
the negative on to paper coated
ened room, light is passed through
emulsion. The light is unimpeded
by the translticent areas
light-sensitive
the values are reversed. The
ex-
and held back by the darker parts. Thus
then developed, fixed, and dried. The length of exposure
posed paper is
light, the density of the
depends on such factors as the brightness of the
Figure 275 shows the differ-
neLtive image, and the sensitivity of the paper.
varying the time of exposure.
ent effects obtained from the same negative by
the negative. They are made
by
Contact prints are the same size as
negative and
paper in firm contact with a
placing a piece of photographic
light first through
are made by passing
exposing it to light. Enlargements
focused image at
a lens to produce a large,
the negative and then through
some distance from the negative.
They offer many possibilities. Using the
of the
be changed. By using only part
whole image, the size of the print can Parts
ne<.ative, the shape can be changed
and undesirable parts eliminated.
And portions of two or more
of the picture can be darkened or lightened.
landscape
negatives can be combined-clouds
from one negative added to a
or two images can be -P-^-P°-^-
in which the sky is uninteresting,
thatf "f
the
to the purists who believe
darkroom manipulation is abhorrent
The Materials and Processes -
275
LOOKING AT PHOTOGRAPHS
that
Today's newspapers, magazines,
and books carry so many photographs
pictures of.
enough to see what they are
we tend to look at them only long
That natural stnce th
we begin and end with the subject matter. is
in short, BtU
more than a literal, vtsual report.
"at majority of them are nothing
photograph that arrests ottr attention
Lm time to time we come across a
because the photographer has
stripped
noTonly for its subject matter but
penetrated into something deeper
Z commonplace from what he saw and
we are likely to experience an
esthetic emo-
than surface appearances. Then
tion akin to that offered by
any other work of art.
Looking at Photographs -
277
Three Historic Photographs
"The Artist's Studio" (Fig. 276), taken by Louis Jacques Mande Daguerre
in 1837, is one of the first successful photographs. Daguerre had established
his reputation as a painter who could
depict with astonishing accuracy
natural scenes, but he wished to go further and make light
paint the picture.
After much experimentation, he succeeded in recording
on a silver-plated
piece of copper what he saw. The process was slow and
complex, but a
likenesshad been captured. Improvements led to a great wave of popularity
during which thousands of daguerreotypes (or tin-types) were
made to satisfy
a public craving for pictures, chieHy portraits.
"The Artist's Studio" is
remarkable for its composure, its sculptural three-dimensionality, and its
varied textures.
By the time of our Civil War, photography had progressed a long way.
Although the equipment was cumbersome, a photographic negative
could
be made on a glass plate from which any number of prints could
be made.
Matthew Brady saw the potentiality of faithfully recording important events.
Matthew Brady, one of the first photographers to record a war, made "The Ruins of
Richmond, Virginia" around 1865. (Collection, the Museum of Modern Art, New York)
1 11 II II.
J k M I I I i
a i i i (^ ti I
(^1
"
•iSmaini:.ntt»fMKnXf
t^ ^'^'-'-^—'"^-'-- •
-""''"iiil'imTi [ii rt
278 - Photography
•!
the
SSJ^ (1875) . iCoUe.L, L Museu,n of Modern Art,
New York)
I I j
^
i 5 i
3 1 1
i
9 ^
^
'
si
•5
9
1
JmB
'1
Museum of Art)
Looking at Photographs -
281
In contrast to the action and atmosphere of "The Terminal," Stieglitz's
photograph of New York City skyscrapers in the morning (Fig. 280), taken
in the early 1930's, presents the brilliant contrasts of light and dark, the
stillness of a day's beginning. Here, too, the composition is audacious: hard,
sharp, and geometric. Arresting vertical elements at the right give way to
diagonal lines that carry attention far back to the intricacies of a skyscraper
skeleton and the towers of a church. Every part, even the luminous blacks,
is rich in detail to enjoy at leisure. But the details never threaten the quiet
intensity, the reserved power of the whole composition. The monumentality,
growth, and heterogeneity of a whole city, even of cities in general, have
been compressed into a single photograph.
Berenice Abbott's "Night View of New York City" (Fig. 282), also
from the early I930's, presents a totally different aspect of a city. Taken from
a high vantage point, it portrays the metropolis as a series of luminous,
cellular edifices separated by traffic arteries. Rigid geometric line is softened,
differences are de-emphasized by concentration on the myriad pinpoints of
light. Our eyes are left free to wander and explore as we wish, for there is
no single center of interest. But, by contrast, the unlighted roofs, the scarce
areas of land without buildings, and the low unlighted structure (slightly
left of and beIo\v the center) tempt one to pause while looking more closely
to see what is there. It is a compact, dense composition without beginning
or end that stands for the seeming endlessness of our urban centers.
But inside movement there is one moment which the elements in motion
at
are in balance. Photography must seize upon this moment and hold immo-
bile the equilibrium in it." *
_:•:•.
jIlV
'
!:»..
»>^»1ra
i
%»*«;.• %.
'..
ment that, "... the world is movement, and you cannot be stationary m
your attitude toward something that is moving."
opposites into
The sense of vitality is heightened by bringing many
slender dark metal strips, which
unison. Most conspicuous is the interplay of
solid masonry. Textured paving,
go through the whole photograph, against
plain surfaces. Straight or
rough stone walls, and tile roofs enhance the
those that are curved. And the people,
dark and
angular lines accentuate
stonework that is their town.
silhouetted, give meaning to the motionless
SPECIALIZED PHOTOGRAPHY
when a drop of milk falls into a pan, or when an air-
Exactly what happens
motion? It is doubtful that anyone knew until
plane propeller sets air in
pen-and-ink drawing.
100 times resembles a sensitive
"'(A) Left. Stainless steel magnified
polar-
^'(B;H?'/'^'A2«git1a crystalline compound) photographed with transmitted
size reveals the intricate
pattern of us structure.
izcd light at 200^im'es natural
287
Arthur Siegel's "Lyric Singer" was achieved by printing two negatives on one piece o£
paper. {Courtesy of photographer)
specialized Photography -
289
such photographs as those shown in Figures 285B and C were taken.
The instantaneousness inherent in photography
possible to makes it
"stop" the most rapid action. Equally important are the permanent
records
of the paths of movement (Figs. 265, 285A, and 380B) that give us
a better
understanding of rhythmic action. Cameras combined with telescopes can
over a period of time concentrate enough light on films so that stars in-
visible to our eyes can be studied. Photomicrography pries into
the complex
structure of substances and reveals their amazing intricacy (Figs. 286.^ and
B). To scientists these are invaluable tools, and they open to artists hitherto
unseen realms of inspiration.
Other distinctive potentialities of the photographic medium include
photograms and single prints made from two or more negatives. Figure
287 is a photogram— a print made by putting objects directly on light-
sensitive paper and exposing it to light. Neither cameras nor films
were
used. "Lyric Singer" (Fig. 288) was made by printing two negatives on the
same piece of photographic paper: one negative carried the image of the
girl and the other an image of trees, shadows, and a gate. The
forms inter-
penetrate and overlap one another to produce an elusive, evocative dream-
like quality.
CONCLUSION
important arts. Satisfaction can
Creating pictures with light is one of the
be had by a child with his inexpensive
box camera, by the vigorous adult
with his complex camera and special
equipment, or by the retired oldster
his gTandchildren or of his flowers.
sitting in his sunny chair taking snaps of
arts and has almost
It is most widely practiced of all of the graphic
the
infinite flexibility and potentialities.
facts of visual experience
Great photography deals not merely with the
inherent but often unnoticed
but with the infinite range of qualities that are
technical dexterity and compositional
in our environment. We may admire
only means through which the
excellence, but we soon learn that they are
feels. Expression and com-
photographer reveals what he sees, knows, and
Conclusion -
291
munication are foremost. Often the content of a photograph cannot
be satis-
factorily translated into words, for photography has
its own unique char-
acteristics. In the words of Ed^vard Steichen, one of
our most distinguished
masters in this field, "photography is a dynamic process of giving form to
ideas. . .
."
Photography: Herbert S. Zim and R. ^V'ilI Burnett (New York- Golden Press
1956).
Informative and well illustrated guide for amateurs.
I'^'^fwT
\m ."~nr-
."'
.1 ' n
9ffl_ " '«PW.«IW«»"!
Tlie Problem of
Organization
294 - Introduction
Introduction
A PUBLIC SQUARE in Italy and a Mexican sculpture, a new table lamp
and an American Colonial teapot, a community mural and an etchino are
dissimilar in specific purposes and in materials. But they are related to one
another because each is an organization that has:
295
296 - Introduction
miscellaneous, or disorganized.
But why is the organization of the two
objects illustrated m Figs, /y*
paintings, differ? The answer is that houses and paintings have been created
in different parts of the
world
to satisfy specific needs
by diverse peoples
Each arose from
at different times.
own complex of spiritual, social, and
its
its
that art merely reflects
geographical conditions. This does not imply
its physical environment
and the
environment, because great art rises above
materials from which it was formed.
who finds new ways to express truth,
Of equal importance is the artist
remakes design to suit
his epoch. Of inner necessity he
his truth and that of
and thus the same period and coun-
art created in the
his individual ideas,
shows numerous approaches to organization.
Two artists may respond
try
aspects of the same culture, but each
by ordering his impressions
to different
can get across to us his personal vision.
One man illumines his view of the
fine-lined, close-up view of
wheat
world of nature (Fig. 297A) through a
artist (Fig. 297B), reacting
to the space
stalks flourishing in a field; another
tensions that very high speeds
might generate. Significant
age, reveals the
elo-
search for forms and colors that
organization in art involves an intense
beholder what the artist has found
quently communicate to the appreciative
design is the opposite of con-
most authentic in his world. Thus, inspired
formity to stereotyped patterns.
the aims and principles
This might lead you to think that studying
a waste of time. An understanding of basic principles,
of organization is
that might otherwise remain
however, can help us relate varied experiences
can be guides for future activity.
disconnected. The resulting generalizations
should develop out of the
To be comprehensive and flexible, the principles
This indicates continuing study of
widest possible variety of experiences.
diverse relationships of form,
many aspects of our world: human responses to
color; the characteristics of
materials, new and old;
line, space, texture, and
movement of waves or clouds; and
design in nature, in a tree or rock, the
from all of the world's culture. New develop-
contemporary and historic art
philosophy and psychology-
ments in chemistry and physics, anthropology,
exciting new vistas for those who
create
to mention but a few fields-open
Introduction - 297
In any period, but especially today, creati\e artists find evocative ways of expressing differ-
ent ideas. (Courtesy of the artists)
(A) Above. "Wheat Field," a silk screen print done by Ben Shalin in 1958, is a tender
portrayal of the poetry of nature.
(B) Below. "iMach 5" is an etching created by Warrington Colescott in 1957. Its tumultu-
ous interplay of forces expresses how it might feel to travel at five times the speed of
sound.
298 - Introduction
formulacmg
or appreciate art. Such comprehensive study protects us from
and rigid that they restrict creativity and appreciation.
principles so narrow
organization in art.
We now turn to more detailed consideration of
function and va-
. First, the two aims of organization, form follows
riety IN UNITY, are discussed in Chapter 11.
We call these "aims" be-
that deserve attention before dealing
with
cause they are basic concepts
more specific matters.
texture, and coZor- the
. Second, the plastic elements-/orm, Ime, space,
vocabulary used by artists to express their ideas
and concepts are con-
the
Chinese painting reached its apex during
Sung Dynasty (a.d. 960-1279). In Kao
K'o
Rung's landscape, man has a secure
though
minor place in the great order of nature.
Rocks, trees, mist, and mountains, deftly
m-
dicated with quick brush strokes, form
an
misty
ascending spiral. The large areas of
of
space speak of the intangible aspects
living. (Courtesy Philadelphia Museum of
Art)
A soaring sea gull epitomizes form
that follows function. (Photograph by
Cecil Tose)
11 - Two Aims of
Organization
WHEN WE WATCH a sea gull soar with minimum effort, dive suddenly
for a fish, or float buoyantly on smooth or rough water, we become aware
that the "design" of the gull's body is wondrously adapted to its way of
living. This one of the chief reasons that sea gulls continue to exist, for
is
in nature anything that is not efficient may perish. If we observe a gull more
closely, we see that although the bird is unified the parts are unlike one
another. Wings and legs, beak and tail are far from identical in shape be-
cause each has a particularity of function, yet they are joined into a coherent
whole.
How does this relate to art?From time immemorial artists have turned
to nature for inspiration and guidance. They have been stimulated by the
299
300 - Two Aims of Organization
by the principles on
nch diversity they see. and they have been guided
are based.
which natural phenomena
.fSTi
^,^7^|?'/iJ'''7-'i7-''7"/'>' l/^i/'/'/'/"''/''.!^"-''^'
Form Follows Function -
303
Sullivan on Function
the sense of life it stands for, the ten-fingered grasp of things it implies, the
304 - Two Aims of Organization
external appearance.
. FOLLOWS means comes from, or even better, is iyiterde-
after, results
acceptance of author-
pendent with rather than suggesting obedience or
ity.
action or purpose
. FUNCTION means natural, appropriate, and complete
utilitarian but also esthe-
on all the levels important to man; not merely
tic functions.
its purposes. Sometimes these are quite clear and tend toward the useful.
Religious art (Chapter 3) aims to communicate intensely the beliefs and the
spirit of the faith from which it develops. Community art vivifies group
ideals and achievements. O'Gorman's mural (Fig. 79A) seeks to make those
^vho see it a^vare of Mexican history, but it is a powerful expression
in excit-
ing form and color, not a prosaic description. Ewing's mural (Fig.
79B) tells
something about the TVA program, but its function is to impart the excite-
ment and grandeur and diversity, not the factual details, of the gigantic
project, and it does this by appealing to our esthetic sensibilities.
Many paintings have a less specific but equally valid intention: to arouse
a heightened sensitivity to emotions, perceptions, and intuitions. In doing
this, the artist awakens us to the realization that life is more than
ma- a
terialistic systemization of human energy. The three paintings reproduced
in Figs. 305, 307B, and 31 IB, done in 1936, 1939, and 1940, exemplify the
boundless range of experiences open to the artist and his public. Mondrian's
"Composition" satisfies a need to explore pure, subtle order free from any
specific application. Siqueiros' "The Sob" reawakens us to the potency of
grief. Davis' "Hot Still-Scape for Six Colors" fills us with the brilliant
energy, the excitement of freedom and contrasts found in jazz and many
other phases of contemporary life. In each of these works, the painter has
vivified form and color to allow us to share the potent discoveries he, as a
sentient individual, has made.
animals, such as amoebae and
diatoms display
Fven simnle sinole-celled plants and (Drawing by Raymond
when seen under the microscope.
marked diffe;en;iation of plrts
E. Brose)
VARIETY IN UNITY
unity is almost inevi-
When form and function are integrated, variety in
than one function and because some
table Because every object has more
the parts are differentiated to
perform their
functions are very complex,
because inefficiency results when the parts do not work
specific roles. And
is essential.
well together, some degree of unification
object that does not show both unity
and
Can you think of any natural
Even an amoeba (Fig. 306A) displays
a microscopic unit such as
variety?
den-
enveloping protoplasm that varies in
a nucleus differentiated from an
the
sity and has discernable contractile
and food vacuoles. As we go higher in
parts
scale to orchids or humming birds,
we find a multitude of diversified
variety in unity is fundamental;
functioning together as a whole. In art also
useful but it is one source of lasting satisfaction.
not only is it
Unity Is Oneness
unavoidable when anything develops
unity or a quality of oneness, is almost
Contemporary aircraft are examples,
out of a strong, clear purpose or idea.
paintings of children. When a child
makes a painting, he
and so are the
to him most characteristic of his subject.
expresses directly whatever is
there
307A), painted by a seven-year old,
is
In "My Playmates (Twins)" (Fig.
"twin-
It is hard to imagine a painting that would more directly emphasize
ness" than does this painting.
Mature penetrate superficialities in their search for unifying
artists also
idea.
Unity in art affects us in several important ways.
step to-
helps to attract and hold our attention, which
is a first
> First, it
ward understanding.
easier to "grasp" than is one marked by
. Second, a unified work of art is
uncoordinated diversity.
memory by providing a central theme to which
. Third, oneness aids
we may cling.
for long.
These devices are among the A B C's of unity. They have been used
effectively by amateurs and geniuses, contemporary and historic. But they
are devices, rules-of-thumb that used alone almost never produce anything
beyond a complacent lack of unpleasantness. Complete artistic unity is not
gained merely by limiting the number of objects or ideas in a painting, nor
does a garden become genuinely integrated by fencing it in. Deep and fruit-
ful unity comes from a powerful, significant oneness that develops out of dif-
brought together by their contrast with straight lines. To put it simply, vital
interaction is important in unity.
Variety Is Diversity
VARIETY', the other partner of this pair, arises from contrast or opposition
—diversity of materials, differences in forms, colors, or textures. It ranges
from just noticeable differences to open conflict. Although it is at the oppo-
site pole from unity, the two are joined in art and nature. Diversity intensi-
fies unity. It keeps us alert by inviting us to participate actively in the
search for unity among variants.
310 - Two Aims of Organization
(B) Right. A
kernel of corn holds the forces that will direct its growth into a sizable
mon experience.
he gets a pair of the most im-
A boy decides to learn to ski. First, skis,
snow. Then
portant element in the situation aside from himself and the
pants, then a ski jacket,
he is likely to purchase ski poles and a pair of ski
rhythm, or key, evolve from a central theme. Often some of the variations
completely different
depart so radically from the theme that they take on a
Artists, too, may take this evolutionary course of
developing vari-
character.
ety out of unity (Fig. 311 A and B).
Variety in Unity -
311
agreement (Fig. 3 1 5 A)
at a harmonious
At times strong contrasts stand alone with no attempt
opposition providing a unifying
resolution, with only the tension of their
crystalline geometric
link. So Philip Johnson's house (Chapter 1) affirms its
line against nature's organic complexity.
#Mlt|fl'"«"
Two buildings can have similar architectural
details yet show great differences in
esthetic
Variety-or unity— can be emphasized, with equally effective but quite different results.
(A) Above. From eighteenth-century Venice comes this playfully elaborate bedroom.
{Courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art)
(B) Below. In twentieth-century California, a peaceful, simple room promises relaxing
repose. Richard Neutra, architect. {Photograph by Julius Shulman)
316 - Ttco Aims of Organization
follows function
few of the many worthwhile readings on form
A
and VARIETY IN UNITY are:
Autobiography of an Idea: Louis H. Sullivan (New York: Dover, 1956).
philosophy of archi-
An eloquent statement of the formulation of Sullivan's
tecture.
The Tastemakers: Russell Lynes (New York: Harper & Row, 1954).
in this country.
A penetrating study of how tastes have been formed
Form and line modulate space in Paul
Rudolph's design for Yale University's
new School of Art and Architecture
(1961). {Courtesy of the architect)
317
318 A\
\/
w //,
w
w // \\
\\ // w
^
Optical illusions demonstrate tl>e significance
\\ // \\
of relationships. (A) LeftThe two central
m
Middle. The two segments of the line are equal
circles are exactly the same size. (B)
length. (C) Right. The vertical lines are parallel.
be interpreted as
color, and more or less smooth in texture. Its edges can
Figure 318 demonstrates that identical shapes may not always appear
the same size in different contexts and that parallel lines do not always
look parallel. We have all observed how conditions affect and the appearance
our estimation of a person or thing. Thus the successful
businessman seems
VTry important in his well-furnished office with his
organization at his finger
tips. When seen in swimming trunks
on the beach, he may seem less signifi-
cant than a college athlete. Movie heroines without
benefit of make-up,
lights, and set may or may not retain their glamour. Everything is modified
by its context, and this is true of each form, line, space, color, and texture
that we see. Aware of this relativity, artists make the necessary adjustments.
FORM*
To understand what form is and what we can look at it isolated
it can do,
from the other plastic elements (even though in actuality it is always bound
up with them). If we use the word form to describe
the inner structure as
well as the visible shape of objects, it is their most
distinctive and unchang-
ing quality. Form is more fundamental than
outline and external surfaces.
It refers to the unseen but basic skeleton
and muscles of a body (Fig. 319)
more than to the covering skin, to the structure of a tree's
trunk and
branches more than to the protective bark.
* A word of warning is in order here. Form has two meanings. In the larger sense in
which u IS u.sed in form follows FUNcr.oN, it refers to total organiza<ion. In the smaller
sense
as used here m connection with the plastic elements, form means
simply mass, shape, or struc-
320 -
The Plastic Elements: Form, Line, and Space
"^
igh
inches high, k inches long) from the Wei Dynasty (a.d. 386-557). {Courtesy of the Metro-
politan Museum of Art)
Form -
321
Form in Sculpture
The sculptor's creativity shaped the Chinese camel (Fig. 320) from clay
that at first was an unformed mass with as little plastic meaning as bread
dough. The subject matter is a camel, but the result is not a literal copy.
The sculptor studied camels not only with his eyes but with his
mind and
feelings. External appearances ^vere less consequential to him than the forces
and structure underneath. Notice that he did not attempt to imitate surface
textures,but his sculpture conveys a vivid sense of the hidden muscles and
frameu'ork. He emphasized those qualities that differentiate camels
from
other animals-the small head and large neck, the peculiar differences
be-
tween the front and hind legs, and the humped back (even though a saddle
pack covers it, one knows full well that it is there). Yet he also strengthened
the head, neck, body, and legs by stressing their similarity to such basic forms
as cylinders, cones, and spheres. This is an example of one of the many
paradoxes found in art. The sculptor particularized his forms to empha-
size the "camelness" of his subject, and at the same time he generalized
his forms to relate them to many other natural shapes. By such
means he
imbued the sculpture with individuality and a timeless universal quality.
Some of the many other -ivays of achieving sculptural form can be
seen in
the sculpture illustrated in Chapters 2, 3, 5, 12, 13, 14, and
16.
Form in Painting
significant aspect of
our world; certainly, it is not the whole truth. We see
our world onl) through the changing light and color that objects reflect or
transmit; this, too, is a reality. And, whether we are conscious of it or not,
everything is in motion. Some painters and sculptors (Figs. 380, 388, and
426) regard light, movement, and change of all kinds as deeply revealing
aspects of existence.
The Plastic Elements: Form, Line, and Space
322 -
nonspecific
these objective facts is the universe of the spirit, of
Beyond
trans-
They may or may not be most vividly
subjective feelings and insights.
objects permanently stationed in static space.
mitted through recognizable
Many contemporary artists in all fields, responding to
^illem de
^^^^^^^
ing environment, have evolved
new approaches. In Fig. 322
discover
bare a tense struggle to
Koonings disquieting brush strokes lay
Form -
323
meaningful order in a world marked by conflict and tension. Additional ex-
amples of diverse treatment of form can be seen on pages 324, 325, and 339.
Families of Forms
In art and in nature, there are "families" of forms. In looking at the illustra-
tions on pages 324 and 325, you can see that each family has its own generic
character. In other illustrations in this book, however, you can see that each
type can be infinitely varied.
Rectangular forms usually seem clear and definite, perhaps rigid and
unyielding, or sometimes assured and certain (Figs. 324A and 332) because
a right angle is always ninety degrees. Stressing the abrupt contrasts of
forms going up and down, crosswise, and lengthwise, as in Fig. 317, gen-
erates a sense of considerable activity.
or smooth; and any color. They can be as solid as the Egyptian pyramids or
as open as radio towers. And they can be made of paper, wood, stone, con-
crete, metal, or glass. No matter how they are treated, triangular forms re-
tain their distinctive characteristic of progressing toward one or more points.
Geometric, curved forms affect us differently from those that are angu-
lar. bounded by one continuing surface on which all points are
Spheres,
equidistant from the center, have no top, sides, or bottom. They seem self-
324 - The Plastic Elements: Form, Line, and Space'
of expressive meanings.
Anaular forms have an extensive repertory . . ^
to k»
be
lithograpfi called "Sanctuary" (1942) seems at first
?MAbovT]osei Albers-
(Courtesy of The Contem-
move wh^le we are looking at it.
rigMly statrC'tilrseems to
Two Chinese vases from the Sung Dynasty (a.d. 960-1280) with sgraffito ornamentation
demonstrate that although enrichment should be appropriately related to form, it can
be handled in more than one way. Which looks larger? Which do you prefer?
Why?
(Courtesy of The City Art Museum, St. Louis)
Shape. Although ornament should be related to the basic shape, this does
not mean slavish reiteration. Shapes can be enhanced through contrasts
as well as repetition.
Material. The nature of materials and processes should affect any enrich-
ment. Wood and metal, for example, are better suited to outstretched
shapes than are clay and glass.
not
may be more appropriate for you. Let us hope, though, that they are
clumsy and awkward. How do you feel about letting your home speak for
expressed in what we sayand do, the objects
you? Much of our character is
yis^vi<{
LINE
Look at the drawing of three youths by Pablo Picasso (Fig. 328). There is
Contrast Picasso's drawing with the one of the Mexican mother and
child by Diego Rivera (Fig. 329). Notice in particular the hands and faces
in the two drawings. Do you get different reactions from them? Why? One
is delicate and reposed, the other is strong, plodding and somber. Forget
the subject matter: turn the pictures upside down. The difference still exists
because it lies in the quality of the lines used by the two artists. Try this
with the drawing and prints by Albers, Arp, and Feininger on pages 324
and 325.
The Plastic Elements: Form, Line, and Space
Abstractions representing Action, Bondage, and Humor show the expressive possibilities
words in the caption. Try with your friends by telling them the three
this
same effect. A computer would be required to work out the potential permu-
tations.
Why is it, however, that an artist with a few simple lines on a flat piece
the lines drawn on paper to represent words. Such use of line is primarily
utilitarian, a convenient way of commimicating our ideas to other people.
the artist. Architect Henry Van de \'elde wrote that, "A line is a force;
SPACE
When Mozart was asked what he thought was the most beautiful music, he
replied: "No music." He meant, of course, the moments of pause and rest,
of total silence, that occur in music. In some of Mozart's own scores there are
moments of "no music" a himdredfold more eloquent than the music that
surrounds them. We are also familiar with the dramatic pauses used by
actors and by speakers to emphasize a mood or a point. Often no words have
far more effect than a thousand could. We think of the saying: Silence is
golden.
Space is the corresponding element in the plastic and graphic arts. Cen-
turies ago a Chinese sage said that the reality of architecture resides in its
space rather than in its mass. Certainly, it is the space that we use, and for
necessary, but today they derive their most significant meaning from the
space they make usable and satisfying.
In the living room designed by Mies van der Rohe and the outdoor living
area by Shweikher and Elting (Figs. 332 and 333), notice the positive
character of the space. Both are basically rectangular, but there similarity
stops. The room by Mies, defined rather than enclosed by a minimum num-
ber of smooth-textured planes, is precise and serene. The outdoor area is a
a superb ex-
Tugendhat House (1930), Brno, Czechoslovakia
is
The living room in the
forms. It ex-
precision possible with rectangular
arnple of the simplicity, clarity, and
of "less is more. u. that nothing
empifies archit ct\liJ van dL Robe's
philosophy
indoor-outdoor flow of space. (Courtesy of M.es
unnecessary distracts from the serene
van der Rohe)
space -
333
Designed by architects Schweikher and Elting for a rugged desert setting, the Upton
House (1949) in Paradise Valley, Arizona, is boldly rectangular. (Photograph by Julius
Shulman)
334 - The Plastic Elements: Form, Line, and Space
Even so, some parts stand in front of others. The shawl overlaps
ganization.
to carry around to
the woman's left shoulder, envelops the boy, and seems
the sculptor Noguchi, and Charles Fames' boldly molded plywood chair (Fig.
183), all of which vigorously shape their enveloping space into new dimen-
sions.
Fourth, mobility and fluidity, two potentials of space, have been the
subject of experimentation. Alexander Calder (Figs. 380A and B) has
incorporated actual movement into abstract design through the use of free-
swinging shapes. Touched by the hand or a gentle breeze, his discs suspended
from wires cut through the surrounding areas to describe fascinating
rhythmic patterns. Highway engineers have designed complex traffic inter-
:!
'
'I
space - 337
of inert matter but a lively part of great natural forces. In this painting line
is of little consequence, but space is tremendously important. We see the
landscape from one fixed viewpoint and progress from the
foreground along
the road and on through the grove of trees. In this
movement into space!
sweeping, horizontal curves propel us into, across, and beyond
the fields up
into the limitless sky. Not content merely to reproduce
a pleasant scene,
Ruisdael reawakens us to the power and grandeur that lies
beneath the
surfaces of what we see. Compare this painting with Ben Shahn's "Wheat-
field" (Fig. 297A).
which are accentuated by a few curved and shaded forms. Instead of por-
space, he
traying objects as self-contained entities each in its own allotted
Art and Visual Perception: Rudolf Arnheim (Berkeley, Calif.: University of Cali-
fornia Press, 1954).
An enlightened discussion of "the psycliology of the creative eye" in terms of
Gestalt psychology.
The Creative Process: Brester Ghiselin, editor (New York: Mentor, 1959).
Statements by contemporary and historic and
artists, scientists, writers on
how they work.
Handbook of Designs and Devices: Clarence P. Hornung (New York- Dover '
1946).
A collection of 1836 designs classified according to their
basic geometric
shape.
and space.
change.
Two contemporary ceramic vases made
by Gertrud and Otto Natzler show how
textures can alter the look and feel of
similar forms. {Courtesy of the Ameri-
can Craftsmen's Council)
IN THE DISCUSSION of form, line, and space you probably noticed that
two other elements tried to assert themselves. You will feel one of these if
you close your eyes and run your fingers over this page or the clothes you are
wearing. Do the same with sandpaper, fur, and glass. Your fingers will report
differences— roughness, softness, sleekness. This is texture. Open your eyes
and you will see the other element, color, which is a visual phenomenon
dependent on the radiant energy of light
343
The Plastic Elements: Texture and Color
TEXTURE
as the struc
texture, which can be defined
Every substance has an internal
tural.uaUty resulnn, ^ro.n tke
Men^.n, or ^nte^ation of tke cornpoj^ent^
texture tnay be the organtcal y -^^
"^ "^^^
of the material. This ^^ or th
of metallic crystals (Fig. 348),
^ain of wood, the geometric balance materia
into a tweed textile. Each
Secular integration of wool yarns by th
texture, the surface ,uaHty
eterm.ned
also\as an external tactile
the material . treated.
Glass can be lef
inner texture or tke u.y in .Inch
patterns, or etched to a slight
smooth impressed with three-dimensional
satin
yarns in a vigorous, plain weave;
Iln ss. Burlap has coarse hemp
sleek surface^
such a way as to give a smooth,
h°sline silken yarns woven in
as they are in printed
Finally, visr simulated textures can be applied,
Jor
cloth or wallpaper.
be divided into two types:
For our purposes, textures can
of struc-
three-dimensional surface manifestation
Tactile texture, the
It is the way things
related to the sense of totich.
ture or finish, IS directly
to soft, smooth to rough.
feel when . run our hands over them-hard
get ft:om sitting
rJao^^ie the pleasure that a
small child, or anyone, would
three-dimen-
and exploring by hand us
on George Wells' rug (Fig. 345A)
sional patterns.
crushed rocks.
correspond to or
In any Avork of art tactile
and visual textures may
vases (Fig. 545), t e .re
on
dilfe fll each other. Of the two Natzler on the le ha
the right looks and feels
rough and corroded, but the one
that comes from various
ts bland surface
enlivened with a visual texture
pattern rem-
produces a flowing, light-and-shadow
olors in the glaze. This e pro
Great textural interest can a
so
n ceVrof structural unlulations.
structure, and this may
result in
vided by disclosing inner
visual sensations. Polishing
and
wood reveals ^^^^^ its organic
ture of tactile
surface is smooth to touch.
pattern, which may look rugged, but the
Texture - 345
Effects of Texture
describe it. Textures from one another in many ways, two of which
differ
are the range from smooth to rough, and from soft to hard. The
adjectives
we use tell us much about what texture does for an object, and how it makes
us feel.
But we must take into account two other adjectives when thinking
about texture and its effects:
Soft surfaces tempt us to touch them for they seem friendly and appeal-
ing (until they become so soft that they are flabby).
Hard surfaces are less inviting, especially if they are rough, but the
bark of trees and fieldstone walls are reassuringly strong and vigorous. As
hard surfaces approach the brilliance of crystal or polished marble, their
smoothness is visually and tactually satisfying.
Sculptors, working in one of the most tactile branches of art, have great
concern for texture. The surface treatments of the "Greek Horse" and
"American Bison" (Figs. 347A and B) markedly different but both ap-
,
propriate to metal, vitalize the basic forms and strengthen the expressive-
dignified,
ness of these two pieces. The handsome, well-groomed horse has a
sensuous attractiveness— we want to stroke the muscular shoulders and the
decisive curves of the proud head. Notice how the grooved crest of
mane
accentuates the spirited lift of the head, the smoothness of the body. We
respond to the statuette with respect and appreciation of its tactile beauty.
347
and space of a small room. {Courtesy of the Smith College Museum of Art)
Texture -
349
"American Bison," belligerently ready to attack, is taut and angular.
Thin steel plates with the hammer marks that shaped them much in evi-
dence compose the body, ropelike bronze wire expresses the shaggy fur. This
sculpture would be no more pleasurable to touch than the animal himself
would be to meet, but looking at it is a vivid experience. Often we need
something that is startling. If everything were smooth, soft, and rounded,
boredom would soon take over.
Use of Texture
close harmony of a
should be coherent, but the possibilities range from the
Bison." The designers
Vuillard painting to the abrupt contrast of "American
a basic textural idea and
of the rooms in Figs. :558B and 359B each took
informal living room,
then implemented it imaginatively. In looking at the
metal with rough
our finger tips tingle as we compare smooth glass and
brickwork, and then enjoy the reed rug, cane chairs,
and varied woods and
fabrics. The beams are regular and vigorous, the plants informal and
ceiling
the actual textures of materials have been
exploited;
delicate. In this room
there has been a consistent juxtaposing of
smooth and rough to enliven
a predominance
and enrich the architecture and furnishings. In contrast,
crisp and easy to maintain.
of smooth surfaces make the efficient kitchen
tops are unpatterned lam-
Ceiling and walls are painted plaster, counter
birch in the cupboards,
inated plastic. The natural grain of varnished
the slightly mottled hardboard cabinet doors,
and a lightly flecked vinyl
is seen in the gleam of
polished
floor are subtle variations. More contrast
cement-asbestos board on which
pans, which is heightened by the perforated
textural organization. But it is
they are hung. This comprises the interior
at the richly patterned woods
not until we look through the big windows
of these rooms the textures
outside that the composition is complete. In each
our privilege to see and
were purposefully and coherently organized. It is
use texture knowingly for its capacity to enrich
and diversify otir environ-
ment.
COLOR*
In one of Dickens' books there is a conversation between two stable
visualize a world without
boys in which one of them tries to get the other to
color. The other boy is not able to handle
such an idea and wonders about
In the commercial and industrial arts, color was used timidly. Advertise-
ments were mostly black and white, kitchen and bathroom fixtures were al-
Employees in a factory said that they felt cold when the temperature was
72 degrees, but faultfinding ceased when the blue-green walls were painted
coral. Men lifting black metal boxes in a factory complained of strained
backs, but when the same boxes ^vere painted pale green, they reported that
the "new, lightweight" boxes inade a real difference. One chain of restau-
rants speeded its turnover of customers and increased its receipts 50 percent
by changing its color scheme from quiet gray-green to stimulating red and
yellow. Other reports are equally amazing: flies tend to avoid blue, and
night insects do not like orange light; barnacles, a pest of the shipping in-
dustry, dislike hulls of ships painted white or light green. Clearly, color is
an actual force.
White (or apparently colorless) light, such as that from the sun at noon,
contains all the colors of the spectrum: violet, blue, green, yellow, orange,
and red Avith their intermediate gradations. These are so balanced and
blended that the effect is colorless, but the fact that they are there can be
demonstrated by passing white light through a prism which refracts it into
352 - The Plastic Elements: Texture and Color
can be diagrammat-
Color has three dimensions or attributes, which
ically visualized. You should memorize them.
B COLOR WHEEL
VALUE SCAl E INTE NSITY S CALE
High light
Full
^^^^1 ^H
Light
DD Low
Middle
light
High dark
Dark
(A) Top. The color wheel shows a sequence of hues in the following order, beginning
with yellow at the top and proceeding clockwise: yellow, yellow-green, green, blue-green,
blue, blue-violet, violet, red-violet, red, red-orange, orange, yellow-orange. The numeral
1 indicates primary hues. 2 secondary hues, and 3 tertiary hues.
(B) Lejt. The value scale shows seven values each for three hues: green, orange, and
violet. Those containing white disks are at normal value.
(C) Right. The intensity scale shows two different degrees between full intensity and
neutral for six hues. {Figs. A, B, and C adapted from The Art of Enjoying Art by A.
Philip MacMahon as adapted from Commercial Art by C. E. Wallace; by permission of
McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc.)
Color -
353
Hue Refers to the Position of a Color in the Spectrum
Notice that the color wheel 353A) has the same progression of hues
(Fig.
as the spectrum but bent into a circle and with the two end colors blended
into red-violet, a color not in the spectrum. The twelve hues on the color
^vheel can be divided into three categories:
Primary hues, labeled (I), are red, blue, and yellow. They cannot be
obtained by mixing other hues, but, if combined in the proper amounts,
these three will produce nearly every other known hue.
Secondary hues, labeled (2), are gxeen, orange, and violet. Each stands
midway between the two primaries that produce it when mixed in
right amounts— green comes from blue and yellow, orange from red and
yellow, and violet from red and blue.
combined with violet. If even more violet is added, the hue is changed
again. The twelve hues on the color wheel are only a convenient beginning,
for there can be an almost infinite number of hues.
When placed next to each other, hues produce effects ranging from
harmony to contrast. Some combinations, such blue, blue-green, and
as
green, produce a harmonious and restful sequence. But if blue is placed next
to orange, there is excitement and contrast. Looking at the color wheel, we
can see that hues adjacent to each other are the more harmonious, those
opposite each other the more contrasting. Two adjectives are used to de-
scribe these relationships:
Analogous hues are adjacent to each other on the color wheel, as are
blue, blue-green, and green.
Complementary hues lie directly opposite each other. Blue and orange,
red and green, or yellow-orange and blue-violet are examples.
Any two complementary colors can either cancel or intensify each other.
If they are mixed proper amounts, they will produce a grayish neutral
in
tone. But if they are placed next to each other, each hue will seem brighter,
as though its power had been released. Red next to green appears redder
354 - The Plastic Elements: Texture and Color
than when and the green appears greener than when seen in isolation.
alone,
pair of comple-
Blue and orange, yellow-green and red-violet-in fact, any
ments-affect each other similarly. This phenomenon, known
as simultane-
Thus, if a sun-
ous contrast, is of great importance in combining colors.
the comple-
tanned person wishes to look even more bronzed, he will wear
sector of the
mentary blue or blue-green because his skin is in the red-orange
color wheel.
The relative warmth and coolness of hues affect us and our environ-
warm hues, associated with sun, fire, and
ment. Red, orange, and yellow are
heat. Conspicuous, cheerful, and stimulating, these hues stand out so promi-
nently that they seem to come toward us. In contrast, blue-green, blue,
cool, inconspicuous, and restful. They
and blue-violet are comparatively
are often bluish.
suggest distance, in part because faraway trees or mountains
larger and to soften
Additionally, warm hues tend to make objects seem
their outlines while cool hues do the opposite.
Artists make good use of these characteristics. If a painter wishes a land-
How is the value of color changed? When we raise the value of a color,
we make it reflect more light. If we wish to lower the value, we reduce the
light it reflects. With pigments this is most readily done by adding white
or black (which also usually changes the hue and intensity as well as the
value).
356 - The Plastic Elements: Texture and Color
Lk^^ background.
affected by its
shows how greatly the appearance of anything
is
"a value scale
The gray circles are identical.
complement— decreases its purity. Notice that midway between each pair
of complementary hues, both in the color wheel and the intensity scale
(Figs. 353A and C), is neutral gray.
The apparent intensity of a color is affected by its surroundings. An-
other simple experiment will illustrate this far better than words can. Hold
a piece of moderately intense green paper or cloth in front of (1) neutralized
red, (2) intense red, (3) neutralized green, (4) intense green, (5) intense
blue or yellow, (6) white, (7) gray, and (8) black. Does the backgroimd ap-
pear to change the intensity of the green? Against which backgrounds does
it seem most intense? With intensity, as with hue and value, relationships
are potent factors. Colors can be made to seem more or less intense, depend-
ing on their surroundings.
special contribution, but the three properties of color are usually regarded
as integrated components dependent on each other for their total impact.
Artists heed these multiple effects in their creative activities, and there are
many ways in which you can use them in daily living.
Color Arouses Emotions. Fernand Leger and Vincent van Gogh had full
sharply defined by flat, opaque colors. Van Gogh has given us an atmospheric
landscape all but dissolved in rain and mist. Grayed blues, greens, and
lavenders, closely related in value, are relieved by streaks of yellow, brown,
and pink. Outlines are blurred in a pearly opalescence. The feeling is
358 - The Plastic Elements: Texture and Color
,?
^i-^
;^'
ways in both.
Because we tend
bination at a distance, which explains its use on road signs.
to look first, and often longest, at anything
out of the ordinary, very light
and very dark values draw our gaze as do marked contrasts. The more in-
tense the color, the greater its pulling power; and painters and advertisers
parts of their pictures.
typically reserve their brightest colors for important
do the same thing with colors in your garden or a table setting.
You can
The ways in which color
Color Influences Apparent Size and Distance.
seems to alter the size of objects is often dramatic. Painting the walls of a
room in light, neutral, cool colors seem more spacious than would
makes it
attention and thereby makes it seem larger. Thus, a dark blue sofa against
Warm hues bring ob- Low values advance, Full intensities decrease
jects forward, cool hues high values recede. apparent distance.
make them recede. Marked value contrasts
within an object bring
it forward.
OUTLINE OR Warm hues soften out- Value contrasts empha- Intensity contrasts em-
CONTOUR lines slightly more than size outlines. phasize outlines.
do cool hues; contrast-
ing hues make outlines
clearer than do related
hues.
ATTENTION Warm hues attract more Extremely high or low Full intensities attract
attention than do cool values attract attention, our attention, especially
hues; contrast of warm but contrasts or sur- when contrasted with
and cool is also atten- prises are e\en more neutrals or complemen-
tion-getting. effective. taries.
FEELINGS Warm hues are stimu- High values are cheer- Full intensities are
lating, cool hues quiet- ing, low values restful heartening, strong, ex-
ing. Warm and cool to- to depressing; contrasts citing; low intensities
gether give a balanced are stimulating. are peaceful and relax-
effect. ing.
362 - The Plastic Elements: Texture and Color
On Using Color
proved by
There are no laws governing the use of color, as is abundtantly
of constricting
widespread differences of opinion and by the sterile results
notable for divergencies,
systems. Color usage throughout the world is its
not its consistency, and for the courageous innovators who have broken
anyone, including the writers of this
through stifling formulas. Do not let
not to say that
book, dictate a series of do's and don't's. This, however,
is
to material, to form
tributes to function? When it is meaningfully related
it a completely independent element?
Obviously, it can
and space? Or, is
Related color schemes tend toward quiet, restful effects— ?/ strong value
YO YG
COMPLEMENTARY schcmes are built from any pair of hues
directly opposite each other on the color wheel. Orange and
blue, yellow and violet, and red-orange and blue-green are BG
RO
examples.
BV
YO YG
DOUBLE-COMPLEMENTARY schemcs usc two adjacent hues with
example, red-orange and
their respective complements as, for
orange with blue and blue-green.
RO BG
RV BV
YO YG
the two hues
SPLIT-COMPLEMENTARY schcmcs use any hue and
If we start with yel-
located on each side of its complement.
and blue-violet (because BG
low, the other hues will be red-violet RO
into red-violet and
violet, yellow's complement, was split
blue-violet).
RV BV
Color - 365
But many artists, painters in particular, want to explore beyond the familiar.
Notice the paintings, rooms, advertisements, and packages that you see in
the next week. How many belong to one of these typical schemes? How
many do not?
Intense colors demand more attention and seem visually stronger and
heavier than do neutral ones. Thus a small area of saturated color will
balance a much larger amount of low intensity. Sometimes called the
law of areas, this is merely a safe guide quite generally followed. The
large elements in interiors— walls, floors, ceilings, and furniture— are
usually gTayer than such small accents as vases, lamps, and pillows. In
many— but not all— paintings small patches of pure color seem even
more vivid against a background of lesser intensity. But in all art mani-
festations there are exceptions. See how many you can find.
hues tend to
Warm hues tend to bring objects together whereas cool
furniture in your
separate them. If you want to draw together the
furniture is not
room, give it a warm background, provided that the
predominantly cool. you wish noteworthy pieces to stand out,
But if
it!
on each one, they are almost never experienced in isolation. We will now see
is a
Praised for adventurous showmanship, the Olivetti shop (Fig. 367 A)
its
Avenue. Instead
continued source of delight for many who walk along
Fifth
367
sculptural mural,
through the transparent street wall. Constantino Nivola's
cast in beach sand with forms evocative of sea,
land, and primeval figures,
Smooth yellow paint coats the end
stretches the full length of the left wall.
Bands
wall, and the right wall is grayed-lavender, subordinate but not inert.
walls seem to float in
of light at the floor and ceiling make the three inner
balcony like a ship's deck with an angled, deep blue staircase
and
space. A
a slender white balustrade provides additional
space and visually broadens
the room. Near the window at the right a five-foot wooden wheel, painted
machines.
yellow and constantly turning, carries bright orange ofiice
the effect. The Imes
Although unobtrusive, line is important in total
module
demarking floor, ceiling, and mural panels indicate the one-meter
from which the design expands. The linear chair legs and
lamp cords, ex-
contrast call
posed without embarrassment, repeat these lines and through
attention to the sculptural mural, marble pedestals, and
lamp shades. Sur-
were
prisinglyenough, this is an example of prefabrication: some parts
coordi-
made in Italy, some in the United States, but all are esthetically
nate.
Texture and Color. The major one notable exception,
surfaces, with
polishing lets one see
are smooth but the visual textures are varied. High
in the walnut door.
the marble's translucent depth and the matched grain
The ceiling and two walls are coated with opaque, mat-finish paint, the
typewriters and metal furniture legs are lightly textured. Tactile interest
patterns
reaches a climax in the mural, whose inventive three-dimensional
and accentuated by the sur-
are unified by their consistent sandy texture
rounding smoothness.
The Five Plastic Elements Viewed Together - 369
Thecolors do not follow any standard scheme, although the three large
areas ofpronounced color— the yellow back wall, green floor, and blue ceil-
ing—represent equal intervals on the color wheel. The slightly warm, sand-
colored mural complements the slightly cool, lavender-gray wall opposite.
Beige and brown folding chairs, blue-black typing chairs, and pink marble
tables are subtle punctuations. The deep blue staircase and balcony are high-
lighted by the white balustrade. Color reaches its highest saturation and
most vivid contrasts in the prismatic hues of the glass lamp shades and in
the intense yellow "Ferris Wheel."
One might think that this dramatic setting would detract from the
products it aims to sell. Quite the contrary, this is prestige advertising.
The plastic elements create a holiday mood and entice potential customers
In a religious masterwork (Fig. 370) we see how the plastic elements can
other matter. Eight figures are grouped around His body in a dynamic
organization of downward curves expressive of tragedy. Fluent and painterly,
the forms are plastically modeled: sharply defined at times, merging into the
enveloping space at others. Flesh is softly rounded; the robes fall in folds.
Although the figures are stretched and twisted, an uncommon feeling for
balance and rhythm brings repose. Line is subsumed in the plenitude of
form.
Set in fathomless space, the figures advance toward us. Those at the
top, pushed forward by the sky, seem almost as near as those at the bottom,
but within the group there is complex interplay of advancing and receding
forms. Notice how the top left figure stretches back into space while com-
ing forward to touch Christ's shoulder in contrast to the tensely hunched
figure at his right. The vehement stances of the men at the right cleave space
sharply, the three Marys supplely modulate it. Only when we look from
370 - The Plastic Elements: Texture and Color
Peter Paul Rubens' "Descent from the Cross" (1611-1614) magnificently integrates all of
the plastic elements in a proloundly impressive painting. {Fro7n Harper History of Paint-
ing by David M. Robb. By permission of Harper ir Row, Publishers.)
The Five Plastic Elements Viewed Together -
371
the ladder's base to the horizon at the left do we sense the great space that
surrounds the figures.
below middle value. The one large, intensely colored area is John's red
robe, which makes Christ's body seem more pallid and seems to imbue John
^vith strength to support the Master. At John's left, Mary Magdalen's dark
green robe complements the nearby red.
Paintings such as this show how noble subject matter can be made emo-
tionally vivid through the evocative use of the plastic elements that consti-
tute all visual art.
14 - Principles of Design
372
Two Houses - 373
conceiving, and expressing in tangible materials what the artist knows and
feels. The planning may precede the making of the object, as it usually does
in architecture, orit may occur while the work is being produced, as it is
unpretentious family living. But one is more attractive than the other, and
in discovering why this is true we may also derive some common criteria that
TWO HOUSES
Look at Figs. 374A and B. For clarity, we will focus attention on external
appearance, ruling oiu the other home-planning problems discussed in
Chapter 1. One house looks orderly and inviting, the other haphazard and
ungainly. These are total impressions of the houses as wholes. But total im-
pressions, important as they are, do not suffice. In many ways the houses
are similar: both are of wood, have sloping roofs and small porches, and
have approximately the same number of openings. The difference lies in
the Avay the components have been selected and organized.
Both houses have a large, dominant mass with projecting, smaller units.
In the first house the major mass is symmetrical; one half is the mirror image
of the other. This produces an assured, quickly understood stability. The
subordinate wing at the right softens the formal equilibrium of the main
section and makes the total design appropriate to a modest home.
In the second house the door is off-center, thereby weakening the
dominant symmetry of the mass. The exactly centered point of the gable
sets up a central axis that deserves respect. But the designer ignored this
it with a small porch. Then he underlined his error by placing one in-
374 - Principles of Design
rectangularity. Further study discloses that the doors and windows have
proportions similar to those of the main mass, only turned the other way.
The other house suffers from disconnectedness. Windows and door
are not consistently aligned horizontally or vertically. Although there are
only seven openings, they are of five different sizes and proportions (as
compared with eight openings of three sizes but similar shapes in the
first). All are rectangular, but their unpatterned placement and heterogene-
ous sizes and proportions make their similarity in shape count for little.
The detailing of the portico is inconsistent with the rest of the building and
awkward in itself. Aside from the repetition of horizontal and vertical
lines, the house stands as an assemblage of shapes without continuity.
Continuity is a second word worth thinking about.
ground: the walls and roofs, viewed separately or together, and the visual
units of doors and windows. This horizontality is challenged by verticals,
but, serving as subordinate contrasts, they are less strong. The other house
376 - Principles of Design
The Taj Mahal (completed in a.d. 1650), at Agra, India, has been called the most ex-
quisite tomb in the world. The basically simple design has been enhanced with intricate
ornamentation. (Courtesy of the GovernmeJit of India, Tourist Office)
of the structure look bald. Thus, in one house the doorway is appropriately
emphasized in terms of its own importance and its relation to the whole
Why Design? -
377
house. In the other house the doorway clamors for more than its just share
of attention.
Emphasis, then, is also an important concept to keep in mind.
We have used these two houses to start you thinking about design
because they are simple in organization and represent what you can see
almost any place. The superiority of one to the other can be easily ex-
plained. Do not think, though, that design in all art is this rudimentary.
Although the most complex and intense compositions can usually be reduced
to simple outlines, this is a serious reduction. In expanding their ideas into
full-fledged plastic organizations (Fig. 376), great artists show an enormous
range of imaginative yet ordered relationships, unexpected yet coherent
nuances, dynamic yet controlled contrasts. Forms express their functions
intensely; unity pervades each individualization. In the presence of master-
works one shares the exhilaration of magnificent creativity transcending the
fundamentals on which they are based.
WHY DESIGN?
Design serves us in several important ways.
face and joined hands are emphasized. The effect is contemplative, peaceful,
and self-contained, in keeping with the religious beliefs the sculpture por-
trays. "Grand Arabesque," in contrast, depicts a difficult moment in the
dance, when motion is temporarily stopped but every muscle is actively
straining. Dynamic asymmetry and tense rhythms convey this vividly. Be-
cause Degas wished us to concentrate on the precarious balancing of the
whole body, no parts have been stressed. These sculptures came from differ-
ent periods and countries, but we can appreciate the emotional content of
each because the language of design knows no national boundaries. Artists
in all fields, intuitively or consciously, employ the kinds of balance, rhythm,
and emphasis that will most vitally convey their concepts.
To communicate his ideas an artist must engage our attention and hold
it until his message is comprehended. Designs that are easily understood but
forceful attract attention, and this is basic in commercial art (Fig. 378)
because an unnoticed advertisement is a failure. Furthermore, design in
378
readily comprehensible.
Second, design makes our environment more
Industrial designers attempt to make the
switches on kitchen ranges, the
Balance Is Equilibrium
move but almost seems to, such as "Grand Arabesque" (Fig. 383A), "Demp-
seyand Firpo" (Fig. 383B), "St. Francis in Ecstasy" (Fig. 386A), or "Nude
Descending a Staircase" (Fig. 388).
Parthenon (Chapter
(Chapter the Farnese Palace (Chapter 11), and the
2),
weights or attractions
Asymmetrical Balance. An object in which the
illustrates asymmetrical balance,
on each side are equated but not identical
side view of the human figure
which is also called iriformal or active. The
of the lever, as used in
shows type of equilibrium. The principle
this
Radial Balance. In this type the major parts radiate from a center like
the spokes in a wheel or the petals of a daisy. The center is thus a potential
focal point, but it may or may not be emphasized. Usually there is a sense
of circular movement. When symmetrical, the effect tends toward the formal
as it does in radial city plans, many dinner plates (Chapter 7), or the rose
windows in Gothic cathedrals (Chapter 17). Asymmetrical examples include
expanding spirals and off-center mobiles (Figs. 372 and 380A).
another matter to watch one whose motions are without pattern. The varied
kinds of dances, from the stately minuet to the energetic twist, have earned
their popularity because they are rhythmic patterns of bodily movements
expressing the feelings of the dancers. Such continuing, recurring, and
developing patterns, although most obvious in the dance, pervade all phases
of art.
Looking back
at the preceding illustrations in this chapter shows that
continuity can be a decisive unifying factor and also convey highly diversi-
fied feelings. The clear-cut, cadenced rhythms of the first house are measured
and stabilizing, while the erratic placement of elements in the other house
gives a feeling of uncertainty and discontinuity. Gentle, harmonious curves
reinforce the Buddha's peaceful nobility and assurance. The basic rhythmic
pattern of the "Maesta" is firmly established in the rectilinear throne, steady
and strong as can be, but a succession of curved, gently swaying forms dispels
rigidity. The flowing contours and delicate poise of Degas' dancer captures
the essence of classical ballet with its sequences of fleeting moments of bal-
ance set into a lilting rhythmical continuity. In "Dempsey and Firpo" the
rhythm comes from the predominance of diagonals pitted against each
other in a harsh, aggressive counterpoint befitting the subject. But, as we
shall see, not all rhythmic patterns are as immediately comprehensible as in
these examples.
386
The three elementary rhythmic devices are repetition (top) in which the same form is
duplicated; alternation (center) in which two (or more) forms follow one another; and
progression (bottom) in which the forms undergo sequential change.
388
in 1912 was
Staircase," an oil painting done
Marcel Duchamp's "Nude Descending a
and time fep.cted abs trac y by
1 oi the pioneer explorations of
movement n, space
motion. Compare wuh the pho ograph of Calder s
simultaneous views of an object in
Philadelphia Museum of Art)
"Hanging Mobile" in motion. {Courtesy of the
Three Principles of Design -
389
unnoticed. The child who repeats, "Mama, I wanna cookie, I wanna cookie,
I ^vanna cookie," may get the delicacy, but he risks so irritating his mother
that he may get an overt expression of her annoyance. In contrast, the cease-
less ticking of a clock sinks unnoticed into the background. Alternation, the
interspersed repetition of two or more units, is more active and complex
than a repeated single unit. The effectiveness of either device depends on the
appropriateness of what is repeated and how sensitively the recurrence is
handled.
more dynamic than repetition or alternation, involves
Progression,
sequential change of one or more quality. The sizes may range from
small to large; shapes may change by degrees from angular to rounded;
and colors may move from gray through a sequence of dull greens up to
pure green. Notice in "St. Francis in Ecstasy" the gradations in size, shape,
and direction of the V-shaped forms in the left sleeve that pull attention
down toward the hand and over toward the skull. Throughout the painting
elongated, pointed forms are dominant, but no two are identical. "Nude
Descending a Staircase" (Fig. 388) is built on countless progressive changes
that suggest downward movement.
Not always, though, is it this easy to point specifically to classifiable
devices in works that are imdeniably rhythmic. In "The Moment in and
out of Time" and "Hudson River Landscape" (Figs. 390 and 391), con-
tinuityand discontinuity are harnessed together, much as they are in con-
temporary life. Perle Fine's painting is marked by unfettered motion, abrupt
shifts, unexpected juxtapositions. Why did she forsake the well-understood
and well-worn devices? Because she was exploring realms of experience that
have hitherto hardly been touched by painters. Sparked by a theme from
T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets, the painting deals with the intricate network of
past, present, and future happenings and the emotions they arouse. Big
thrusts penetrate wispy forms, angles and curves are orchestrated but not
tidily fitted together. It is as though she let her mind and paintbrush wander
freely in perpetual yet transitory time. The rhythms are appropriately elu-
sive.
David Smith's sculpture is of hard, heavy steel coerced into the shapes
he wanted by machine-shop techniques. As with "The Moment in and
out of Time," it is technically impeccable but with none of the smooth
polish too often associated with technique. Inspired by what he sees, feels,
and knows about the Hudson River, his sculptural statement rises above a
specific locale to symbolize the vigorous, multiplex forces of rivers in general.
In the painting entitled "The Moment in and out of Time" (1954) Perle Fine relied on
rather than intellect, and on deliberately disquieting brush strokes
the discipline of feeling
gray, and generally dark shapes converging
that present an impulsive complex of "Blue,
upon a second of bright lucidity." (Courtesy of the artist)
"The Fountain." Forget the subject matter and look only at the rhyth-
mic patterns. Which holds your attention longer?
It can make objects more orderly and
therefore more readily compre-
of this chap-
hensible, as illustrated by the two houses at the beginning
ter.
Three Principles of Design - 391
David Smith's steel "open-space" sculpture, "Hudson River Landscape" (1951), has a
hard-wrought singleness of purpose reminiscent of seventeenth-century American carving.
His philosophy includes approaching "each work with new order each time." (Collection
of Whitney Museum of American Art, New York)
Repetition and progression can lead toward unity and variety. Repeat-
ing certain forms, colors, or textures establishes unity, while developing
any quality provides variety that grows out of unity. A study of the Taj
Mahal reveals inniunerable repetitions and progressions of form that
result in a clear statement of Variety in Unity.
Rhythmic patterns emphasize the ideas that the artist wants to com-
municate. In "Dempsey and Firpo" the rhythms are violent and unre-
strained, quite different from those in the "Maesta." The fleeting,
searching movements in "The Moment in and out of Time" and the
tough, confident circuits in "Hudson River Landscape" embody the
emotional and intellectual content of these works of art.
392 - Principles of Design
patterned say, with flowers. Unless done with exceptional skill, everything
The process of differentiating the more impor-
would clamor for attention.
all life's activities. In art, emphasis
important is basic to
tant from the less
discussed under continuity.
functions in ways similar to those
captured and maintained by stressing
some
Attention or interest is
quickly
concrete wall, for example, is
things more than others. A blank
ornament,
passed over- but if that wall is
accented by doors, windows, or
satisfaction. Holding and releasing
we look at it longer and with greater
attention is fundamental in art.
tion than a chair, a horse more than a cat. Notice how Duccio and
Bellows made their principal figures larger than the others, and note
the exaggerated nose in Fig. 393.
Decisive character is quickly noticed. Bold shapes or intense colors are
more prominent than neutral ones. Thus a scarlet pillow may seem
more dominant than a large gray sofa on which it rests.
Unusual or unexpected elements rivet our gaze. When first exhibited,
"Nude Descending a Staircase" startled, intrigued, or irritated almost
everyone who saw it. After fifty years it still does not seem ordinary.
The unique interplay of straight and curved lines, of spontaneous and
reasoned forms in "Hudson River Landscape" set it apart from the
ordinary.
CONCLUSION
Let us look at two living rooms (Figs. 394A and B) as a conclusion to our
librium, restful but not inert. In the other, one stares at an aggressive, self-
conscious effort toward symmetry: major elements are centered and minor
elements are paired with a vengeance. One wonders if the people, too, would
have to participate in this rigid pseudoformality! We say pseudoiorma.\ity
because the room is too small, the furniture too undistinguished to achieve
genuine precise ceremoniousness, a way of living rapidly waning in popu-
larity.
continuity of movement. The other room, too, has its full share of repe-
tition and progression-and it well-nigh insists that you stare at every specific
application. Application is, we think, the right word because the continuity
seems applied rather than integrated, pulled out of the past rather than
growing out of the present.
Third, emphasis. In the lower living room there has been a brave at-
tempt to build up "centers of interest" both by grouping objects and by
stressing certain objects. Regrettably, the result is like eating a piece of
sugar, and
poorly stirred cake-instead of cake, you taste eggs, flour, butter,
room, some units (the fireplace wall, for ex-
vanilla separately. In the other
ample, with its bookshelves and sofa) offer a satisfying place to rest
your
you that they
roaming eyes, but they do not rivet your gaze. Always, feel
When you look during the next few weeks, concentrate on design
at art
and the
but do not forget the importance of the purposes of the work of art
materials from which it was made. In order to sharpen your
observations
Does the work of art, whatever it may be, convey a basic idea?
in a unified
Architecture is most gratifying when it expresses its functions
composition, not when it looks like a miscellany of walls, windows, and doors.
Is there enough variety to hold your attention for a suitable length of time?
of religion.
Specifically:
The following books are but a sample of the many worthwhile publica-
The Philosophy of Modern Art: Herbert Read (New York: Meridian, 1952).
The course of modern art is discussed with pertinent emphasis on creativity.
Point and Line to Plane: Wassily Kandinsky (New York: Solomon R. Guggen-
heim Museum, 1947).
One of the few books that penetrates the relation of expression to design.
architecture.
398
PART IV Painting:,
Introductlorx
IN THE FIRST THREE PARTS of this book you have seen many exam-
ples of painting, sculpture, and architecture because there could be no
valid discussion of the problems of Human Needs, of Materials and Proc-
esses, and of Organization as they pertain to art without frequent reference
to these three major Throughout history they Irave provided great
arts.
opportunities for varied and intense expressions of man's thoughts and feel-
ings, for the development and use of his highest technical skills, and for the
exercise of his capacity for organization. Rightly, these areas are often called
the fine arts.
Although all of the arts express and communicate feelings and ideas,
were generally
artists had patrons (religion or the government), their works
off from support,
supportive of the ideals and ideas of the patrons. Now, cut
the artist is frequently a strong cultural critic.
The freedom of modern painters and sculptors has its price, and
it is a
or not, there are large numbers of painters and sculptors who, to our ulti-
mate benefit, are pouring out an astonishing array of expressions that de-
much architecture has a broadly social basis with little of the highly personal
to commerce and each individual building has its own expressive qualities-
character of the people who created them. In the same way, present-day
paintings, sculptures, and buildings tell us much about ourselves and
the
New York)
15 - Painting:
404
A Landscape and a Cityscape - 405
saying the reverse, that we see in life that which the artist has chosen to
portray. What, then, does the artist do? Does he "hold a mirror up to na-
ture" and attempt to make his pictures a reflection of the visible world,
or does he interpret his subjects and thus provide for observers' new in-
sights into the world about them? We know, too, that pictures by many
recent artists (though it is also true of other periods in the past) bear little
or no resemblance to our visual world. One might well ask: What are these
artists painting? What are the subjects of such works? Before attempting to
answer such questions, let us take a look at two pictures, examining them
in some detail, to see what insights they might provide.
the mystery and awesomeness of the night. Both artists were faced with the
necessity of transformation: Hopper to take an ordinary and unattractive
subject and make it a work of art; van Gogh, to capture within the con-
tion ignores the fact that even the simplest painting involves
many de-
cisions. Hopper, first of all, had to decide what he wanted to paint and any
artist is drawn to some subjects more than others. In fact, to produce a
painting of vitality, it is essential that the artist feel deeply about his subject;
hori-
The first thing we note about "Early Sunday Morning" is its
This effect
zontality. As has already been noted, horizontal lines are restful.
morning, contrast to other
entirely in keeping with the title, for Sunday
in
is
mornings of the week, is a time when the practical affairs of life are tem-
porarily in abeyance, when we can enjoy the luxury of sleeping past the
when a general air of peace and quiet is most likely to
usual rising time,
This last point is especially pertinent here, for this is an area with
prevail.
shops and stores, and on weekday mornings the street
and sidewalk
many
would be alive with activity.
unbroken,
running lengthwise across the painting. The top one, the sky, is
the right side of the picture. Through such means as the shapes of awnings
and the curtaining of windows, the openings in the building are interest-
ingly and variously treated.
Hopper has introduced two gentle yet important contrasts in the pic-
ture. All of the basic forms are rectangular, and opposing them are a num-
ber of circular and curved forms; the water plug, the barber pole, the three
little metal forms on the ledge in front of the second-story windows, the
scallops on the awnings. The other contrast is in direction. The front of the
building establishes a flat plane across the picture. Opposing this are three
signs which project from the building, all casting long diagonal shadows.
The dark entrances into the stores and apartments carry this same opposing
direction past the plane of the building. The placement of the water plug
and barber pole relates to the same system of diagonals set up by the shadows
of the signs. Note also how the dark area in the upper right corner and the
low-value treatment of the shop windows at the right serve to stop the
diagonal and depth movements and the rhythms of the window forms. The
picture abounds in other subtleties which repay study. Find, for example,
mystery. It is at early morning that we wonder what the day will bring and
in the picture the uncertainty is suggested by the long shadow running the
length of the sidewalk— but we do not know what is casting it. Without
portraying people, Hopper produced a human document; by an exception-
It is the might of nature, the natural laws that order the stars and that de-
termine the forms of hills and the gro\vth patterns of trees, to which the
artist is responding.
\Ve have all experienced starry nights in which we feel the gigantic
forces of nature and realize ourselves as only tiny parts of a universe which
is awesome in its magnitude and magnificence. It is these feelings that van
408
"7?^'
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t*"^!**-**-.
night
Gogh is and he accepted the fact that the magic of a starlit
stating,
than by literal photography.
can no more be portrayed by literal painting
movements
To convey his ideas he has used distorted sizes and shapes;
of light pattern the sky with all the energy
and much of the form of nebulae;
brilliance take on tremendous size (compare
them
individual stars in their
sky as is usual in night
with the buildings); the moon, not dominating the
scenes, takes a lesser place in the firmament.
The cypress tree in the fore-
restless energy as the
ground-also a part of nature-is filled with the same
sky. The small village in the foreground
seems secure and protected, and m
the repose both of the forms of the buildings
and the technique used to
explosive vigor in the rest of the
depict them offers a contrast to the almost
picture. "Starry Night" romantic subject, romantically portrayed, highly
is a
its ideas. It is the
emotionalized both in content and in means used to convey
feels deeply and intensely
work of a passionately sensitive individual who
the wonder and the awesomeness of nature.
A Landscape and a Cityscape - 409
part of a large moving pattern. Even more basic, ho'ivever, are the composi-
tion and forms. The areas occupied by sky and ground are generally hori-
zontal, as are the lesser forms within them. Opposing these, both in direction
and value, is the form of the cypress tree (with a faint echo in the church
spire). Its startling darkness adds brilliance and luminosity to the sky; its
verticality makes the earth forms appear more stable and placid. We have
already commented on the tree's restless quality, which serves as a link
bet^veen it and the sky, giving the two a basis of unity even though in other
respects— direction, hue, and value— they are drastically opposed. It is within
the sky, and properly so, that the most compelling and unusual forms are
found. Almost directly in the center are two large interlocking spiral forms
(with a lesser one slightly below and to the right) that are part of a great
form to give a sense of movement and energy. Filling the rest of the sky
are the stars and the moon, all burning with a terrible intensity. These are
all circular, and they appear restless and mobile. The unstable forms hang-
ing in the sky are in stunning contrast to the stable, rectangular solids of
the buildings. The hills, with their gently rounded forms, serve as transition
between ground and sky. In color, the hot piercing yellow of the moon and
stars is in strong opposition to the cool greens and blues in the tree, land,
and sky.
one based on a system of diagonals. A strong line is set up along the lower
right edges of the cypress tree extending generally to the upper left-hand
corner. Note in how many places this direction is repeated in the building,
ground, and sky forms. These diagonals are opposed by another set at right
angles to them, most sharply defined in the lines defining the tops of the
hills but which also appear in every part of the composition. The picture
the impulsive technique, the rhythmic forms, the vibrant color, the dynamic
contrasts. Study the picture closely and see what other devices he used to
the "form" of a
in Part 1 (and as we shall take up further in this section),
Painters vary widely in what they want
work of art grows out of expression.
"say"; therefore, they make use of
widely differing means and forms of
to
expression. Let us look now at some general considerations.
the Arts of Representation
Paintinc and sculpture are often called
painters and sculptors bears a marked
because in many instances the work of
other objects we see. Often the
resemblance to the persons, trees, skies, and
approximate the appearance of
de-ree to which painting and sculpture
and many persons look only for
nature is taken as a criterion of excellence,
naturalistic perspective, proportions,
and colors. If a picture or statue looks
good. If it does not, many persons
"natural" or "real," they regard it as
careless. But as the problems of
assume that the artist was incompetent or
it becomes evident that
literal imita-
painting and sculpture are investigated,
painters or sculptors themselves.
tion is seldom held as a goal by
one may emphasize its picturesque, charming or quaint aspects, while the
other may make of it a social commentary on the conditions that produced
such a d\velling. Thus we can distinguish bet^veen subject matter and con-
tent. The subject matter of both paintings is the same dilapidated house,
but the content of the first is the charm of the quaint and picturesque while
that of the second is social comment. In the paintings of Maria Lani (Figs.
418B to 419D) you can see how identical subject matter has been used to
objects in the visible world. But clearly there is content, for these painters
have chosen to portray in a generalized, philosophic way their thoughts and
feelings about such abstract but basic concepts as the interrelations of or-
ganic forms and about order and regularity. In fact, the more we study re-
cent painting, the more we discover, to our astonishment and delight, the
range and intensity of ideas that can be conveyed without recourse to subject
matter.
Almost any surface— paper, canvas, plaster, ^vood, or metal— will hold paint,
but each has its own characteristics that in part determine the final effect of
a painting. For each of these surfaces there are suitable paints and brushes,
not just one kind of paint and one type of brush for each, but a considerable
variety. And after the painter has chosen a specific surface on which to paint,
a suitable kind of paint, and appropriate brushes, he can use these tools
and materials in extremely diverse ways. The wise painter chooses the
tools and materials most compatible with his basic idea, then develops a
technique through which it can be sympathetically expressed.
Finally, the painter concerns himself with organizing the plastic ele-
ments with which he works to give order and intensity to his idea. He thinks
not merely of balance, rhythm, and emphasis, but of which kind of balance,
which rhythm, which degree of emphasis will best convey his content.
sort of
In the process of creating a painting, the painter must react deeply and
strongly to his basic idea. It must inspire and stimulate him, and he must
devise means of communicating his feelings to those who see his ^vork. Out
of the basic idea grows the technique and the organization of the painting—
if it is an integrated expression. And out of the intensity of his feelings
comes the spirit that makes a painting vital.
412 - Painting
typical reactions.
many respects, paintings are like people: they are richly
varied, and
In
They can be serious, profound, trivial,
each has a distinct personality.
any of a wide range of characteristics that could also be
humorous, sad, or
his behavior
applied to people. In meeting an individual, you react to
traits, his speech, his clothes, his ideas, his
responses to situations. On such
bases you form your opinion: him; you dislike him; you are neutral;
you like
Sometimes
you wish to withhold judgment until you have seen him again.
further acquaintance you reverse your opinion: a person
on the basis of
as various
toward whom you were neutral may become a valued friend
seemed who
aspects of his personality are slowly revealed; another
at first
and
to possess charm and graciousness may before long seem superficial
shallow.
Carrying the analogy of pictures and people further,
we may state a
to modify them,
your own: do not be afraid of them! Do not be afraid
and beliefs and understand-
either, for only through a revision of attitudes
ings can true growth take place.
turn to two more paintings which we will scrutinize closely.
We now
The subject matter same in both-people-but they differ widely in
is the
Grant Wood's literally stated "American Gothic" (1930) is a penetrating study in oils of
a Midwestern farmer and his wife. {Courtesy of The Art Institute of Chicago, Friends of
American Art Collection)
of an American farmer and his wife against their Gothic Revival farmhouse
and one of their barns. It is a picture of two people (in actuality, Grant
Wood's sister and an Iowa dentist) who, to the artist, typified Midwest
American farm folk. The couple appear severe but not unkind, hard-work-
ing and thrifty, clean and unpretentious. There is much evidence of pride
414 - Painting
king would
in their well-kept farm: the farmer grasps his pitchfork as a
wife implies a humorless concern for
hold a scepter, the expression of his
the thriving house plants, the
shades m
her neatly kept home as indicated by
curtains
the rug from fading, and the lace
the living room drawn to keep
in the bedroom. .
organized
Yet for all its unpretentiousness, the composition is artfully
held to-
generally triangular and stable, the two
figures
and unified. It is
between the two
gether, pictorially, by the gable and porch roof. The area
that they, too, take
given importance by the dark windows
(note
heads is
from the one looking into it. We can see at once that Picasso is "O^ P^""?
interests him little: he feels free
surface appearance: in fact, in this
picture it
Pablo Picasso's "Girl Before a Mirror" (1930), in oil, is abstracted and expressionistic.
Numerous views and aspects of the figure are vigorously shown and combined. {Collec-
tion, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift of Mrs. Simon Guggenheim)
once a tension set up between the quietude of the figures and the energy
of the background. The composition is cut into two almost equal parts
by the edge of the mirror but the arm of the girl as it reaches across connects
the two halves.
416 - Painting
The figures are the dominating element of the composition and they are
clothed, nude, and X-rayed." On the left the
head is shown
"simultaneously
and we see both a profile and full-face view. This is a time-
as a full circle,
other sets up a sensation of
space treatment and looking from one to the
movement. This head with its full, bold forms is serene and out-going m
In the head in the mirror the profile is more dominant and the
its effect.
painted within
"American Gothic" and "Girl Before a Mirror" were
respectively, and illustrate two
two years of each other, in 1930 and 1932,
People are the content
among the many trends in contemporary painting.
dissimilar. Wood's painting is a literal,
in both, but the content is markedly
of their house and barn. Picasso's
factual document of two lowans in front
portrayal of many physical and
painting is an imaginative and inventive
psychical attributes of a young girl. Whereas
"American Gothic" is specific,
All these combine to make a head that is beautiful and distinguished. Hers
is a beauty of structure and form; it is not superficial or skin-deep.
We cannot help noticing that although all seven portraits are different,
they are at the same time very much alike— they all look like the subject.
Interestingly enough, five out of the seven have chosen a three-quarters
view, only one a profile, and one a full-face view. All have taken note of the
characteristic shape of her face; of the wide forehead tapering to the full
In Kramstyck's picture we see a serene, healthy woman who gazes upon the
forms of the head and shoulders have been organized as large, simple, closely
related areas. The Soutine has a general aspect of somberness, and the elonga-
tion and distortion of the forms give us a portrayal that is ascetic and
neurotic. In the Rouault she is portrayed as tragic, her face a mask, the eyes
full and unseeing. In contrast, the Matisse is gay and alive with sparkle and
vitality. Kisling has given great emphasis to her eyes. He has made them
the rest of the figure further centers attention on them. They are the
troubled eyes of a woman, perhaps not sure of herself, who looks to others
for assistance and assurance. Of all the portraits, the one by Lurcat is the
most depersonalized. He has seen the sitter not so much as a woman but
as a design with richly varied forms and strong contrasts. But even that tells
How can we explain all these varied interpretations? True, the model
was a person of rich and varied personality, as the wide range of interpreta-
tions testify. But the artists saw different things in the model, and they saw
different things because they themselves were all different people with differ-
ent backgrounds, experiences, and goals. We cannot help concluding that
Rouault has something of the somber and tragic in his personality, Matisse
the gay and cheerful, Kramstyck the healthy and untroubled, Soutine the
moody and introverted, Lurcat the intellectual and impersonal. A study of
other works of these artists will bear out these generalizations, because the
characteristics exhibited in these portraits are found there. We conclude that
artists interpret their subjects in terms of their interests and experiences.
In this case they have done it with a living subject, but the same is true
••^^^\-'•^>;l'.•'l;'•
'.
#
Y
t
/ j
'
K t
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1
Opposite, above, left to right: (A) Photograph (Life photograph by Harold Carter); (B)
Romain Kramstyck; below, left to right: (C) Georges Rouault; (D) Henri Matisse.
Above, left to right: (A) Marcel Gromaire; (B) Cluiim Soutine; below, left to riglit:
(C) Moise Kisling; (D) Jean Lur^at.
420 - Painting
Painting in Oil
of the fifteenth
Ever since oil paints were developed around the beginning
other medium.
century painters have used them more frequently than any
that
They have many advantages. Therange of hues, values, and intensities
themselves to extraordi-
can be obtained is practically infinite: they lend
Materials and Processes in Painting - 421
narily varied handling; they can be worked and reworked many times; and
tliey are durable.
Three Landscapes. Interesting contrasts in the use of oil paints as a
medium are pro\ iticd by "\'iew of Toledo" (Fig. 422A), "La Grenouillere"
(Fig. 422B), and "Door to the River" (Fig. 423A) painted by El Greco,
Claude Monet, and W'illem de Kooning. The El Greco is not only of interest
historically— it is probably the first landscape painted in Europe where the
subject ^vas treated on its own merits rather than being a backgioimd for
people— but it is a magnificent composition. The great free curved forms of
the groimd contrast, both in nature and scale, with the geometric architec-
tural forms that on them. Belo^v, the foliage has been varied in texture,
rest
value, direction, and scale to support and enhance the middle ground.
Above, a massive sky, its warm grays contrasting strongly with the sharp
greens on the ground and in the foliage, partakes of the same enormous
energy ^vhich permeates the rest of the canvas. To achieve this result. El
Greco took full advantage of the versatility of oil paints. The comparative
smoothness of the sky and ground forms accentuates the varied textures
of foliage and buildings, and the direction of the brush strokes not only
models the forms but vitalizes the whole canvas.
This idea is carried further in "La Grenouillere," for here one is con-
scious of the medium in all parts of the composition; every brush stroke is
We note such things as the vigor of the brush work, the texture left by the
strokes, the splash of pigment when heavily loaded brushes were struck
against the canvas. These compel our attention. The basically simple forms
of the composition reveal themselves to us but they are not particularly
emphasized. \'ery obviously the medium has been exploited as a source of
pleasure: we are almost a witness to the act of painting for every step of the
painting process is there to be seen. "Door to the River" is part of a long
train of developments in art in which interest has tended to shift from con-
422 - Painting
I-.- •^L
^^^:^
w-
,.'?*.. ,:i-':J:.-::V^
f--'
424 - Painting
an acceptance of a painting as an object
to
tent or message in a painting
This concern for the qualities of a
medium and its
of interest in itself.
°^ pigments and
The Process. There is no limit to the ways of handling oil
'^'
effects^The
possible to get as wide a range of
in no other paint medium is it
heavy
strokes (Fig. 408), in thick and
pigment may be applied in separate
almost water-color transparency
opaque masses (Fig. 423B), or in washes of
subtle modeling of form are
/Fie 45''B) Variations and nuances of color,
characteristic is
ingenuity and skill. Another
limited only by the painter's
painter begins
In water-color painting the
also of considerable importance.
and each touch of pigment dark-
with white paper to which he applies color,
water color,
ens the paper. Thus, unless
opaque white pigment is added to
true of fresco.
light to dark. The same is
the painter necessarily works from
In oil painting, however, one may
work either from light to dark or from
to cover
used, oil paint is opaque enough
dark to light because, as typically
century. Prior to that time, in most paintings, pigment was applied smoothly
and texttires arising from it as a material were avoided. Now painters treat
it in varied ways to give it an interesting surface. We have already men-
tioned the textural effects from bristle brushes and palette knives. William
Congdon, in "Venice, Number I" (Fig. 423B), has gone to considerable
pains to apply the paint so as to produce a richly textured surface that
glows with the opulence of a tapestry. In addition, he has used a sharp point
to scratch into the moist pigment some of the details of the buildings he is
Modern oil painters are a highly experimental group and they have
extended greatly the range of possibilities of their medium. The ways in
which they use it are as varied as the ideas they express. After over five
hundred years of use, oil paint as a medium can still astonish and delight
us with its versatility.
eral of the tall buildings that characterize the area in the backgrotuid, and
the elevated railroad (now gone) in the foreground. The sketch with its
headlong diagonals, its sharp contrasts, and its impetuosity, captures the
dynamic quality characteristic of a throbbing business and commercial
center. It would be difficult to get the effects Marin achieved in any
other medium than a watered pigment applied freely on paper. Good water
color paintings are not easy to make, despite their impromptu appearance.
Water color painting, as much as any other medium, requires a high degree
of technical dexterity.
426 - Painting
ments. These come in tubes or cakes and are soluble in water. Colors that
are mixed on the palette (which for water colors must be white so the
painter can see how the colors will look on white paper) generally produce
an even tone when applied to the paper. Or the artist may load his brush
ivith two or more colors by pressing it directly into the pigment and then
applying it to the paper. A particular brush stroke, therefore, can be richly
\'aried in color if the separate colors in the brush remain unmixed. A wide
range of colors can be mixed from a few basic ones. A glance at Marin's
palette (here the term is used only to refer to the colors that an artist uses)
shows what a small number of colors an artist needs to get striking and
complex results: blues— French, ultramarine, cerulean, cobalt; reds— rose
madder, light red, spectrum red; );e//oit;5— aureolin, yellow ochre, cadmium;
greens— \iridian, oxide of chromium; gray— Fayne's gray; black— \amp black.
Paper, brushes, palette, and water is all that the water colorist needs.
"Lower Manhattan" shows all these materials at work. Even the paper itself
"works": its handsome texture enriches the painted areas; lightly painted
and unpainted areas provide brilliance. The brushes and pigment, too, work
well: we see the directions of the strokes; the energetic interplay between
light and dark areas, between verticals and diagonals.
It is evident from Marin's water color that he approaches his work as a
means of recording his response to the forces implicit in his subject. He is
Consider the material side of today with its insistence: glass, metals, lights,
buildings of all kinds for all kinds of purposes with all kinds of materials.
Lights brilliant, noises startling and hard, pace setting in all directions,
taut, taut
loose and taut
electric
staccato
that
To eet to my picture ... I must for myself insist that when finished,
place and are working, that now it has become
is when all the parts are in
boundaries as definite as that the prow,
an object and will therefore have its
bound a boat I am not to be destruc-
the stern, the sides and bottom
fight going
tive within. I can have things
that clash. I can have a jolly good
there are living things. But 1
on There is always a fight going on where
a Blessed Equilibrium.
must be able to control this fight at will with
Speaking of destruction, again, I feel that I am not to destory this flat
design in ^vhich forces play against and with forces. His mention of the
fact that he is not to destroy the flatness of the working surface shows gen-
oughly mastered the difficult art of using transparent water color quickly,
boldly, and expressively. His brilliantly direct and spontaneous handling
of this fluid medium exploited some of its most distinctive characteristics.
Cezanne's "Mont Sainte-Victoire." There are many other ways of paint-
ing with u'ater-soluble piginents and each has its merits. A great contrast to
Tempera, a medium that lends itself to precise treatment, was used by Andrew Wyeth
in "Christina's World" (1948). A feeling of melancholy pervades the painting. (Collec-
tion, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Purchase Fund)
water colors are among the most ancient of painting mediums. Tempera,
a mixture of ground pigments and an albuminous or colloidal vehicle
(egg, gum, or glue), was used by Egyptian, Medieval, and Renaissance paint-
ers, and it is still used today as we can see in "Christina's World" (Fig. 431)
by Andrew Wyeth. Sharp and precise detail is possible with this medium.
Gouache is made by grinding opaque colors with water and mixing the
product with a preparation of gum, or by adding Chinese white to transpar-
ent water colors. Poster paints are the most familiar, least expensive, and
least satisfactory (as far as permanence and flexibility are concerned) of the
opaque water colors. Casein paints, which have an alkaline solution of casein
as their vehicle, are comparatively new and hold many possibilities, for they
Any medium is used well when it serves the artist as a suitable means of
expressing his ideas, and almost any exhibition of contemporary water colors
will show the great ingenuity with which today's painters approach their
432 - Painting
Painting in Fresco
art.
Materials and Processes in Painting - 433
quality of water color. But here the similarity ends, because fresco is a
times can never be accurately matched: a line always appears to show where
the break occurred. Therefore, the limits of each work period are made to
coincide with the edge of a figure or other object where they will be in-
conspicuous and unnoticed.
The coloring substance, of course, must be ready to use as soon as the
plaster is put on the wall. It is prepared by mixing a pigment with water
or with water and lime; when this is applied to the wet plaster, the lime
binds the pigment to the plaster and makes the painting actually part of
the wall. A certain amount of touching up with tempera paint is often
done, but colors applied to dry plaster lack the permanence of those bonded
into the plaster, so that this touching up is avoided as much as possible.
Colors in fresco are less brilliant than in water colors or oils. But they can
be very rich and the somewhat muted quality they often have is entirely in
keeping with the impression of permanence and monumentality that they
give.
Fresco painting has a long history. However, aside from the fact that
contemporary painters have at their command a wider range of colors than
did earlier workers, the present-day methods of painting are similar to those
used by Michelangelo and, in fact, by painters centuries before him. During
the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries the interest- in fresco
painting declined, but the twentieth century has witnessed a renewed inter-
est inmural paintings done in this medium.
Two Frescoes. Jose Clemente Orozco's "Gods of the Mqfiern World"
(Fig. 434), is part of a large fresco that this Mexican artist painted for the
the moment of
was painted with the greatest o£ reverence. Adam is shown at
Bible tells us,
creation receiving life from the hand of God, and he is,
as the
history, and "Adam-
created in God's image. This is the beginning of man's
life. Man, all too soon, will show
his weak-
is the promise of the wonder of
Experimentation in Mediums
Technically, 'Composition 8" (1953) by the Italian Alberto Burri is not a painting, for
it is made of burlap which has been sewn, patched, and glued
over canvas. By this
treatment of an unusual medium he has produced a picture of considerable power.
(Collection, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Mr. and Mrs. David M. Solinger
Fund)
have been cut and glued to make a careful pattern of edges. On the pieces
of white canvas strong figures have been painted, mostly in blacks with
touches of the primaries away from the center. The freedom of the brush-
work contrasts with the preciseness of the cut edges: the overlapping of the
pieces of canvas adds an actual, even if slight, dimensionality to the painting.
"Composition 8" by the Italian artist Alberto Burri is made of burlap, a
material that to begin with is highly and interestingly textured. In "form-
ing" his medium he has sewn, patched, and glued it to a canvas. We respond
not to a painted surface but to one of an actual material that has been
manipulated, and "Composition 8" achieves a considerable intensity by the
direct presentation of torn and mended surfaces and edges. A handsome
abstract pattern is formed by the disposition of forms and textures.
also
Although works such as these are framed and hung, they are not, strictly
speaking, paintings. In a sense, then, paintings are becoming harder to de-
fine. At the same time and for some of the same reasons, the line between
ORGANIZING A PAINTING
How does an artist organize a painting? One has only to look at the variety
know that there are many different kinds of or-
of paintings that exist to
of the four exam-
ganization. This was demonstrated, too, by the discussion
portraits of Miss Lani. As one
ples at the beginning of the chapter and the
great diversity in the ^vay in ^vhich artists go
about
would suspect, there is
with.
modifies the visible world in doing a painting, even if he is in-
Any artist
most realistic effects possible. Whereas any
terested only in getting the
object exists in three dimensions, the painter has only
two in which to work.
greater than can be achieved
Also, the value range in nature is many times
possibly be achieved
with pigments; the brightness of a sunny day cannot
of the artist, is not light
by realistic means since white, the lightest pigment
to sunlight. For example, a piece of white
paper indoors
at all compared
comparison some-
isdarker than a black car standing in the sun. (Try the
does not have any definite
time.) Again, a scene looked at by an observer
is circular in shape
boundaries because the image on the retina of the eye
and grows gradually less distinct as its distance from the center of the image
we look at actual objects. We almost invariably move our eyes and our
heads, we may shift our bodily positions or the light may change on the
subject. This results in a total visual impression that is not static but is
world that has enormous range of color and no sharp visual boundaries.
Beyond the purely visual aspects are the equally, or possibly more, impor-
tive in color, the other interesting in form and growth pattern; one may
be part of a large orchard, lost among many other similar trees, the other
may be silhouetted against the sea and sky above a stretch of lonely beach.
Each has its own values, each its own significance. From many
the existing
possibilities the painter selects those having meaning for him and subjects
them to his own interpretation. His job is to transform the raw materials
of life into artistic realities that will objectify his own significant experiences
and that will have meaning for those individuals who will see his paintings.
portraying with great fidelity the object or scene which interests him. He
might then produce a painting like William Harnett's "After the Hunt"
(Fig. 438). This painting is a masterpiece of the "fool-the-eye" {trompe
actual objects. It is, however, more than a convincing record, for the in-
events, we can still get pleasure from paintings such as this. But we must re-
member there are many things that painting can do and copying the appear-
ances of the things around us is only one of the many functions it can fulfill.
Assuming that Harnett painted "After the Hunt" from an actual arrange-
ment, he had a considerable task in selecting and arranging the objects in
the composition. And certainly, they are composed with great
discrimination.
We note ^vith pleasure the repetition of circular and near-circular forms and
their contrast to the straight ones; the opposition of smooth metal surfaces
all the objects
Furthermore,
with the textures of wood, feathers, and fur.
in the composition were ones that Harnett could control; he
could move or
438 - Painting
raise the rabbit; lie could change the size of the hat; he could discard objects
that did not Such direct means are not available to a landscape painter
fit.
photograph
ordered in doing a painting is shown in the comparison of the
Cezanne's painting of it
of Mont Sainte-Victoire in southern France and
oil
ties? Which one is easier to look at? Which do you prefer? What has been
discussed earlier
the oil painting with the water color of the same subject
(p. 429).
Organizing a Painting - 439
S ^"
'
w ^ :h
440 - Painting
the Basque town of Guernica. There was no military reason for the attack;
it uas an experiment to see if a town could be entirely destroyed from the
air. It was— and there was a world-wide reaction of horror to the event.
Picasso, a Spaniard, was deeply moved and in a little over a month executed
the mural, along with a large number of preliminary sketches of the entire
composition and various parts of it.
grays, and whites. Contrasts occur only in value changes: it is as if all color
trasting, and convulsive forms which it includes. The two sides of the tri-
angle also set up diagonal movements which are carried strongly through-
out the composition. Note also that the major triangle— and the entire com-
position—is bisected and that to the middle right a large white triangular
area appears resting on one of its points. Thus we see in the composition
the use of stable and unstable forms; of serene, yet exploded, areas.
The actual objects in the composition are few. In the major triangular
form there is to the left a fallen and dismembered warrior; above him a
dying horse which has been gored from above; at the apex, the small lamp;
and to the right, the figure of a woman struggling into the area of light
cast by the small lamp. Immediately above her head is the head of another
cially the bull, the horse, the lamp, and the radiant eye-like form slightly
to the left of center at the top that differences of interpretation have cen-
tered. Picasso has made extensive use of highly personal symbols in "Guer-
nica," and his observations on them have not clarified their meaning. The
obscurity of these symbols has also lessened the impact of the painting for
many people. But we must remember that Picasso is a Spaniard, and the
horse and the bull both figure prominently in the bull fight. Picasso, in
much of his work, has used the bull as the symbol of brutality; the horse
A many studies for a major painting.
painter eenerally makes
war.
(A) Above. "Guernica" (1937) by Pablo Picasso is a powerful protest aganist
of the composition, highly expressionistic devices
Along with the strong geometric basis
on exteJided loan from the artist to
have been used. {"Guernica" and the studies below
the Museum of New York)
Modern Art, ,,
general elements
, ,
(B) Below left. study for the entire composition, the same
In this
disposition.
appear as in the final painting but in a different
V
443
(C) opposite right. This study of a woman's head is one of a series that Picasso did. He
continued making studies such as this even after the painting was completed.
(D) Below left. Another study of a woman's head. Anguish has seldom, if ever, been
conveyed with such intensity as in the Guernica drawings.
(E) Below right. .\ study of parts of the painting testing expressive ideas.
\m:,
444 - Painting
is little doubt. Seldom
as thesymbol of innocence. About the people, there
with such agoniznig nitensity as
have the horrors of war been depicted
the fallen hghter, and the women
on the right and left and the dead
in
is violent, we are never
child Even though the distortion in the figures
treatment of figures, faces, hands, feet, we
distracted by it, but through the
are made aware of suffering of the
most intense nature. Perhaps the major
It occurs at the apex of the
major form
clue is the small lamp in the center.
the
area of greatest brilliance. Although
in the picture: it illuminates the
includes the dead warrior and a
trianoular form which it dominates also
it is the light of the
human spirit
part of the body of the expiring horse,
the least anguished in the mural,
perhaps towards which the two women,
sides, we
in the areas of darkness at the
are drawn. Beyond this central form,
the scene of desolation and
suffering.
see the triumphant bull surveying
of the many sketches Picasso
Fioures 442B through 443E are only a few
for Guernica. Early in his planning,
he seems to have decided upon
made
that is, the large central triangle,
the basic compositional arrangement,
of major fig-
but he experimented extensively with problems of placement
of details. Some possibilities had
ures their relationships, and of treatment
used which seemed to contribute
most
to be discarded; only those were
in these various sketches we have
a re-
forcefully to the total statement. But
may do in planning a picture. The tenta-
markable record of what an artist
concern.
Organization of Space
compose his pictures he has been
Since man as a painter first started to
is im-
suggestion of space
concerned with the organization of space.
Some
values or
plicit in any painting or design
in which there are changes in
suggests
forms. Each of these devices
hues, lines that cross, or overlapping
Organizing a Painting - 445
that certain parts of a composition are in front or behind other parts. Space
is implied space which the painter works with and it is his decision as to
\\hether he wishes to make the space in his picture deep or flat. Early in
house and barns in the background, even though we know that each of the
latter are many times the size of the -ivoman in the picture.
Vertical Location. "Christina's World" also shows the effect of the verti-
an element. With objects that are below eye level the further
cal location of
down they are in a picture the nearer they appear to be. Conversely, with
objects that are above eye level-clouds, for example-the higher they are
in a picture, the closer they appear to be.
Overlapping Forms. When
one form overlaps and partially obscures a
second form, the first one seems nearer than does the second. In Grant
Wood's "American Gothic," the farmer and his wife overlap their farm
buildings and the farmer's right arm overlaps the figure of his wife, thus
establishing a definite spatial organization. Even in an abstract picture such
as "Girl Before a Mirror" there is spatial relation suggested by the overlap-
ping of forms.
Linear Perspective. For centuries artists were concerned with ways of
suggesting space realistically in a painting, for the devices that are men-
tioned above are only partial means of achieving this. It was the discovery
of the principles of perspective in the fifteenth century that provided the
precise means. Linear perspective is the depiction of space by means of
diminution of size in relation to lines that converge as they approach the
horizon line. Railroad tracks or the edges of roads on flat terrain clearly
during the last five centuries and through its use an effect of great "natural-
"American Gothic" and "View of Toledo" are both
ness" can be achieved.
limitation that
clearly based on it. Useful though linear perspective is, its is
"La Grenouillere" and "The Evening Tolling of a Distant Temple Bell" are
trends in contemporary painting. No one could possibly like them all, but a
be narrow-minded, indeed, who could not find some trends in
person would
contemporary painting that had particular meaning for him in
illuminating
that contemporary painters are responding to our age with vigor and con-
purely physical, we cannot
cern. If we are alive today in any way beyond the
ignore contemporary painting.
Unusual subjects and large are not uncommon characteristics of recent painting.
size
The subject of "The bow with the Subtile Nose" (1954) is clearly a cow, but the
paint and
French painter Jean Dubuffet has used it to experiment with media. With oil
Duco on canvas, he has created a surface of great beauty in both color and texture.
{Collection,the Museum Modern Art, New York, Benjamin and David Sharps Fund)
of
both. In fact, few recent painters have secured surfaces in their canvases that
are so beautiful in colorand texture.
Brutal a term
is that has been used to refer to Dubuffet's style. It is
brutal in the sense of lacking refinement in the grand tradition of Western
art. But if Dubuffet has rejected some values, it is
because he is inter-
ested in others. In writing of this and related paintings (he has done a series
of pictures of cows), he states that he wishes to portray things by making use
something of the preposterous in the title, for subtile means delicate, rarified,
and keenly perceptive, or wily, cunning, and crafty. But what he hopes to
accomplish is more intensely alive reality "by means of unreality." He thus
a
turns his back on the visual image and uses images as they are formed
and colored by reactions and feelings about the subject.
450 - Paijiting
ably poking a little fun at the many inert still-life paintings which exist. Per-
haps he is saying that in the twentieth century life is not still. In any event, he
true that the strong dark lines are less animated at the two sides. In the
sub-areas of the picture he has provided contrasts in scale and color. The
forms are calligraphic and not representational, but certainly lively. In this
picture, Gottlieb, using only lines and colors and without recourse to any
representational forms, has created an intense feeling of life.
"Sleepers, 11" by George Tooker (Fig. 45 IB) is, in keeping with its title,
made up ofrounded forms with slight contrasts. We see only the faces of the
sleepers, and the flowing and restful folds of the covers are related to the
shapes of the heads. But the figures themselves, the "sleepers," lie with their
eyes open; they are troubled, anxious, and lonely. In spite of the harmonious
relation of forms and its generally restful composition, this is a haunting
jacket lying on a thick carpet of small and interestingly leaved plants. The
lovely and diverse textures of the leaves, their softness, and their organic na-
ture are emphasized by the two boulders which appear among them.
The
arresting quality of the picture, however, comes from the incongruous con-
trast of the plants and the jacket: the one, symbols of growth
and life; the
other, an evidence of life, empty and disembodied. This, like the
yet here
Tooker, suggests much more than one sees. Although highly realistic, defi-
nite, and precise in every detail, something mysterious, or even ominous, is
opaque, and this treatment produces new and intriguing forms which, as
Contrary to the title, in "Sleepers 11" (1959) by George Tooker all the figures
are
(B)
fully awake. The picture conveys a sense of tension and anxiety. The
medium is egg
tempera on a gesso panel. {Collection, the Museum of Modern Art, New
York, Larry
With his technique of pouring pigment directly on a canvas, the American Jackson
Pollock created fascinating labyrinths of varied lines as in "Number 27" (1950). A re-
markable sense of spontaneity is achieved. (Collection of Whitney Museum of American
Art, New York)
the machine age, he chose to experiment with biomorphic forms. If you look
again at the Eames chair (Fig. 183), you will notice how similar their shapes
are to those of Miro's painting. Here, again, the relationships among diverse
art forms of one age becomes as explicit as they did in the photographs of
the commimity of Williamsburg. "Composition" is a painting of liveliness
and vitality and an important work in a movement that has done much to
redirect the attention of designers and people generally to organic forms
and forces.
of marvelous intricacy. The black and lower value colors which he has used
under the white and light value lines suggest thickness and depth. There
is a fascination in exploring the various lines and areas of the picture, of
noting soft against hard, of light against dark, thick against thin. By looking
closely at the painting one can see exactly how it was done, what color was
laid on top of another, where thin paint splashed, where thick pigment left
454 - Painting
Pollock's "Number 27" and de Kooning's "Door to the River" are examples.
Although the paintings may be very abstract or non-objective so far as sub-
ject matter is concerned, the emphasis on sensation, feeling, and highly
type draw upon the fantasies and imaginings of the unconscious. The subject
matter is often bizarre and symbolic, the effect dreamlike.
Within each of these categories great variation is possible for the broad
Look through the book for other illustrations of painting and see if you
can classify them according to the above headings.
that if we use the standards of visual appearance to judge their works we will
miss their message.
Modern painters have often been accused of turning their backs on life,
stand. Study, however, would reveal that artists are deeply involved in to-
idea in paint.
Covers all the visual arts from prehistoric Indian era to the present. Highly
readable.
History of World Art: Everard M. Upjohn, Paul S. Wingert, and Jane Gaston
Mahler (New York: Oxford University Press, 1949).
Covers the development of painting, sculpture, and architecture.
A Treasury of Art Masterpieces: Thomas Craven (New York: Simon and Schuster,
1952).
Profusely illustrated with superb color reproductions.
Mainstreams of Modern Art: John Canaday (New York: Holt, Rinehart and
Winston, 1959).
A discussion of the major movements in painting during the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries.
Modern American Painting and Sculpture: Sam Hunter (New York: Dell, 1959).
Picasso, Fifty Years of His Art: Alfred H. Barr, Jr. (New York: Museum of
What Is Modern Painting?: Alfred H. Barr, Jr. (New York: Museum of Modern
Art, 1952).
An exceptionally clear, brief statement on the aims of modern painting.
Foundation)
16 Sculpture
many ways,
BECAUSE SCULPTURE AND PAINTING are related in so
and much
equally well to sculpture,
much in the preceding chapter applies
painting. But the two fields are by
of the material in this chapter applies to
between them lies in the
no means identical. The most obvious difference
two-dimensional and relies heavily on color with
form
fact that painting is
sculpture three-dimensional
and space being suggested or implied, while
is
chiefly
Thus, even though
from actual form and space.
and gains its effects
similar ideas, the final products-and
artists in the two fields may express
458
Six Sculptures of Women - 459
I hat field, the results can only be viewed from the front. But in relief, as in
works during any one period. It is the similarity of the basic interests and
problems of artists who are contemporay one with another and the fact
that they live in the same cultural milieu which accounts for the relation-
ship among their products. The sculpture and painting of any particular
period exhibits, of course, considerable diversity of expression. In the pre-
ceding chapter we mentioned that ^Vood's "American Gothic" and Picasso's
"Girl Before a Mirror" \vere painted only a few years apart and yet
are
Although some kinds of subject matter, such as figures, animals, and ab-
stractions, are equally appropriate for both painting and sculpture,
the latter
with satisfaction from all sides. Painters, in contrast, know that their work
will be seen only from the front.
century before Christ. The others are recent: all are the work of twentieth-
century sculptors. "Walking" by Alexander Archipenko, an American,
"Young Girl" by Reg Butler, an Englishman, "Woman Combing Her Hair"
Ameri-
by Julio Gonzalez, a Spaniard, "Aurora" by Saul Baizerman, also an
460 - Sculpture
with its title, dynamic and full of movement. (Courtesy of the sculptor)
Six Sculptures of Women - 461
the louver edge of the dress curves outward and serves as a transition to the
base the
base on which the figure stands thus extending around the entire
same line as that formed by the outward curve of the feet from the legs.
This gives the figure a pleasing stability. "Hera" is generalized and stylized
are feminine and, in a sense, intimate. While still impersonal, it has none
of the monumental character of "Hera." The figure is presented
not at one
also less feminine. The forins are lithe and taut, rather than full
but it is
putting
and rounded. The girl is engaged in a simple act of removing (or
concerns her. She
on) an article of clothing. Yet it is not this activity that
conveys the idea of great nervous energy, of tension and anxiety,
of restless-
(A) Left. In "Aurora" (1950-1957) by Saul Baizerman, the hammered copper forms are
full and rounded, the effect noble and serene. {The World House Galleries, New York)
(B) Right. The mood of Wilhelm Lehmbruck's "Standing Woman" (1910) is one of
pensiveness and introspection, but the treatment of the figure is idealized. {Collection,
the Museum of Modern Art, New York)
464 - Sculpture
artist asan innovator in the use of metal. His \\ork has been of enormous
influence on a younger generation of sculptors, for, as we shall see
later,
texture resulting from the tool marks covers it in its entirety. Furthermore,
kind of elemental energy pervades the figure as it background. rises from its
a
The method used to create the figure is not conducive to hard or sharp
edges. Consequently, softly rounded forms predominate and give a serene
and womanly effect.
Lehmbruck's "Standing Woman," with its full, rounded forms, has some
of the same quality of "Walking." Both are markedly
feminine. But whereas
Archipenko has used highly abstracted forms, Lehmbruck has used idealized
appeal, but
natural forms. We see a figure of great physical beauty and
she is more than that. She is a person of
sensitivity and modesty, and she
The nature of the various materials accounts for a part of the differ-
what is being conveyed. Or put another way, artists are drawn to the
par-
A SCULPTOR ON SCULPTURE
turn now to
For a firsthand discussion about sculpture and its problems, we
a statement by the sculptor Henry Moore.* He is
England's greatest living
siulptor, perhaps the greatest that country has ever had, and he is sensi-
tively aware of the complexities of the field. He has described both his feel-
ings about sculpture as well as his methods of working. As you read his
statement study the figures by him (Figs. 467A and B) to see the relation
This is what the sculptor must do. He must strive continually to think
of, and use, form in its full spatial completeness. He gets the solid shape, as
it were inside his head— he thinks of it, whatever its size, as if he were hold-
ing it completely enclosed in the hollow of his hand. He mentally visualizes
a complex form from all round itself; he knows while he looks at one
side
what the other side is like; he identifies himself with its center of gravity,
its mass, its weight; he realizes its volume, as the space
that the shape dis-
And the sensitive observer of sculpture must also learn to feel shape
simply as shape, not as description or reminiscence. He must, for example,
perceive an egg as a simple single solid shape, quite apart from its signifi-
cance as food, or from the literary idea that it will become a bird. And so
with solids such as a shell, a nut, a plum, a pear, a tadpole, a mushroom,
a mountain peak, a kidney, a carrot, a tree trunk, a bird, a bud, a lark, a
From these he can go on to appreciate more
lady-bird, a bulrush, a bone.
complex forms or combinations of several forms. . . .
on paper and make lines, tones and shapes with no conscious aim; but as
my mind takes in what is so produced, a point arrives where some idea be-
comes conscious and crystallizes, and then a control and ordering begin
to take place.
Or sometimes I start with a set subject; or to solve, in a block of stone
It might seem from what have said of shape and form that I regard
I
them as ends in themselves. Far from it. I am very much aware that associa-
tional, psychological factors play a large part in sculpture. The meaning and
466 - Sculpture
and intensity.
A great artist can only hope to suggest a few of his major concerns in
as short a statement as the one above: he can never "explain" all aspects
of his \vork by words. But Moore has made a number of
penetrating obser-
out at the same time that the sculptor must not "walk in two directions
at
occur." Moore insists that a sculptor must "learn to feel shape simply as
making them disappear, but rather to accept and live with them.
sense of
His sculpture, therefore, has in it a strong feeling of vitality and energy
from the incorporation of these opposing considerations into
his
resulting
work.
The Englishman tlciiiy Moore has used the same subject for two sculptures in different
materials. j t-u
grain of the wood. Ihe
c . .
provided with a fascinating comparison of the same basic idea carried out in
different materials and at different times in the artist's life. It is clear that
in both examples Moore has used the figure only as a point of departure:
the unity that he has created is sculptural rather than anatomical. In both
tributing its full share to the total result is the elm wood from which it is
carved. Because he has a deep respect for the materials with which he
works,
Moore not only revealed the grain but used it to accentuate the forms. He
has o^iven the whole sculpture an organic rhythm that is reminiscent not only
of wood but of the great forces of nature. We
are reminded of a great tree
trunk that has felt nature's own sculptural forces of wind, sand, and water.
The later figure is more abstracted, being composed of two masses that,
although related, are separated. But it is larger both in size and scale, and
we feel it is a more mature work. This, too, is clearly a figure, but at the
same time it is like a vast geography with crags, cliffs, and caves. It is as if
Moore, even more than in the earlier work, sees the relation between the
enduring nature of man and our physical world; or, perhaps, that we are
shaped by the forms of nature and, in turn, see nature in our own image.
PROCESSES IN SCULPTURE
There are three major processes by which sculpture can be executed— by
subtraction, by addition, or by replacement. The carving of stone is an
example of the first, a process in which unwanted material is cut away. The
construction of a sculpture by putting together bits of clay or by welding
together pieces of metal typifies the second. Sculpture cast into molds where
a more permanent material replaces that with which the sculptor worked
is the third major process. We will look at each in turn.
In the subtractive process the sculptor begins with an unformed mass and,
by the removal of material, brings into being the finished sculptural form.
The Materials. Stone and wood are the two major mediums used to
make sculpture by the subtractive process. In many respects they are notably
dissimilar. Stone hard and durable, inorganic and almost without limita-
is
tions of size. Indeed, many hundreds of years ago entire temples were carved
out of both in Egypt and in India. More recently, at Mount Rushmore
cliffs
in South Dakota, an entire mountain side has been carved into gigantic por-
Processes in Sculpture - 469
trait heads of famous American presidents. Wood, on the other hand, is rela-
tively soft and subject to decay. It is an organic material, showing through its
grain the fact that it came into being by a process of growth; furthermore, it
is limited in the size of the pieces obtainable. But both materials occur
pretty generally throughout the world, and both occur in diverse types.
century, white marble was especially favored because its fine grain made
possible carving it in great detail. But today sculptors are working in many
kinds of stones. In Chapter 6 we have already discussed the range of color,
texture, and hardness in wood.
The Tools and Processes. Chisels and hammers are the sculptor's basic
tools in the subtractive process, and these are different for wood and for stone.
The task of chipping and carving even a modest piece of sculpture not only
demands judgment but great stamina. Power tools have materially
artistic
lightened the physical effort that a sculptor must expend, but it is still
true that the resistance of the material itself has its effect on the result. The
artist is, in a real sense, pitted against the stone or wood on which he is
working, and the toughness of the material makes its own special demands.
This is one reason why there is so much less sculpture than painting. It is
also one explanation for a difference in the kinds of ideas that are treated.
Since stone and wood sculpture involves sustained physical effort and can-
not be "dashed off" like a pencil or water-color sketch, the subjects which
are treated tend to be monumental and deliberate, and the transitory and
trivial are avoided.
Direct carving as a process is not attracting many sculptors at the present
time. As we shall see further on in the chapter, they are now drawn more to
sculpture that involves either new materials such as plastics, or new proc-
esses such as welding and brazing. But, from an historic view, a large part
of the great sculpture in the world is of stone or wood.
But let us return to a consideration of process. When sculpture assumes
monumental proportions, it becomes necessary to make a carefully studied
small model in some easily workable material, such as wax, in which the
sculptor plans the basic organization of the sculpture. Because wood sculp-
tures are generally smaller in size and the material is more readily worked.
470 - Sculpture
preliminary models are less frequently used. Often the artist makes his
on the block of wood itself and begins carving.
initial sketch directly
a stone statue down a hill without breaking it. This drastic criterion of
sculptural excellence emphasizes the necessity of keeping in mind the solidity
both of the original mass of material and of the finished product. Michel-
angelo worked chiefly with stone, a fact which should be remembered, be-
cause his statement applies only to sculpture made of brittle material.
This
"rolling-down-the-hill" criterion of good sculpture grows out of the basic
structural properties of stone. The maxim thus leads to the conclusion
that
Carving in Stone and Wood. In Fig. 471 A we see the head of Michel-
angelo's heroic statue of David. He is shown as he prepares himself for
with the giant, Goliath, and the anticipatory tension is evident in
combat
his facial expressionand the taut tendons in his neck. For this work Michel-
angelo wisely chose Carrara marble, which is almost white and exceptionally
fine grained, because it shows to advantage both the
powerfully simple,
major forms and the subtle detail of the smaller features. Imagine how
its contrasting
different the effect would have been had he used granite with
dark and light crystals.
The head of Christ (Fig. 47 IB) is carved of wood but it has much of the
compactness associated with sculptures in stone. It, too, has strong basic
hair, and
forms which are enhanced by the detailed carving of the eyes, the
expression. Other-
the beard. But it was painted to emphasize its form and
wise, the wood's darkish color and its grain might have minimized the effec-
painted today (because we like to see the basic materials from which our
art
is allowed to tell their own story), the painting of both wood and
fashioned
Processes in Sculpture - 471
Stone sculpture was common Middle Ages and in many other periods
in the
and places. The Greeks and Romans, the Chinese and Japanese, and the
carvers of the South Pacific frequently added color to make their
forms and
These heads contrast with each other, however, less because of their ma-
than because each of the sculptors created forms appropriate to his idea.
terial
To convey this, the sculptor tilted the head strongly to the side and the
forms are attenuated, comparatively flat, and even concave. If you will com-
pare similar parts, such as the eyes or hair, in these two heads, you
will see
how vastly different they are in treatment. And as you look at each head as
a whole you can see the compelling consistency of the forms and their rela-
openness and slender forms, is well suited to wood. {The Brooklyn Museum)
Processes in Sculpture - 473
A comparison between stone and wood as materials is provided by John
Flannagan's "Jonah and the Whale" (Fig. 472A) and the carving from New
Ireland (Fig. 472B). The former is heavy, compact and "stoney"; the latter
is light, open, and comparatively delicate. With the Flannagan, one has the
feeling that he was as interested in the form and surface of the stone as a
piece of stone, as he was in its suggesting a whale. He has used the density
and weight of the appearance of the material to convey the feeling of mas-
siveness. The figure of Jonah is finely modeled, but simply too. Certainly
this sculpture could be rolled downhill with safety so carefully has the
nature of the stone been kept in the sculpture.
The carving from New Ireland shows a warrior with his shield sur-
rounded by four free, tipright forms. In spite of its openness, the general
form of the sculpture reflects the source of the material— a columnar tree
trunk. In order to give this sculpture a specific meaning to the group for
^vhich it was made, the sculptor has elaborated its surfaces with a variety of
intricate traditional symbols. To the New Irelanders, these symbols have a
significance which we, as products of a totally different culture, can only
partially understand. That, however, need not keep us from appreciating
the rich interplay of solids and voids of this carving, for the space is quite
as important as the solid masses it defines. Color has been used to intensify
symbolic meanings and to emphasize form and space as well as for the
sensuous enjoyment of color for its own sake. In its openness of treatment
the relation of the New Ireland carving to Harwood's "Winged Figure"
(Fig. 486B) is very apparent.
In sculpture that is built up, the expression of the sculptor's idea is achieved
through the joining or combining of small pieces of material. These mate-
rials may be very plastic, such as moist clay, which is worked by building
up the finished form with small pieces and modeling them into the desired
form. This may then be subjected to intense heat to produce a ceramic
known as terra cotta, or may be cast in metal or artificial stone. Other
474 - Sculpture
materials may be rigid or semi-rigid, such as metal wire, rods, and plates,
to a sculptor's hands and tools as clay: it yields readily to the slightest pres-
sure, and can be worked and re^vorked any number of times. More than
it
sculptor
most other materials, it seems to leave a vivid record of what the
did (clay sculpture has even been identified by the sculptor's
thumb-
print!)
We know that unfired clay is and that sculpture
a fragile material
possibilities are open to
in this material would have a short life. Several
a sculptor who wishes to make more durable a work
done in clay. If he
original
wishes only one permanent record of his work, he can fire the
in a kiln as was discussed under Ceramics in Chapter 7. To do this, however,
the piece must be so built that the clay in various parts does not vary much
built around a
in thickness. Large clay figures, for example, are generally
hollow core. Or the sculptor may make a plaster of Paris mold similar to
number of replicas of his piece, and
those discussed in Chapter 7, cast a
then fire them. (This, then, becomes cast sculpture, which is discussed more
fully in the following section.) In either case the result is usually referred to
sculpture as they do
forms predominate, for these come as naturally in clay
conspicuous variety. The
in pottery. But in Verrocchio's work, too, there is
softly rounded forms of the Madonna's face and hands and the Child's body
somewhat angular treatment of the clothing.
are accentuated by the crisp,
476 - Sculpture
Exquisitely fine detail contrasts with broadly handled, simple masses. The
relief by Verrocchio differs from the figure by Archipenko
in that the sur-
face has been richly painted and gilded to enliven the underlying forms.
Grippe's "The City" has been fired but not glazed, and therefore, as
from which it is made. Clay slabs, some flat, some curved, form the basis of
details such
the composition, and to these have been added the various
fascinatmg
as facial features, windows, hands, feet, dates, and symbols.
It is a
is buildings, then people, then history and tradition; then it is all of them
together.
and joined to produce the finished work. We have already discussed the
wrought-iron figure by Gonzalez and the fact that these techniques set in mo-
tion a method of working that has been attracting an increasing
number of
artists through the years. Succeeding sculptors have diversified not only the
materials but the methods of handling them and the effect secured. An im-
portant reason for the popularity of this method of working is that it
utilizes
both materials and processes of the machine age— iron, steel, copper,
and
sults that have been secured could have emerged only in the t^ventieth cen-
tury.
"Sanctuary" by Seymour Lipton (Fig. 477A) is made of a combination
of metals. Nickel, silver, and steel are all cold in color and highly reflective.
But they also vary slightly in color and the surfaces the silver resulting from
and nickel having been melted over the steel are richly varied. The title
of the sculpture
suggests protection or refuge from some threat. In the center
and shielded by large
we find a group of small geometric forms enclosed
organic shapes. The work suggests a plant-seeds perhaps ^vithin a pod.
The strong rhythmic forms are compelling: they become more open and
more fully curved at edges of the work. There is also a handsome interplay
with
between concave and convex forms. Compare Lipton's "Sanctuary"
thatof Albers (Fig. 324A). Two gifted artists have used the
same theme but
have pursued it in different mediums and with vastly different interpreta-
tions.
(A) Left. Seymour Lipton has used nickel-silver over steel in "Sanctuary" (1953). The
large, outerforms enclose and protect the cluster of small ones in the center. (Collection,
the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Blanchette Rockefeller Fund)
(B) Right. 'Interior Castle, Number 1" (1959) by James Rosati suggests a head or a
covering for the head such as a helmet. The sheet metal exterior provides protection
from a hostile world. {Gift of the Friends of the Whitney Museum of American Art,
Collection of Whitney Museum of American Art, Nezv York)
zontality of the metal strips is varied with smaller pieces that serve as verti-
cal contrasts. They give the impression of being patches which have been
added to insure security for the "castle." The title also suggests that, al-
though rough and forbidding on the outside, the inside, which, of course
we cannot see, is secure, elaborate, and attractive. There are many overtones
to this work. We know that increasingly, in the twentieth century, man is
developing an inner life where his secrets are carefully guarded. In the pres-
sure of the public world in which we move, with numerous forces competing
for our attention and loyalties through such mass media as radio and tele-
vision, we must have some place secure and protected into which we can
retreat. It is ideas such as these that seem implicit in Rosati's work.
mache is used for such things as masks and stage properties and is both
light
plastics, wire,
and tough. Sculptors are also using such mediums as mosaics,
and glass with ingenious and varied effect.
In this process a mold formed around the original model and into
is
it
is cast the material of which the final version of the sculpture is made.
Sculpture in Cast Metal. Building a model in clay is usually the
first
finished product is in
step toward sculpture in cast metal. In most cases, the
bronze and four examples are illustrated here, Butler's "Girl"
and Moore's
"Reclining Figure Benin head and Epstein's "Social Consciousness"
II," the
(Figs. 462A, 467B, 479, and 480). Bronze is hard, strong, and durable with
none of the softness of clay. Nonetheless, the cast piece may reflect the plastic
neither to clay
with metal in mind. Long, or extended, forms are suited
nor to stone. In both the Epstein and the Butler the arms and
legs are
slenderand attenuated. Yet in bronze, because of its great strength, they are
so often given
entirely justified. Bronze, too, can take intricate detail,
it is
complex surfaces.
Bronze castings are generally made by the lost wax or cire perdue proc-
The prepares a model
ess which dates back many hundreds of years. artist
a system of canals for the bronze to enter and the air to escape. The
form
with
core is held in place with iron nails. A plaster-silica mix, reinforced
The wax covering, and outer
wire, is used to build up the outer mold. core,
Processes in Sculpture - 479
^^,-iiv3.ni^^i^^
mold, together, are called the flask and when it is heated to 600 degrees Fahr-
enheit the wax melts and runs out through the canals. It is then heated to
1500 degrees Fahrenheit to burn out any remaining wax. What remains is
the core separated by a narrow space from the surrounding mold. Into this
free space the molten bronze is poured. The outlets enable the air to
escape
as the bronze fills the mold. When mold and core are re-
cool, the outer
moved and the final finish is given to the sculpture. Whereas in stone sculp-
ture there is only one "original," in bronze a number of replicas can be
made.
The casting of sculpturean old process which was employed by such
is
bronze casting was developed to a high level, and the head in Fig. 479 is a
superb example from the sixteenth century. Bronzes such as this exemplify a
court style and were dedicated to the ruler's glorification. Like most African
sculpture, this example is distorted for expressive purposes, especially
apparent in the forward thrust of the lower part of the face. The forms that
connect the head covering with the ornament around the neck give the piece
a simple basic shape. But our attention is directed chiefly to the features,
which are full and bold in form and strong, regal, and imperious in effect.
480 - Sculpture
bronze by
Consciousness" (Fig. 480) is a recent important
"Social
the controversial American-born
English sculptor Sir Jacob Epstein. Planned
keep-
for in size and monumental in effect. In
an outdoor setting, it is large
with compassion, yet it is not in the
in- with its theme, the work is filled
a magnificent piece of design:
there are majestic
lea'st sentimental. It is
covered with another. In some instances gold leaf is applied. Many of the
Victorian statues which ornamented the lawns of old houses were made of
cast iron. Julius Schmidt's "Iron Sculpture" (Fig. 481) is also of cast iron,
but there its resemblance to the iron sculpture of the nineteenth century
ceases. The fact that itsand accounts for the granular surfaces.
was cast in
In form it is reminiscent of a table for it clearly has a top and legs, but each
plane is inventively and richly textured. Schmidt has used machined forms
in preparing his model, but these occur next to one another in an
almost
random fashion. In making the casting he has not wanted sharp edges
on forms or smooth As can be seen, there are holes in the casting
surfaces.
where the metal did not run; there are projecting slivers of iron where it
ran into fissures in the mold. But he has given us fascinatingly varied
sur-
Sculpture cast in metal is attractive to the artist because the result is very
derful sculptures have been melted down for re-use, sometimes to make
cannons. But because of its many advantages, metal will continue to be an
important sculptural medium.
Sculpture Cast in Other Materials. "Creature of the Deep" (Fig. 399B)
by Leo Amino is made of a material new in sculptural history— plastic— to
^vhich the artist has given distinguished tieatment. He first made a model
of the inner form, and a black plastic was poured into the mold made from
the model. Around this a new form was built with clay and a second set
of molds was prepared for the transparent plastic. The result is a casting
within a casting. Plastic is a material which offers new possibilities for the
it has the same general characteristics as stone— heaviness, hardness and dur-
ability. Plaster is also used for casting sculpture. While it lends itself to the
making of precise copies and can be given a variety of finishes, it is fragile
modern concepts of space, and the forms that are characteristic of our cen-
tury. We have already looked at a number of recent works, and the final sec-
tion of this chapter will deal briefly with several others to extend further
an understanding of the many directions taken by modern sculpture.
it was a radical work at that time. Several years later a copy was brought to
this country for exhibition, and customs inspectors, declaring that it was not
art at all, demanded duty on it as a piece of metal. The shape bears no literal
484 - Sculpture
(A) Lejt. In "Integral" (1959) Isamu Noguchi has used fine-grained Italian marble in a
simple, compact, form on which there are subtle surfaces and details. {Giji of the Friends
of the Whitney Museum of American Art, Collection of Whitney Museum of American
Art, New York)
(B) Right. The geometrically simplified and abstracted forms in "Man with a Guitar"
(r.1915) by Lithuanian-born Jacques Lipchitz are characteristic of much Cubist sculpture.
{Collection, the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Mrs. Simon Guggenheim Fund)
486 - Sculpture
Nevelson, incorpo-
(A\ Left "Dark Shadows" (1957), an assemblage in wood by Louise
shapes
gly varied forms. It is painted a flat black which unifies the d-erse
aLs in rigui
Museum, Newark, Ne.
dark mystery' (Courtesyof Tke Newark
ancrsSls a'kind of
wood. A poetic geometry is evoked by the rhythm of the forms and the
shadows they cast.
But whereas the New Ireland carving was symmetrical and generally
static, "Winged Figure," in keeping with its title, is alive with movement.
The forms \vhich move upward are flamelike in shape: their pointed ends
seem to pierce the space they are traversing. The eye is intrigued into ex-
ploring the various forms and voids which have a remarkable coherence and
similarity.
tivism which developed shortly after World War I. Based on "an optimistic
acceptance of scientific and technological progress," Constructivists regarded
space and time as the essential elements of real life and, therefore, of art.
They must cease trying to represent the surface
also believed that artists
purity in "Linear Construction." The forms are sharp, clear, and open.
488 - Sculpture
"Rectangular, Number 5" (1952), a precise, painted steel construction by Sidney Gordin,
ischiefly concerned witli tlie geometric definition of spatial areas. Strong colors are
used
on many parts of the sculpture. (Courtesy, Grace Borgenicht Gallery, New York)
480
The tension achieved only in ways that are clearly visible: no psycho-
is
air-age spectre of destruction and annihilation, and that the same discoveries
But not all recent work is and we will close this chapter with
abstract,
(Fig. 491). In her full
Jose de Creeft's deeply expressive "The Cloud"
vigor the mother supports and sustains the tiny child she holds and caresses.
The forms are appropriately full, rounded, and soft, and like a cloud they
cloud and
seem to float because de Creeft has seen a relationship between a
a small but noble sculpture that tells us with
mother-child love. This is
CONCLUSION
Sculpture one of the major fields of art and has been important in
is
great diversity-in
every great culture. Recent work has been marked by
mediums, in methods of working, in content. Like painting, much of it is
abstracted or non-objective. The human image, which during
man's
either
history has been the subject of greatest interest to the sculptor, is
now
exhibiting a
used only occasionally. But sculpture in recent years has been
remarkable vitality. New forms and techniques are being explored, new
will continue its
ideas are being conveyed. It seems likely that sculpture
full flood. But what-
explorations into new areas for these tendencies are at
Conclusion - 491
Further readings:
include brilliant
lishing ventures ever attempted. The published volumes
by an
and authoritative statements on all forms of art, including sculpture,
international group of scholars.
492 - Sculpture
A Histoiy of Western Art: John Ives Sewall (New York: Holt, Rinehart and
Winston, 1960).
A history of art that integrates architecture, painting, and sculpture in its
Modern Art, A Pictorial Anthology: Charles McCurdy, ed. (New York: Mac-
millan, 1958).
Eight authorities have collaborated on assembling the extensive pictorial
material on modern art and in writing the concise and effective commen-
taries.
Looking into Art: Frank Sieberling (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
1959).
A general appreciation text in which sculpture, along with other art areas,
are interestingly and intelligently discussed.
17 Arclxitectuire
-
ness, and judged by that standard it is probably the most extravagant build-
ing ever constructed.
In striking contrast, the buildings of Rockefeller Center in New York
concrete, and stone-house offices, stores,
City (Fig. 494)-thin shells of steel,
493
494 - Architecture
restaurants, and broadcasting studios. (Compare the size of the two develop-
ments in the dra^ving below.) Many thousands of people work in the build-
ings, and thousands more enter them every day. They were built to be used.
not by mummies waiting for eternity, but by television and radio stars,
executives, secretaries, janitors, office boys, and the visiting public. Thus
the human needs which the Pyrainid and these skyscrapers were constructed
different. However, our concern in this chapter is
not
to meet are vastly
only with human needs but with organization of space and with problems of
materials and methods of construction and ho^v they relate to and are in-
ture thus combines the highly expressive and the directly utilitarian, the
chapters in this book have included many examples. Here, the attention
will be directed to the general problems of architecture, its design, construc-
tion, and expressiveness. Let us begin by looking at a form that has evolved
only in recent years.
FIVE SKYSCRAPERS
Skyscrapers are an American art form. Representing new conquests of
skyscraper "look" like? Does the architect, like the painter, have
problems
One of the early skyscrapers was the Wainwright Building (Fig. 497)
in St. Louis; though it was built in 1891, it still has a refreshingly "modern"
one of America's great architects,
look. It was designed by Louis Sullivan,
who was the first to realize that the skeletal frame of a skyscraper should be
reflected in the design-that a tall office building should
look like what it
and
isand not like a Greek temple or a Gothic cathedral. Sullivan's sensible
revolutionary ideas were temporarily rejected in the stifling wave
of eclecti-
WM»8 si,
(B) Right. A by Hood, the New York News Building (1929), makes use
later building
of precise machined forms in its stark vertical treatment. (Courtesy oj the
New York
Daily News)
Five Skyscrapers - 499
space and economy, was built primarily of steel. Still Hood decided it should
look like a Gothic to^ver; hence, even though everyone knows the shell of
a modern building is hung on a steel frame, the stonework is designed to
look like masonry construction. Yet the slender piers of stone could not
possibly stand if they were built apart from the steel frame. Near the top
of the tower, where the first setback occurs, the designer (foUo^ving the
model) has introduced a series of flying buttresses which, in the original,
resisted the thrust of the arches in the center. Here again the forms are
false; there is no reason for flying buttresses in skyscraper construction.
However, the building does possess a large measure of attractiveness.
One cotild apply to it, with favorable results, all the principles of design.
Hood also designed the New York News Building (Fig. 498B), which
was built six years after the Chicago Tribune Building. It is definitely in
the Sullivan tradition, but in starker terms. Here, in bold and simple forms,
the verticality of the skyscraper is proclaimed, the bands of masonry are
clearly nonsupporting, and the space between is given over to the windows
and the medium brown panels that separate them between floors. On the
shafts themselves, there is no detail; their great effectiveness comes from the
design inherent in the structure. The facing is light in value, almost white,
and presents a dazzling contrast with the sky, especially on sunny days. The
window shades in the entire building are a soft rust color, and these provide
building itself as a basis for the design. As we look at some of the skyscrapers
designed after it, we see how the innovations introduced by Hood have been
further developed. We have become used to them and accept the absence
of human scale and the use of machined forms in recent buildings as a mat-
ter of course.
Lever House
(Fig. 500) which is situated on New York's Park Avenue. It was designed
or "notch" rises the main mass of the building. The tower occupies less
than twenty-five percent of the site so that it stands free and uncrowded.
impressiveness, was erected diagonally across the street from Lever House
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(B) Right. At night the entire building glows with warm light.
Then the glass sheathing
become especially apparent.
of the building and the horizontal division of the floors
building— a thirty-eight story cliff of glass and metal. The ground floor is en-
closed with large sheets of glass. Above that are closely spaced ribs and bands
of bronze and between them tinted glass. The color of the building is rich
and warm, the forms are of the utmost severity and refinement; the effect is
The horizontal divisions of the building, the floors, then become more
prominent, but the effect of precision and refinement is not lessened. Mies
has had as his dictum, "Less is more," meaning that more is gained than
lost by severity and austerity. The Seagram Building is proof of the validity
of that doctrine.
Lever House, the Seagram Building, Philip Johnson's house (Chapter 1),
and the United Nations Headquarters (Chapter 2) exemplify the Interna-
tional Style in architecture, which is a major trend today. Rejecting the
picturesque, it develops expressive shapes from the functions the buildings
serve. Structure is clearly stated and the surfaces are clean and even stark.
Rather than looking back, as does eclecticism, the International Style readily
accepts the present and finds within it the basis for an esthetic that expresses
these times.
The design of skyscrapers has changed considerably since they first
became possible in the closing years of the nineteenth century. The sky-
scraper continues to be a vital art form in the technological age, and as our
ideas change and new technical discoveries are made, their design, too, will
change, and architects will continue to give us structures which embody
these ideas and discoveries.
ARCHITECTURAL CONSTRUCTION
In general, architecture has three components directly comparable to the
human body: the skeleton or frame which supports the building; the skin
which encloses it; and the equipment or "vital organs" through which air,
light, sound, and sanitation are controlled. In early architecture little dis-
tinction was made between skeleton and skin, and little provision was
needed for equipment; today each of these components has been the sub-
ject of careful study, although in some recent work the distinction between
skeleton and skin is again disappearing as new materials and techniques
make possible new methods of construction.
504 - Architecture
joints at right angles to the curve (see the diagram on page 510).
This
defines the true or radial arch, but the term has come to describe any
structure with curved elements.
4. Truss, in which members such as beams and bars are assembled into a
1. Bearing wall construction, in which the wall supports not only itself
but the floors and roof as well: skeleton and skin are one and the same
thing. For example, in a log cabin or a solid masonry building, the
the walls are the structure. Two specialized variants deserve mention.
Monolithic construction, in which the material is continuous-that
is, not jointed or pieced together-as in concrete structures (Figs. 520A
and 540).
Structural skin construction, in which sheet materials (such as ply-
wood or sheets of metal) are placed and held under stress to assume a
structural form. Skin and skeleton are fused, but they are more or
less continuous thin, sheet materials rather than
"chunks," and their
shape exploits their potential strength. Typical examples are the shell
of an egg or turtle; a gas-filled balloon; silos, grain elevators, and oil
architecture in terms of the four major materials that have shaped it-
stone, concrete, wood, and steel. The systems of construction have grown
out of the properties of these and their use, and the various systems listed
above will be discussed in greater detail as they relate to the different ma-
terials.
BUILDING IN STONE
Most of the world's great architecture is in stone, because until recently
this was the material used in practically all buildings where monumentality
and permanence were desired. Thus the stone tradition has permeated much
of our architectural thinking and has determined much of our taste and
judgment.
To say that the history of architectureembraced entirely in stone
is
structures is not accurate, for this neglects the remarkable work of the
Romans in concrete and many structures of wood and brick throughout
the world. Nevertheless, the architectural tradition of western Europe, our
major source of knowledge and ideals, is one of stone, and it is probably
safe to venture the assertion that the structural and esthetic possibilities of
stone architecture have been more completely developed than have those of
simple
(A) Above. Even in its partially-ruined state, the Parthenon (454-438 b.c), with its
Post-and-Lintel
Built about 2500 years ago (454-438 B.C.) as a temple to the goddess Athena
Parthenos, become synonymous with perfection in art in the minds
it has
of many people. The illustrations (Figs. 506A and B) of both the building
and a model show the building in its present state and the way it looked
^vhen originally built. The temple has suffered a large number of vicissitudes
(including a gun-po^vder explosion when it was used as an arsenal by the
Tinks), and today only a part of the columns remain standing and most
of the sculpture has been removed. Even so, in its present state it retains a
captivating magnificence.
The plan shows the rectangular simplicity of the building— it was
surrounded by a colonnade with a second row of columns at both ends.
Of the two rooms composing the interior, the larger housed an ivory and
gold statue of Athena; the smaller was a treasury. The black areas designate
the parts of the building that were still standing before it ^vas partially re-
stored (Fig. 506A). The plan shows that the temple was not designed to hold
large groups of worshipers. Instead, the religious festivities took place
mainly outside the building.
The Parthenon, like any great flowering, did not emerge full-blown.
That it had awooden parentage can be observed from a study of the build-
ing itself. Columns such as those surrounding the building are a natural
form in wood, for a single tree will provide a column. Their translation
into stone is less natural because they are built up of a number of separate
pieces called drums. The triglyphs— those rectangular forms that appear di-
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508 - Architecture
rectlyabove the columns in the frieze— are modified beam ends. The Greeks
turned to stone because it was a more durable material and because
Greece itself is blessed with some of the finest marbles in the world. The
Parthenon is constructed of Pentelic marble, which becomes a rich glowing
yellow as it ages.
This can be readily demonstrated by standing two books on end and bridg-
ing the gap with a third. Through this system builders and architects have
given us some of the most distinguished buildings in the world. The
Parthenon, however, reveals one of the major limitations of post-and-lintel
construction when stone is used. Notice that the columns (posts) are set
relatively close together, not necessarily because the designers, Ictinus and
Callicrates, wanted them that way, but because stone lintels of great length
posts can be high because the weight above merely compresses them.
Lintels, however, are another matter: the upper half is in compression;
cately curved capitals; the columns are chaimeled to make them seem more
slender, and the capitals form an admirable transition between the vertical
columns and the horizontal entablature. The architrave, adorned with
bronze shields, acts as a good foil for the sculptured panels in the frieze,
above which is the cornice. Architrave, frieze, and cornice make up the
entablature just as the shaft and capital make up the column. Surmounting
all is the pediment filled with sculpture subdy adapted to the triangular
Building in Stone - 509
proportions are exquisite; the glistening Pentelic marble of which the tem-
superlative
ple is built is one of the Avorld's finest building stones; the
sculpture both inside and outside the building, originally painted with
vibrant color, enriched it immeasurably. Yet none of these alone can explain
why the Parthenon is symbol of the beautiful. It is a basic fact, however,
a
that every part is inextricably related to the whole design. Beauty is often
considered a matter of harmonious, functional relationships, of adjusting
each part to its neighbors through careful refinements, and the Parthenon
shows many remarkable refinements.
Of the many ingenious devices employed by the architects, only those
Some of the major ones are listed below; the optical illusions are in one
column and the refinements used to overcome them in the other.
A building rising straight up from the The whole front of the Parthenon is
enrichment of the capitals, moldings, and sculpture all give it an air of re-
^B^V^B^
VOUSSOICS,—
Diagram of the round arch. Arches
\^Sr ^^^k
^K^ ^'^a m^l^e possible the spanning of large
^M Vmkust^ ^B openings with small pieces of mate-
IH H
H
H
rial. Their dynamic nature is con-
veyed not only by the lively form
but by the thrusts which develop in
this type of construction.
ciple of the arch, but they made little use of it. Perhaps the arch form was
incompatible with their ideals of beauty, concerned as they were with
harmony and repose. It was the Romans, their immediate followers in the
march of architecture, who developed the possibilities of arch construction.
Indeed, was the development of the arch in its varied forms that was one
it
form are still referred to as Roman. Its development was intimately related
to the development of the Romans as a people. We know that they were
more aggressive and materialistic than the Greeks. Their commercial activi-
buildings with larger, more flexible interiors. The arch provided a structural
basis for such buildings, but the Romans found other uses for it as well.
The Roman aqueduct (a.d. 10) at Sego\ia, Spain, shows clearly the use of small units of
materials in arch construction and its restless dynamic character.
shaped pieces of materials (voussoirs) with joints at right angles to the curve.
Stone is a material uniquely suited to arch construction because all material
in an arch is in compression. Stone can stand great pressure and is, of course,
extremely durable.
The arch, by its nature, is subject to lateral thrust or spreading. This
may be easily demonstrated: arch a piece of paper, and then slo^vly bring
the weight of your hand to bear on top of it. The arch, while dropping in
the center, spreads at the sides. These movements, indicated by ihc arrows
in the diagrams, are characteristic of all arches. Fiiiilicniiorc, the ll.iucr die
arch, the greater the tendency to spread. Tall, pointed, or parabolic arches
show less tendency to spread and therefore need less support. To counteract
a buttress.
The difference in effect between post-and-lintel and arch construction
is apparent you compare the Parthenon with the Basilica o£ St. Peter (Figs.
if
with
513A and B) and the aqueduct at Segovia. Whereas the former,
is static and reposed, the last two
its balanced verticality and horizontality,
a barrel cut lengthwise. The barrel vault has the characteristics of the sim-
ple, round arch. There is the same tendency to spread, the same need for
the
support at the place where the lateral thrust makes for weakness. In
interior of the Basilica of Peter the voluminous spatial quality of a large
St.
barrel vault is evident. Here the surface is enriched with coffers, depressed
rectangular forms that lighten the weight of the vault and
supply interest
cross-vaulting results and the support can be localized rather than having
be continuous as it is in a barrel vault. The intricate
development of com-
to
discussed in the succeeding section on the pointed
arch.
plex vaulting is
Usually, but not always, this is taken care of by properly designed buttresses
which may become a decorative feature of the exterior.
The dome of the Basilica of St. Peter crowns this largest of all churches.
impressive both
Here, the intent was to construct a form which would be
is a magnificent
asan exterior and interior part of the total structure, and it
after his
dominating element. Designed by Michelangelo and completed
513
St. Peter's Basilica in Rome is one of the most impressive monuments in Christendom.
(A) Above. The chief feature of the exterior is the dome (begun
1564) designed by
Michelangelo. A spacious plaza enclosed with a colonnade provides a setting for the
Basilica. (Alinari)
(B) Below. In this view looking up the nave, one can see the base of the dome and
the main altar beneath it. Many designers worked in St. Peter's and its construction
extended over a long period. (Alinari)
514 - Architecture
of an outer and inner shell, the latter 137 feet 6 inches across. The base
of the dome nearly 250 feet above the floor; the distance from the floor
is
story building! In the interior, the altar is centered under the dome, the
lower part of which can be seen on the plate of the interior. This
dome is
vision or physical
feeling of spaciousness because no supports interfere with
movement. A strong feeling of centrality is also produced-the place im-
mediately beneath the center of the dome becoming the point of focus.
that the people, most of whom ^vere illiterate, might know more of the life
of Christ, of holy men and ^vomen, and might visualize and feel more of the
great glory of their God, Biblical incidents and stories from the lives of the
saints were depicted in richly carved stone and glowing stained-glass win-
dows. Thus these glass ^vindo^vs and stone images which are an integral
part of the Gothic style are there, not as technical flourishes, but as direct
answers to deeply rooted human interests and needs.
Still another factor affecting the construction and the appearance of
Gothic cathedrals ^vas climate. The Greeks did not have to build against the
rigors of bitter winter weather; they took advantage of the mild climate by
erecting buildings with open porticoes and colonnades. But farther north
the architects had to reckon with severe weather. Northern France has
periods of driving rains and snow with long, gloomy days. This coldness,
wet, and gloom had to be kept out of the buildings, not only physically but
psychologically, and architects made windows richly colored so that the dull
light from the outside ^vas transformed into warm, glowing
o tones.
In Rheims we find the pointed arch used— a form that is found in all
IH
^^g }g/g the as for the but,
due to the difference in form, the
^M thrust is less.
thrust than a round arch and greater flexibility. Whereas a round arch of
a particular width can only be a certain height, a pointed arch can be readily
varied by changing the curve of the sides.
But the Gothic from being characterized merely by details,
style, far
•If
This interior view of Rlieims Cathedral, looking from the clioir toward tlie main door-
way, sliows the soaring and lofty nave. Here the vaulting reaches a height of 124 feet
above the floor. The rose window, filled with richly glowing stained glass, dominates
the nave. Note the continuity among the forms of the structural system. {Photograph by
Ciraudon)
518 - Architecture
vaulting. in the picture of the interior that the nave, or central aisle,
Note
of the cathedral is defined by two corresponding series of piers which sup-
port the vaulting over the nave and the side aisles. By following two
of the
adjoining piers (the one with the pulpit on it and the one this side of it
are the clearest) up into the vaulting, it can be seen that these, with the
bay)
two corresponding ones across the nave, define a rectangular area (or
and that the outer edges of the bay in the vaulting are defined by pointed
arches which connect the piers. In addition, arches are sprung
across the
bay dividing it into four areas which are filled in with masonry. The groin
Gothic buildings are not inert. Rather, they are structures in which
the forces and counter forces that reside within the structure are given
exciting and esthetic form. The thrust-counter-thrust that exists in nearly
every part of Gothic cathedrals means that they are in a delicate and amaz-
ingly complicated state of equilibrium. Theoretically, at least, the removal
of one of the arches would mean the collapse of the whole building, be-
cause every part depends on every other part for support. Thus, the term
organic is often used to describe the Gothic style.
^
^^
g^
P--—^
$T^
.-,
— i
y
-.1?
lii
\9.mm
ti ffi
Hi
ffl
si
Plan of the Pantheon.
\;-J\ .
•<
'^:j-* SI l« («
'i^S>. w,
dome is a perfect half-sphere which rests upon a circular wall. There is only
one entrance, and the remainder of the circular wall is enlivened and
adorned with seven large niches. The light comes from a single source, a
great "eye" or opening 40 feet across in the center of the dome. Built dur-
ing the years a.d. 120-124, it was originally constructed as a temple to all
Structures such as the Pantheon differ significantly from the stone build-
ings discussed in the previous section in that they are monolithic (the mate-
522 - Architecture
are
rial is homogeneous and continuous) whereas masonry constructions
in the finished struc-
built of relatively small pieces of stone which, even
up
concrete structures of the Romans
ture, retain separate identities. The
than on precise
depended for structural strength on bulk and mass rather
by uniting cement
knowledge of material. Concrete is a conglomerate made
the like. It withstands
and water with sand, broken stone, slag, cinders, and
great compression, very little tension, also, like stone, does not rot or cor-
plastic."
Ferro-concrete
been a notable
As ferro-concrete technology has developed, there has
tendency toward increased lightness and flexibility.
Thus some bridges use
strong structural elements.
thin slabs of ferro-concrete shaped to become
for large unobstructed
Thin, curved shells have been found highly efficient
the pictures of the Trans World Airlines
Flight
open Look ahead at
spans.
Center (Figs. 538B through 540A and B)-certainly
one of the most exciting
Pantheon, it is chiefly of
and significant buildings of this century. Like the
lighter. Not only did architect
concrete: unlike it, however, it is much
about the
Saarinen and the engineers who worked with him know more
strength of concrete, but metal reinforcing rods are
embedded in it to pro-
Pre-stressed Concrete
its effectiveness
is only in tension or in compression is limited in
efficient
BUILDING IN WOOD
The plentiful supply of wood in the United States has made it our most
(the skin) of wood, brick, or plaster is added; and the interior wall finish is
a type of
applied. Called balloon jraming or light frame structure, this
is
Its mvention
skeleton frame construction developed in Chicago in the 1830's.
^vas an important factor in the rapid development of the land beyond the
Alleghenies, for it permitted much more rapid construction than did the
in ^vhich the
older heavy frame structure. In contrast to masonry structure
closely related
wall is both load-bearing and surfacing, balloon framing is
to steel construction in its separation of structure and surfacing. Wood is
Lamination of Wood
The wood, discussed in Chapter 6, reveal its potentiali-
characteristics of
stronger
thereby greatly simplified. In relation to its weight, it is probably
consider-
than any known material. It can be a moldable "skin" material
of
Plywood sheets are not the only new development in wood. Related to
these are larger laminated structural members in wood, such as beams and
trusses, of great size and strength. A beam, customarily, is a large single piece
of wood (or metal) much longer than it is ^vide or thick and used horizon-
tally to bridge the gap between upright supports; thus, it is the same as a
lintel. Beams of single pieces of wood are limited in length and known
strength, but lamination makes possible beams and other structural mem-
bers of increased size and efficiency. Like plywood, these structural members
become precise building materials.
A example of the use of laminated wood structural members
striking
occurs in St. Paul's Lutheran Church of Sarasota, Florida (Fig. 527A) by
the architect Victor Lundy. Most of the interior is of wood, a material of
warmth and rich surface. It is the form of the ceiling that gives this interior
its distinctiveness: the laminated beams suggest lower branches of great
trees that diminish in size as they ascend. The interior conveys the impres-
appropriate for a church. Note that the supports meet at regular intervals
in the ceiling like groin lines in Gothic vaulting, except that here the
curve is reversed. Note in addition that as they approach the top of the
ceiling, and as the load they support becomes less, they become smaller.
Forms of this shape and lightness are possible in wood only through lamina-
tion.
-i<KI>i>^
Diagrams of trusses. The triangle, the basic unit of all trusses, is strong and rigid. Left.
Howe truss. Right. Bowstring truss.
shape without altering the length of one or more of its sides. Originally
made of single pieces of timber (later of metal), trusses are now also made
of laminated wood. Although the principle of the truss is remarkably sim-
ple, it has only been developed precisely Avithin recent times.
The view of Taliesin West (Fig. 527B) is a striking example of wood
used to give a monumental effect. The forms at the left are the ends of large
Building in Wood - 527
trusses which extend over a workroom. The organic texture of the wood is
in handsome contrast to the brightly colored stone in the base below and the
strong forms of both the wood and the masonry are suited admirably to the
landscape. Like all of the work of Frank Lloyd Wright, this building is char-
acterized by its adaptation to its site and by the vigor and ingenuity of the
forms.
The developments mentioned above only touch on the advances made
with wood as a building material: new possibilities have been discovered,
and previous limitations have been overcome. Science and art together are
Steel-Cage Construction
It is only logical that the use of steel was first channeled into steel-cage
construction (Fig. 520C), which is found in most tall buildings. Like balloon
framing, was also developed in Chicago— the first multistory steel frame
it
thick at the base. One of the early Chicago skyscrapers, the sixteen-story
Monadnock Building, constructed in 1891, is of stone construction and the
ground-floor walls are six feet thick. If a stone structure thirty stories high
were to be built, most of the space on the ground and lower floors would
be taken up ^vith ^valIs and supports. With steel-cage construction, the sup-
ports take surprisingly little space, and steel buildings resist the forces of
u ind and earthquakes with a resilience that stone structures do not have.
Steel-cage construction, like the older post-and-lintel, leads to basically
rectangular architecture. Large contemporary structtires are usually assem-
bled from many prefabricated parts. The result is a repetitive grid of
identical upright and horizontal forms. To make this iniified, but essentially
monotonous, framework into a humanly satisfying work of art is a challenge
to architects. There are, however, other ways of using steel.
completed state with the walls and doors obscuring the great free stretch
of the roof supports. This hangar is planned ^vith berths for four DC-8's.
covered by a stainless steel dome over 400 feet in diameter and is thus one
of the largest clear-span roofs in the world. Even more remarkable is the
fact that the roof is retractable. It is divided radially into eight 45-de-
gree segments, six being moveable and two stationary. In opening the
roof, three moveable segments on each side move on a series of motorized
carriages imder the fixed sections. Only tAvo and one-half minutes are re-
quired to open or close the roof. The main support for the dome is pro-
vided by a cantilever space frame— a triangular truss visible on the right—
which projects 205 feet over the auditorium. This, too, is spectacular con-
structionand it is easy to grasp how unprecedented flexibility is provided
by such a structure for concerts under the stars on clear siniimer evenings
or hockey games on cold winter nights.
Diagram of Mackinac Bridge. The over-all length of the bridge is slightly in excess of
one and one-half miles.
Between the abutments which anchor the cables the distance is 8344 feet-
over one and one-half miles— making it the longest over-all span in the
ivorld. \Vhen we realize that the road^vay of this tremendous structure
is supported by two relatively thin cables, we realize the audacity of con-
struction which is made possible by tension construction.
The dynamic state of tension of these bridges is illustrated by San Fran-
cisco's Golden Gate Bridge. With a central span of 4200 feet (400 feet longer
than the Mackinac Bridge, but the distance bet^veen the abutments is al-
most 2000 feet less), the distance of the road^vay at the center of the span
from the water below may fluctuate as much as ten feet under varying con-
ditions of weather and load.
the Lincoln Electric Company (Fig. 534A). By this process, two steel mem-
bers can be joined so that the joint is as strong as any portion of the mem-
bers themselves. It can be seen that this is superior to riveting, where, in a
sense, a joint is no stronger than the weakest rivet. Many of the recent
skyscrapers are arc-^velded structures, but the potentialities thus far have
been explored chiefly by the aeronaiuical engineer in airplane construc-
tion. Other common examples of welded structures of the "stressed skin"
534 - Architecture
(A) Above. In the Lincoln Electric Company in Cleveland, Ohio, "tree-form" welded
steelframes are used, giving a handsome continuity to the forms. (Amman and Whitney)
(B) Below. These stressed-skin, steel Hortonspheres in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, are
not only arresting in form but also extremely efficient in terms of use of materials and
the space enclosed. [Standard Oil Co. (N.J.), Photograph by Webb]
Environmental Control in Building - 535
type are the Hortenspheres seen around oil plants (Fig. 534B). The
geo-
them assume curves of great beauty; the scale of the welter of pipes in the
For most of man's history stone has been the great architectural mate-
rial with which he has built. But the stone tradition
from which came so
laro^e a part of our great structures has now been set aside;
steel is the build-
needs
ing material that provides the twentieth century with the structures
it
his share and each determines in his way the form of the
building.
Avorld's work of the twentieth century is possible only because we can regu-
light, sound control, and air conditioning is adequately provided for, vastly
matter.
Significant architecture, however, not only meets the physical needs of
its occupants, but expresses their social and political outlook, their spiritual
aspirations, their esthetic values. In Part I we analyzed human needs in
tecture and saw how forms were developed to meet these needs. In Part III
character. This is the basic factor, but, in nearly all, the forms have been
also have sculpture, paintings, and ornament that arouse spiritual responses
a space age, and the airplane typifies both our great technological achieve-
ments and our urge to explore further our world and our universe. Travel
by plane has bought its particular problems and unique solutions: air
terminals, hangars, control to^vers, runways are ne^v in both the functions
they serve and the forms they are given to serve these functions.
airfields in the world. It serves as the major gateway of that city for inter-
national travelers and for long-haul domestic flights. It also serves as a center
for much air freight. Although size and complexity are no criteria of ex-
cellence, they are often impressive. Idlewild is the product of the work
of hundreds of architects, planners, engineers, and airlines' owners and
Land and Building Planning - 537
The plan of Idlewild Airport in New York City shows the great scale and complexity
needed in a modern air-terminal complex. (Reprinted from Architectural Record, Sep-
tember 1961, ©
1961 by F. W. Dodge Corporation with all rights reserved)
parking lots with a capacity for 6000 cars. It is called Terminal City.
The great runways needed for modern aircraft cut across the plan in
long straight lines. These, along with the service runways, practically en-
circle Terminal City. Although on one side the terminals have access to
the runways, on the other they are serviced by auto roads that bring and
538 - Architecture
(A) Above. The sweeping roof of the Pan American Terminal (1960) at New York City's
Idlewild Airport is hung from cables that radiate from the center. Tippetts, Abbett,
architects; Ives, Turano, and Gardner, assoc. architects. {Photograph
McCarthy, Stratton,
by Pan American)
(B) Beloiu. The exterior view of the TWA Flight Center (1962) at Idlewild Airport
shows the soaring forms of the vaults which roof it. Eero Saarinen was the architect.
(Photograph by ©
Ezra Stoller Associates)
take away the passengers. the north of the terminals and in the lower
To
left-hand part of the plan are the giant hangars and
maintenance buildings.
center, animal facility, medical building, bus garage, and telephone build-
ing- . .
in planning.
As Idlewild grew, various plans were developed. The one finally
adopted calls for a decentralized plan with some of the major airlines con-
structing terminals of their own, other smaller airlines joining together
in other terminals. The disposition of these, along with the vast
arrival
building, is in a generally oval form and alongside of them are the runways.
By decentralizing the plan, the passenger is enabled to check in at a point
near the aircraft he will take. Had a central terminal been constructed, the
distances from check-in points to planes would have become too great.
Some basic requirements for individual terminals were set, but other-
wise individual companies have been free to vary their buildings in design
and construction to solve the functional and esthetic problems of air travel
as they saw them. The result is buildings of considerable variety, but
they
building itself. It is oval in shape and from the main area of the building,
to build forms for the entire building, both inside and out, into which the
concrete was poured. And since the building had to be monolithic, the pour-
ing of the concrete, once started, was not stopped until it was completed.
Then the concrete was allowed to dry and cure and the forms were removed.
There a similarity between the shell of concrete in a structure such
is
the amount and thickness of the material involved. But sheer size makes its
special demands. The Flight Center has a two-acre roof made of 6000 tons
of concrete and 700 tons of steel. In some places, where the roof had little
weight to carry, it is only seven inches thick: at the buttresses, where the
weight of the roof is transferred to the supporting piers, it is three feet
thick. By allowing the potentialities of the materials to suggest the form and
then refining that form creatively, Saarinen showed that today's architects
need not always follow "the cult of the cube" into a boxlike conformity.
Basically, the Center is composed of four concrete, intersecting shell
vaults that seem to float above the ground. The free, spreading forms are
reminiscent of birds and of airplanes. Not only the vaults but the Y-shaped
buttresses suggest flight. Light is another vital factor that gives the structure
The integration of exterior and interior, from the major forms to the small-
est details, creates a compelling unity. A strong sense of movement pervades
the entire development: inside or out, the curvilinear forms and space seem
in constant change as we move in or around them. Unlike most rectangular
structures,which often seem constant after we get to know them, Saarinen's
Flight Center discloses new and unexpected relationships. The building's
individuality and vitality make it a landmark in a great complex of land-and-
building planning.
IN CONCLUSION
The chapter concludes with a picture of one of Frank Lloyd Wright's
major works, the Kaufmann House at Bear Run, Pennsylvania (Fig. 542),
ture. The house is not new, having been built in 1937. Yet, it has an ageless
quality, for the forms are as vital as when they were first built.
The site for the house, wooded and rocky, includes a brook and a water-
fall. With his constant concern for relating architecture to its setting,
Wright planned the house with that in mind. The major mass of the
house is of stone, and it seems to grow directly from the rock ledges on
which it rests. From these rock walls spring two dramatic and breath-
taking terraces which, cantilevered from the house, project over the water-
fall.Wright has written that "the good building is one that makes the
landscape more beautiful than it was before." The rustic quality of the
setting is not diminished in its attractiveness. In fact, it is heightened by
542 - Architecture
The Edgar J.
Kaufmann House (1936) at Bear Run, Pennsylvania, designed by Frank
Lloyd Wright combines an organic relation to its site with the freedom and daring pos-
sible through modern technology. {Courtesy of the Museum of Modern Art, New York)
the contrast of the man-made forms that have been placed in it. As for
the house itself, we feel that man has come to terms with nature and is
drawing from it the beauty, strength, and serenity it can provide. Although
the forms in the house may seem new, the Kaufmann house is architecture
in the grand tradition— the meeting of human needs, the sensitive use of
and in a sense, the presentation has run full circle. Each field of art has
its own significance, each its own expression. Each too, in its visible
aspects, speaks to us eloquently of the people who create, use, and enjoy it.
manize and give meaning to a culture. It is through the arts that we become
civilized, and all-the creators, the users, the appreciators-make their con-
tributions in the kind of art they create and support. All of us have a part
and a responsibility.
American Building-The Forces That Shape It: James Marston Fitch (Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 1948).
Mr. Fitch reviews and analyzes with great perception the development of
American architecture and establishes new technical standards for modern
building.
The Architecture of America, a Social and Cutural History: John Burchard and
Albert Bush-Brown (Boston: Little, Brown, 1961).
Introduced by a chapter on the nature of architecture, this comprehensive
book discusses developments in this country from 1600 on, with major em-
phasis on recent periods.
544 - Architecture
Architecture and the Esthetics of Plenty: James Marston Fitch (New York: Co-
lumbia University Press, 1961).
An analysis of American architecture, its achievements, shortcomings, and
paradoxes.
Frank Lloyd Wright: Vincent Scully, Jr. (New York: Braziller, 1960).
A monograph on the work of one of America's greatest architects.
Experiencing Architecture: Steen Eiler Rasmussen (New York: Wiley, 1959).
A simply written book that leads the reader to the delights of experiencing
architecture.
The Future of Architecture: Frank Lloyd Wright (New York: Horizon, 1953).
The New Architecture of Europe: G. E. Kidder Smith (New York: World Pub-
lishing, 1961).
Recent outstanding buildings in Europe, intelligently discussed and per-
ceptively photographed.
Academic. Art based on a more or less completely worked-out theory and phi-
losophy and characterized by a crystallized approach; opposite of experi-
mental.
Action Painting. Related to Abstract Expressionism with immediacy, impulse,
chance, and lucky accidents taking precedence over premeditation and de-
liberate planning. An action painter regards his canvas as "an arena
in
converging to the center (or centers) of the arch, but any curved structure
is apt to be referred to as an arch even though not
constructed on the
true arch principle.
Archaic. Referring to objects belonging to an early, conventionalized style; more
advanced than primitive.
Architrave. The lowest major division of the classical entablature resting di-
Closed Plan. A building plan in which the rooms or areas are sharply separated
from one another, as differentiated from Open Plan.
Collage. A
composition in which such materials as paper and cloth are attached
to a flat surface, sometimes in combination with drawing or painting.
Collotype. An inexpensive yet highly satisfactory method of reproducing limited
quantities of paintings, drawings, etc., in black and white or color, by means
of gelatin plates.
Colonial. As used in this book, refers to the period in American history before
independence was established.
Colonnade. A series of columns placed at regular intervals and usually united
by other architectural members such as lintels or arches.
Column. A supporting member usually composed of a base, shaft, and capital.
Complementary. A color or form that completes or fills out another. Red and
green are complementary colors.
Composition. The relation of parts to one another and to the whole in a work
of art. Similar to Design and Organization.
Concourse. Alarge space for the gathering of crowds. Concourses are generally
open areas in parks or in such buildings as railway stations and air terminals.
Concrete. A synthetic stony material composed of broken stone, sand, etc., held
548 - Glossary
Earthen%vare. Ceramic ware made from coarse clays that are fired at low tem-
peratures. It is comparatively soft and fragile.
Eaves. The lower part of a roof which projects beyond the exterior wall of a
building.
Eclectic. Selecting and combining from various doctrines, systems, or styles.
Colonial, French provincial, or Tudor houses built during the 20th century
Free Form. Shapes that do not follow any set of rules; usually biomorphic.
Fresco. Painting, executed with a medium on plaster,
similar to water color,
which is usually bonded masonry wall. True, or buono, fresco is done
to a
on fresh, wet plaster into which the pigment sinks. Fresco secco, done on
dry plaster, is much less permanent.
Frieze. The middle portion of the classical entablature; also a band or strip of
painted or sculptured decoration.
Function. Purpose; natural, appropriate, characteristic action.
Futurism. An art movement originating in Italy in the early 20th century that
aimed to portray the movement and change in objects rather than their
appearance at any specific time.
Laminate. Layers of paper, wood, etc., bonded together, usually by heat and
pressure to make a tough, homologous material. Plywood is a laminated
product.
Layout. In printing and in commercial art, a term referring to the arrangement
of pictures and words on the page.
552 - Glossary
Madonna. Italian word meaning "my lady," usually referring to the Virgin
Mary.
Magic Realism. A type of painting, the subject matter of which is objectively
portrayed, but which has strong nonrational overtones.
Majolica. A type of ceramic usually decorated with large bold floral patterns.
Most majolica comes from Italy but was introduced there from Spain by
way of Majorca— hence the name.
Masonry. Construction made from such materials as stone, brick, tile, and plaster.
Medieval. Referring to the Middle Ages, during which the Romanesque and
Gothic styles of architecture developed.
Medium. The material used produce an
art object. Also the liquid with which
to
pigments are mixed to make them suitable for painting.
Metope. Space between two Triglyphs in a Doric frieze; often enriched with
sculpture.
Mobile. A kind of sculpture, usually of metal, in which the parts move.
Modeling. The representation of solid forms in either sculpture or painting.
Modeling refers either to the actual shaping of clay or other materials in
sculpture, or the use of colors and values to represent forms in painting.
Module. Standard or unit of measurement.
Mold. A form from which something takes its shape. Much commercial pottery
is made in molds.
Nave. term applied either to the long portion of a church leading to the
A
from the side aisles.
choir, or to the central aisle as distinguished
Niche. A hollow recess in a wall, generally intended for a statue or ornament.
Non-objective. Referring to paintings or sculpture that show no resemblance
to natural objects as they are ordinarily perceived. (See also Abstract.)
Palette. A flat thin piece of metal, wood, porcelain, or glass on which a painter
mixes colors; also, the assortment of colors used by a painter.
Palette Knife. A thin flexible knife used by painters for mixing oil colors or
applying them to a canvas.
Pastel. Crayons made of ground colors and a binder (usually gum arable). Pastel
is also used to describe colors that are light in value and somewhat neu-
tralized.
Patina. A
film or encrustation on the surface of copper or bronze produced
naturally by oxidation or by treatment with acids. Also includes any mellow-
ing of surfaces resulting from age and use.
Pediment. In classical architecture, the triangular area above the entablature,
forming the gable of a two-pitched roof; also, similar areas on doorways,
furniture, etc.
Perspective— Aerial. Representation of space by the weakening of hues and
value contrasts and the softening of edges of objects in proportion to their
distance from the observer. The apparent haziness of distant objects is an
example of aerial perspective.
Perspective— Bird's-eye. The representation of a building or some scene as it
would look viewed from the air.
if
the latter part of the 19th century who departed from the Impressionist
approach to find their own ways of seeing and painting what they saw
and felt.
Realism. Applied chiefly to painting and sculpture that rather closely approxi-
mate the natural appearance of objects but emphasize the most distinctive
visual characteristics of forms, colors, textures, and space.
Regional Planning. An extension of city planning to include a considerable
area of land around cities. Sometimes entire counties, states, or geographic
regions are involved, as in the Tennessee Valley Authority.
Relief Printing. Printing done from a raised surface, in contrast to Intaglio
and Planographic Printing.
Relief Sculpture. Sculpture in which the forms project from a background to
which they are attached.
Renaissance. The great rebirth in art and learning that began in Italy in the
15th century and quickly spread to other European countries. Sometimes
called the Age was the period in which the achievements
of Discovery, it
Rose Window. A circular window filled with a design that radiates from the
center. Rose windows are often found in Gothic cathedrals.
Scale. The size of the parts in relation to the whole object. Also, the size relation
of the representation of an object to the object
itself; for example, architects
Section. The representation of the way anything would look if cut straight
through and one portion removed. A section of a building shows the in-
terior and its relation to the exterior along a given line.
Shape Engineering. See Structural Skin.
Significant Form. A phrase applied to works of art, especially paintings, whose
handling of form, space, color, and texture are markedly expressive, meaning-
ful, or vital. Cezanne's paintings are examples.
Silk-screen Printing. A type of printing in which a silk fabric is used as a stencil.
derived their inspiration from the subconscious. The results usually have
a dreamlike irrationality.
Symbolic. Representation by symbols rather than direct imitation.
Symmetry. A
balancing of parts in which those on one side of the center are
the exact reverse of those on the other. Symmetry is the most obvious form
of balance.
Tactile Values. An expression used to describe the quality of a work of art that
appeals to the sense of touch.
Tempera. A thin but opaque paint in which the pigment is carried in a milk-
like emulsion of oily and watery components. Egg, milk, glue, gum arable,
the juice of the fig tree, and dandelions are some of the materials used in
preparing the emulsion.
Tension. Stretching, straining, or pulling as opposed to compression. Tensions
in architecture are the actual straining forces in various members; tensions
in painting are the representations of the pulling forces between forms,
colors, etc.
Terra Cotta. A low-fire ceramic body used both for construction and decoration
in architecture, for sculpture, and for flower pots, planters, etc.
Textile. A woven fabric.
Three-color Process. A photoengraving process in which unshaded areas are
printed in colors.
Thrust. An outward force produced by an arch or vault. In Gothic architecture
the buttresses provide counter thrusts to the thrusts of the vaulting.
Tonality. The general quality of a painting produced by the color scheme.
Generally, tonality is developed from the predominance of one hue or from
closely related values.
Traditional. Anything handed down from earlier periods.
Transept. In churches with a cruciform plan, the portion of the building that
transverses the major dimension. Sometimes, as in most Gothic cathedrals,
the transepts project conspicuously beyond the nave.
Triad. A gioup of three. A triad color scheme has three colors, generally form-
ing an equilateral triangle on the color wheel, such as red, blue, and yellow.
Triglyph. Rectangular, projecting block which alternates with Metopes in the
frieze of the Doric order.
Truss. An form in which beams, bars, etc., are combined into a
architectural
rigid framework, the shape of which cannot be altered without deformation
of one or more of its members. Trusses are usually triangular or are made
up of triangular forms because the triangle is the only polygonal form
that cannot be altered without changing the length of one or more sides.
Type Face. The character, shape, or design of the type used in printing.
Value. The degree of lightness or darkness. Values range from white to black,
from light pink to dark maroon, etc.
558 - Glossary
from 1837 to 1901. For the most part, designers of the era were inspired
by Gothic and baroque motifs but were inventive in developing new forms
and in a free use of vigorous if often crude detail.
Vitreous. A term applied to high-fire ceramics that are dense, glassy, and non-
porous, as opposed to earthenware which is granular and porous. Porcelain
is a vitreous ceramic.
Volute. The scroll or spiral of Ionic capitals.
Voussoir. Wedge-shaped piece of material used in an arch.
Warp. The lengthwise threads in a woven fabric. Warp threads are strung on
the loom before the weaving begins.
Water Color. A painting material made from pigments held together with a
water-soluble binder. Although usually thought of as being transparent, it
(Italicized numbers refer to pages where illustrations will be found. The Glossary should be con-
sulted, because items there have not been indexed.)
Aalto, ."Mvar, church at Imatra, Finland, S7 SS , in, .502, 303, 323; industrial. 57. Ill, 134-139;
Abbott, Berenice, "Night View of New York integrated planning in, 506; religious, 85-
City," 282, 281 97, 506-510, 512-521, 526; space in, 332-333,
"Abruzzi." Cartier-Bresson, 2S3. 281. 284 331, 334; variety and unity in, 313, 312, 314;
abstract design, in commercial art, 142, 145, 149 see also construction
abstract painting, 3SS, 415, 416, 454 architrave, 506, 508
abstract sculpture, -132, 4S?, 484 Arden [Mary] house, Wilmcote, England, 33,
abstract-expressionist painting, 42}, 416 32,37
abstractions, "action, bondage, humor," }}0, 318 Arens, Egmont, 122
acrylic plastics, 169, 193, 195, 2-IS, 192 Arneson, Bob, 209
"Adam." Michelangelo. ^52, 433 Arniches. Carlos, 520
advertising and advertisements, 147-154; design Arp, Jean (Hans), "Automatic Drawing," 325,
principles in, 37S, 303, 384, 387, 392 334
aerial perspective, 446 "Artist's Studio, The," Daguerre, 276, 277
African altar head, Benin, Nigeria, 479
Arts and Crafts Revival, 130
African ancestor figure, 100, 99-102
assemblage, 436
"After the Hunt," Harnett, 43S, 437, 454
asymmetrical balance, 3S1, 384-385
aircraft construction, 493, 504, 533
Auditorium. United Nations Headquarters, 77
Albers, Josef, "Aquarium," 325, 334; "Sanctu-
auditoriums, 74-75, 77, 530
ary," 324, 323, 334, 476
"Aurora," Baizerman, 463, 459, 464
alternation, design principle, 387, 388-391
aluminum, 184; sculpture in, 169
"Automatic Drawing," Arp, 325, 324
Aluminum Company of America building, 320 automobiles, design of, 300, 301
"American Bison," Hardy, 347, 346. 349 Aztec goddess, statue of, 101, 102
"American Gothic." Wood, 413, 414, 416, 424,
445-446, 454 Baggs, Arthur, 203
Amino, Leo, "Creature of the Deep," .399, 483 Baizerman, Saul, "Aurora," 463, 459, 464
analogous color scheme, 364 balance, design principle, 381, 375, 379-385, 395
analogous hues, 353 balloon framing, 525
ancestor figure, Africa, 100, 99-102 Banksia senala, 337
apartment, 4-6, 7-9 "Barcelona," van der Rohe chair, 126, 124-125
"Aquarium," Albers, 325, 334 Baroque style harpsichord, 120, 119-121
aquatints, 255 barrel vault, 512
aqueduct, Roman, Segovia, Spain, 511, 510-512 Basilica of St. Peter, see St. Peter's Basilica
arc welding, in construction, 533 Bass, Saul, 144
arch, 510-519;pointed arch, 515, 514-519; Bauhaus, Dessau. Germany, 137, 29, 136
round arch, 510-511,512 Becker, Frederick, "Woman of the Quarry," 24S
Archipenko. .\lexander, "Walking." 460, 459, bedroom, in apartment, 6, 7; in contemporary
461,475-476 California house, 315, 314; in Techbuilt
architecture, 493-544; commercial, 155-167; house, 13, 16;Venetian rococo style, 315, 314
community, 19, 43-55, 72-78; domestic, 9-41; "Beginning of Miracles, The," Sister Mary
environmental control in, 535-536; form Corita, 258, 259
559
560 - Index
Bellows, George, "Dempsey and Firpo," ?W, centric city plans, 63, 63-66
381 ceramic sculpture, 202, 203
Bertoia, Harry, 73, 161 ceramics, 197-214; characteristics of, 197-198;
"Bewailing of Christ," Giotto, 106, 105 drying and fixing, 207; glazing, 207-210; ma-
biomorphic forms, }25, ?36, 326 terials, 200-201; ornamentation, 210-214;
birch wood, 179 shaping of, 201-207; see also bowls, vases
'Bird in Space," Brancusi, 482, 483-484 Cezanne, Paul, "Mont Sainte-Victoire," 429
block printing, 247-251; of textiles, 237. 238 (water color), 439 (oil), 430, 438-440
blown glass, 2JS, 222, 217 chair(s), contemporary, 181, 124-128; Eames,
blowpipe, 218, 214, 217 183; "Lily," 193; machine-produced, 115;
"Blue Vein," Casarella, 2i0, 249 materials for, 173-174; Shaker, 115
"Boardwalk," Perlmutter, 257 chambered nautilus, as design, 572, 385
boat propeller, 340 Champs filys^es, Paris, 64, 65
books, printing of, 243-245 Chanel perfume advertisement, 150, 151
bottles, 131, 22-t Chang Lung Chang, "The Evening Tolling of
bowls, ceramic, 82, 199, 208; plastic, 193; wood, a Distant Temple Bell," 430, 446
82 Chartres (France) Cathedral, "Kings and
Brady, Matthew, "Ruins of Richmond, The," Queens," 103, 104-105
277, 278 Chicago Tribune Building, 498, 497, 499
Brancusi, Constantin, "Bird in Space," 482, china, 206, 201
483^84 Chinese bowl, 208, 207
Braque, Georges, "The Table," 447, 446, 454 Chinese bronze vessel, 190, 189
Breuer, Marcel, front.; quoted, 312 Chinese landscape, 430, 446
brick, as building material, 158, 162, 20, 157 Chinese painting, 298
bronze, 184; casting of, 478-480; pitcher of, Chinese porcelain plate, 211, 210
175, 190; sculpture in, 347, 438, 462, 463, Chinese prehistoric jar, 199
479-481, 346, 461, 478-480 Chinese tomb figure, 320, 321
Brooklyn (N.Y.) Courthouse, 313, 312, 314 Chinese vases, 197
brush-and-ink drawing, Rivera, 329, 334 "Christ, Head of," ^77, 470
Brush-Everard House, Williamsburg, Va.. 34, "Christ Healing the Sick," Rembrandt, 254, 255
32, 35, 163 "Christ Mocked by Soldiers," Rouault, 107, 108
Bruton Parish Church, Williamsburg, Va., 89, Christ, medallion of, 85
47, 88-90, 95, 323 Christina's World," Wyeth, 431, 445
Bryant Park, New York City, 70, 68, 69 Church, Thomas D., garden, 38, 39
building, see construction church architecture, see architecture, religious
built-up sculpture, 476-478 "Circles in Circle," Kandinsky, 310, 308
Bundshaft, Gordon, 501 circulation, in city planning, 61-62
Burri, Alberto, "Composition 8," 435, 436, 454 "City, The," Grippe, 474, 475-476
Burton, John, glass vases and bottles, 131 "City, The," Leger, 358, 349, 357, 360-361
Butler, Reg, "Girl," 462, 459, 461 city planning, 42, 58-71; in Greenbelt, Md.,
48-53; in Williamsburg, Va., 43-48
"MobUe,"
Calder, Alexander, 380, 381, 385, 478 city plans, 62-63, 67, 62-68
"Camargue X," Koenig, 458 clay, 200-201; in sculpture, 202, 294, 320, 460,
camel, Chinese figure of, 520, 321 474; shaping of, 202, 205, 201-207
Camera Shop, The, Berkeley, Calif., 156, 155- Cleveland Park Synagogue, Cleveland, Ohio,
157 93, 91-94. 95
cameras and equipment, 268-271, 272-276 "closed plan," in house design, 13
"Camp in Baker's Park," Jackson, 275, 271 "Cloud, The," de Creeft, 491, 490
cantilever construction, 529, 504, 522, 525, 529, "Coatlicue," 101, 102
531 coffee table, Noguchi, 336, 335
capital, 506, 508 Colescott, Warrington, "Mach 5," 297, 296
Capitol, Williamsburg, Va., 47 collage, /(?-/, /5 5, 436
"Caresse, La," Cassatt, 253 color, 353 (insert), 343, 350-366; effects of,
Carter, Harold, "Maria Lani," -//S 357-361; nature of, 351-357; use of, 7-8, 362-
Cartier-Bresson, Henri, "Abruzzi," 283, 281, 366
284; quoted, 284 color photography, 271-274
Casarella, Edmond, "Blue Vein," 250, 249 color schemes, 363-365
casein paints, 431 color separation (printing), 260, 262
Cassatt, Mary, "La Caresse," 25.? columns, 506, 508
cast iron, 190, 348, 189 commercial architecture, 155-167
cast metal sculpture, 479-481, 478, 483 commercial centers, 164, 166, 163-167
casting of metal, 188, 189 community architecture, 19, 43-55, 72-79
cave painting, Dordogne, France, 401 community painting, 79, 78-80
Central Park, New York City. 70, 68-69 community sculpture, 81-82, 80-83
Index - 561
complementary color schemes, 364 dining space, in apartment, 6, 7; in Techbuilt
complementary colors, 353 house, 13
"Composition," Miro, -/52, 411, 446, 450 display, see packaging and display
"Composition," Mondrian, 305 domes, 512-514
74, 75, 513, 72,
composition, see organization Domingucz. Martin, 520
"Composition 8," Burri. 7 5 5, 436, 454 "Door to the River," de Kooning, 423. 421, 424,
concrete, in building, 521-525 455
Congdon, ^Villiam, "Venice, Number 1," 42}, Doric Order, 506, 509
425, 428 double-complementary color-schemes, 364
construction, 503-535; in concrete, 521-525; drawings, 325, 328-329, 330-331
in steel, 522, 524, 528-533; in stone, 505-519; drypoint, 253, 252
types of, 503-505; in wood, 525-528 Dubuffet, Jean, "The Cow with the Subtile
Constructivism, 487 Nose," 449, 448
contemporary architecture, 493-503, 522-524 Duccio di Buoninsegna, "Maesta," 382, 378. 384
continuity, design principle, 375, 395 Duchamp, Marcel, "Nude Descending a Stair-
cornice, 506. 508 case," 38S, 381, 389, 393, 461
cotton fabrics, 113,237.2-10, 112-114
cotton fibers, 227 Eames, Charles, chairs, 183, 182, 335, 453
Courthouse, Brooklyn, N.Y., 313, 312 "Early Sunday Morning," Hopper, 406, 405,
"Cow with the Subtile Nose, The," Dubuffet, 410
f49, 448 earthenware, 211, 200
crackle glaze, 20S, 207 Edenfalk, Bengt, 224
crafts, see handcrafts Eg)'ptian glass, 215, 214
"Creature of the Deep," Amino, 399 electric iron, design of, 118, 117
"Crucifixion," Lebrun, 107, 108 elements, see plastic elements
"Crushed Rock," Kahn, 345, 344 Elffers, Dick, 152
crystal, 215, 216 emphasis, design principle, 377, 392-395
Crystal Palace, London, 136 "End of Day," Gwathway, 258
Cubist painting, 339, 446, 441 engraved glass. 218. 221, 223
Cubist sculpture, 4S5, 484 enrichment, see ornamentation
curvilinear forms, 325, 323, 326 entablature, 506, 508
cut glass, 221 environmental control in architecture, 535-536
Epstein, Jacob, "Social Consciousness," 480
Daguerre, Louis, "The Artist's Studio," 276, equilibrium, 379-385
277 Eskolin, Vuokko, 241
"Dark Shadows," Nevelson, 486, 436, 477, 484, etched glass, 223
487 etched plywood, 17S
Dartmouth College mural, 434 etchings, 252, 254, 297, 255
Daumier, Honore, "The Too-Hot Bath," 256, "Evening Tolling of a Distant Temple Bell,
257 The," Chang Lung Chang, 430, 446
"David," Michelangelo, 471 Ewing, Kermit, TVA mural, 79, 78, 305
Davis, Stuart, "Hot Still-Scape for Six Colors," expressionist painting, 454-455
5i7, 305, 310, 312
de Belgiojoso, Lodovico, 367 fabrics, 226-241; definition of, 230; design of,
373-377, see also architecture, domestic; im- Fine, Perle, "The Moment in and out of
portance of, 377-379; industrial, see indus- Time," 390, 389
trial design; as organization, 296; three prin- Finnish churches, 87, 85-88, 95
ciples of, 379-395 Finnish glass, 220
de Swart, Jan, 169, 195, 174 firelighter, cast-iron, 189
562 - Index
First Presbyterian Church, Stamford, Conn., Gordin, Sidney, "Rectangular, Number 5," 488,
97, 95, 96 All, 487
Fischer, Mildred, 229 Gothic architecture, 497, 514-519; concept of,
Flannagan, John, "Jonah and the Whale," 472, 302. 303
473 Gottlieb, Adolph, "Unstill Life, 3," 451, 450
flax, 226 gouache, 431
Fliickiger, Adolf, n2 Governor's Palace and Garden, Williamsburg,
flying buttress, 518 Va., 46, 37, 45-47, 69, 83, 381, 384
form, 319-328; in architecture, 323; and color, "Grand Arabesque," Degas, 383, 377, 381
357, 360-361; and ornamentation, 326-328; graphic processes, 246-262
in painttng, 410; in sculpture, 483-487 "Great Buddha, The," 382, 377, 384
form follows function, 300-306 Great Pyramid of Khutu, 100, 495, 56, 98, 318,
forms, families of, 323, 326 493
Fort Worth, Texas, commercial center, 166, "Great Wave of Kanazawa, The," Hokusai,
165 250, 251
Fortisan, 23S Greco, El (Domenico Teotocopulo), "St. Francis
"Fountain, The," Sargent, 386,. 387 in Ecstasy," 386, 381, 387, 389; "View of
four-color process, 260, 262 Toledo," #22, 421, 446
free-form, 325, 336, 326 Greek architecture, concept of, 302, 303; see
fresco painting, 432, 434, 433 also Parthenon
frieze, 506, 508 Greek sculpture, 103, 348, 460, 102-105, 346,
"Frieze of Dancers," Degas, 399 459, 461
function and form, 300-306 Green, Aaron, 40
function, and use of color, 362-363 Greenbelt, Md., 50, 48-53, 83
furniture, of apartment, 7-8; arrangement of, "Grenouill^re, La," Monet, 422, 421, 446
394, 395; of Brush-Everard House, 34, 35; Grippe, Peter, "The City," 474, Alb-Al^
contemporary, 336, see also chairs; modular, Gris, Juan, "Landscape at Ceret," 339, 340
125; selection of, 132; of Techbuilt house, Gromaire, Marcel, "Maria Lani," 419, 417
16-17,21-22 Gropius, Walter, Bauhaus, 137, 136
Grotell, Maija, 209
Gabo, Naum, "Linear Construction in Space, Gruen, Victor, 164, 166, 165
Number 4," 4S9, 477-478, 487 Guatemalan handcrafts, 113, 112-114
garden city, 51 "Guernica," Picasso, 442^43, 440-441, 444
gardens, of Governor's Palace, Williamsburg, Gutenberg. Johannes, 244
Va., 46, 37, 47; of Mary Arden house, 32, 37 Gwathmey, Robert, "End of Day," 258
"Gate, The," Feininger, 324, 334
General Motors Technical Center, water tower, halftones, 243
111 Hallman, Ted, 228
geography, and home design, 17 handcraft cultures, 112-114
George Washington Bridge, New York City, handcrafts, 111-114; amateur, 132; chairs, 115,
185, 184 127: contemporary, 131, 130-132; Guate-
Giotto, "Bewailing of Christ," 106, 105 malan, 775, 112-114
Girard, Alexander, 237 Hardy, Tom, "American Bison," 347, 346, 349
"Girl," Butler, 462, 459, 461 Harnett, William, "After the Hunt," 438, 437,
"Girl Before a Mirror," Picasso, 415, 414, 416, 454
445, 454 harpsichord, 120, 119-121
Giusti, George, 152 Harrison, Wallace K., First Presbyterian
glass,214-224, as building material, 22, 28, 40, Church, 97, 95; UN Headquarters Assembly
96-97, 137, 156, 159, 162, 27-29, 95, 136, 155, Building, 336
157; general properties of, 214-217; light pat-
Harwood, Stuart, "Winged Figure," 486, 473,
terns in, 220, 223, 217, 220; materials in, 226; 487
Hayter, Stanley W., "Unstable Woman," 252,
ornamentation of, 221-223; sculpture in, 223;
255
shaping of, 217-221
Hempel, William, 359
glass fiber, 232, 229-230
"Hera of Samos," 460, 459, 461
glassware, 275, 218-220
"Hermes with the Infant Dionysus," Praxiteles,
glazing of ceramics, 207-210
103, 102, 105, 461
"Gods of the Modern World," Orozco, 434, 433,
Hilberseimer, Ludwig, 67, 66
445
Hippodrome, Madrid, 520, 522, 529
Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco, 533 Hjorth,27/
Golden Gateway Redevelopment, San Fran- Hokinson, Helen, cartoon, 392
cisco, 54, 55, 53-55, 68 Hokusai, Katsushika, "The Great Wave of
Gonzalez, Julio, "Woman Combing Her Hair," Kanazawa," 250, 251
462, 459, 464 home factory, 137, 134
Index - 563
home furnishing, principles of, 35-37; see also Kao K'o Rung, 29S
furnituie Katayama, Toshihiro, 146
home planning, principles of, 7, 12-24 Kauffcr, E. Mcknight, 14S. 147, 149
Hood, Raymond. Chicago Tribune Building, Kaufmann House, Bear Run, Pa., 542, 541
•/<«, 497, 499; New York Daily News Build- Keck, William and George Fred, 35S
ing. -/OP, 501 Kentucky Dam and Powerhouse, TVA, 57, 56
Hopper, Edward, "Early Sunday Morning," keystone, 510
/06. 405, 410 Khufu, Great Pyramid of, see Great Pyramid
Hortonspheres, Baton Rouge, La., 5J-/, 504, "Kings and Queens," Chartres Cathedral, 103,
533-535 104-105
"Hot Still-Scape for Six Colors," Davis, 311, Kisling, Moise,"Maria Lani," 419, 417
305,310.312 "Kiss,The," Munch, 247
houses, see architecture, domestic kitchen, in Highland Park, 111., house, 35S: in
Johnsonville Steam Plant, TVA, mural, 79, 78 line cuts, 261, 259-262
"Jonah and the Whale," Flannagan, 472, 473 line drawings, 328-329, 330-331
Juhl, Finn, chair, 727, 125 line engravings, 251-252
"Junction," Marca-Relli, 404, 411, 434, 436 "Linear Construction in Space, Number 4,"
Gabo, 489, 477-478, 487
Kahn, Matt, "Crushed Rock," 345, 344 linear perspective, 445
Kandinsky, Wassily, "Circles in Circle," 310, linen fibers and fabrics, 227
309; "White on Black," 397 linotype, 239
564 - Index
Rosati, James, "Interior Castle, Number 1," Sistine Chapel, The Vatican, Rome, ceiling
•/77, 476 of, 432, 433
Roszak, Theodore J., bell tower, MIT chapel, "Sistine Madonna," Raphael, 106, 105-108
73; "Spectre of Kitty Hawk," 489, 476. 487, skeleton frame construction, 504, 522, 525
490 Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill, Lever House,
rotogravure, 262 500, 501 : Manufacturers Trust Company, 159,
Rouault. Georges, "Christ Mocked by Soldiers," 157, 160-161; San Francisco Airport, 530, 531
107, 108; "Maria Latii," 418, 417, 455 "Skyscrapers," Stieglitz. 280, 271, 289
Rouen (France) Cathedral, 497 skyscrapers. 65, 398, 494, 497-498, 500, 502,
Rubens, Peter Paul, "Descent from the Cross," 496-503; construction of, 528-529; Paris, pro-
.?70, 361,369, 371 posed, 64, 65-66
Rudolph, Paul, 317 "Sleepers II, Tooker, 451, 450
"
"Ruins of Richmond, The," Brady, 277, 278 Smith, David, "Hudson River Landscape," 391,
rustic bench, 191 389
"Sob, The," Siqueiros, 307, 305
Saarinen, Eero, chair, 126, 125; Massachusetts "Social Consciousness," Epstein, 489
Institute of Technology Auditorium and Southdale Shopping Center, Minneapolis,
Chapel, 74, 7^, 72-73; TWA
Flight Center, Minn.. 164, 165
538, 540, 539, 541; water tower. 111 Soutine, Chaim, "Maria Lani," 419, 417, 455
"St. Francis in Ecstasy," El Greco, 386, 381, space, 331-341; in architecture, 495; and form,
387. 389 in sculpture, 483-487
St. Mark's Square, Venice, 293 "Space Modulator," Moholy-Nagy, 173, 174
St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Sarasota, Fla., 527, "Spectre of Kitty Hawk," Roszak, 480, 476,
526 487, 490
St. Peters Basilica, Rome, 513, 512-514 Sphinx, 100, 98-99
Samuerly, Felix, 95 split-complementary color schemes, 364
San Francisco Airport, 530, 531 spoons, manufacture of, 187 189 ,
"Sanctuary," Albers, 324, 334 "Standing Woman," Lehmbruck, 463, 459, 461,
"Sanctuary," Lipton, 477, 476 464
"Sarah Bernhardt," Nadar, 266, 284 "Starry Night," van Gogh, 408. 405, 407-410
Sargent, John Singer, "The Fountain," 386, 387 steel. 188; in construction, 20, 522, 524, 528-
Sarpeneva, Timo, 220 533; sculpture in, 140, 391, 488
"Scene in a Courtyard," de Hooch, 3 steel engravings, see line engravings
Schmidt, Julius, "Iron Sculpture," 481, 476 steel-cage construction, 529, 528
Schwarz, Rudolf, 92, 91 stencil printing, 258, 247, 257
Schweiker and Elting, Upton House, 333, 331, Stieglitz, Alfred, "The Terminal," 279, 284;
335 "Skyscrapers," 280, 271, 279
scidpture, 458-492; diversity of, 483: expressive stone, building in, 505-519; sculpture in, SO,
problems in, 459-468; materials of, see clay, 82, 101-103, 460, 471-472, 485, 490, 469-473
stone, etc.; processes in, 468-483; and tech- stoneu'are, 199, 203, 206, 213, 200-201
nology, 487^91; treatment of form and space Stradivarius, Antonius, 119
in, 321,483-487 street patterns, 61-62
Seagram Building, 502, 495, 501, 503 stressed-skin construction, 533-535
secondary hues, 353 structural skin construction, 504, 519, 525
serigraphs, see silk-screen prints stylobate, 506, 508
sgraffito bowl, 199, 213-214 Sullivan, Louis, 303-308, 496-497; quoted, 303-
shades of color, 355 304; Wainwright Building, 302, 497
column, 506, 508
shaft, of surrealist painting, 455
Shahn, Ben, "Wheat Field," 297, 296, 335, 339 suspension construction, 505, 531-533
Shaker handcrafted chair, 115 Sutton Scarsdale, Derbyshire, 172, 174
Sheeler, Charles, "Incantation," 135, 134
Swedenborg, Emanuel, 94
symmetrical balance, 381, 384
shopping centers, see commercial centers
synagogue, Cleveland Park, Ohio, 93, 91-94,
Siegel, Arthur, "Lyric Singer," 288, 289
95
silk, 227
silk-screen prints, 258, 297, 257-259
"Table, The," Braque, 447, 446. 454
silver, 184; pendant, 131; reliquary, 171; spoons,
Taj Mahal, Agra, India, 576, 377, 381, 391
187, 189; teapot, 113, 114; vessels, 186 Taliesin North, 26, 27, 13, 25-27
simultaneous contrast, 354 Taliesin West, 527, 526, 528
Sipoo, Finland, church in, 87, 8.5-86. 95 Taos, New Mexico, church, 89, 90
Siqueiros, David Alfaro, "The Sob," 307. 78, Tarascan (Mexican) sculpture, 294
305 Tawney, Lenore, 229
Sister Mary Corita, "The Beginning of Mir- Teague, Walter D., 120
acles," 258, 259 Techbuilt houses, 8-10, 14-15, 22-23, 9-24
Index - 567
television titles, 755 "View of Toledo," El Greco, 422, 421
tempera paint, 431; paintings in, 4}1, 451^52 \'inyl plastics, 194, 193
Tennessee Valley Authority, 43, 305; Johnson- "\'oisin" scheme. Le Corbusier. 64, 65-66
ville Steam Plant mural, 79, 78; Kentucky voussoirs, 510, 511
Dam and Powerhouse, 57, 56; Pickwick Pow- Vuillard. Edouard, "The Interior at I'Etang-la-
erhouse, 13S; Watts Bar Steam Plant, J55, Ville," 34S, 349
134
"Terminal, The," Stieglitz, 279, 284 Wainwright Building, St. Louis, Mo., 302, 497,
terra cotta, 294; sculpture in, 294, 320, 460, 303. 496
474 "Walking," Archipenko, 460, 459, 461, 475-476
tertiary hues, 353 walnut. 180
tetrad color schemes. 365 Warnecke, John Carl. 156
Guatemala, 11}, 112; handwoven, 7 5/,
textiles, Washington Moninnent. 323
22S-229, 232, 345; machine-woven, 232, 345; water-color painting, 425-432; works in, 426,
see alio fabrics 429.430
texture, 34 y, 317-319, 343-350; internal, 347, Watkins, Rosalind R., 131
344; use of, 7-8 Watts Bar Steam Plant, TVA, 135. 134
thrust, of arch, 510, 511 Wayfarer's Chapel, Palos Verdes, Calif., 96,
tints of color, 355 94-95, 384
"Too-Hot Bath, The," Daumier, 256, 257 weaves, types of, 231
Tooker, George, "Sleepers II," 451, 450 weaving, 113, 226, 22S, 231-233, 112-114, 230-
Torroja. Eduardo, 520 233
Trans World Airlines Flight Center, 53S, 540, Wegner, Hans. 181
495.514,539,541 Wells. George. "Pastorale," 345, 344
triad color schemes, 364 "Wheat Field," Shahn, 297, 296, 335, 339
triglyphs, 507-508 "Wheatfields," van Ruisdael, 33S. 334, 340
437
tioiiipe I'oeuil, 43S, Whistler, James McNeill, anecdote, 405
504
truss, 526, 527, "White on Black." Kandinsky, 397
Tugendhat house, Brno, Czechoslovakia, 332, Williamsburg, Va., Brush-Everard House, 34.
323. 325, 331 32, 35. 163; Bruton Parish Church, S9. 47,
two-story houses, design of, 9-11 88-90, 95, 323; Capitol, 47; city planning in,
Tynell, Paavo, 295 43-48; Governor's Palace, 46, 37, 45-47, 69,
type and type faces, 243-246 83. 381, 384; Millinery Shop, 156, 155-157
Windsor chair, ISl, 125
United Nations Headquarters, New York City, "Winged Figure," Harwood, 4S6, 473, 487
77, 43, 76, 83, 121, 503; Conference Building, Winston, Bob. silver pendant. 131
77, 76; General Assembly, 77, 76, 335; Secre- Winston. Robert, play sculpture, S2, 83
tariat, 77, 76 "Woman Combing Her Hair," Gonzalez, 462,
United States Embassy, London. 73 459, 464
unity, in art. 306-309, 391-395 "Woman of the Quarry, "
Becker. 2-IS
"Unstable Woman." Hayter, 252, 255 Wood, Beatrice, ceramics. 20S, 225
"Unstill Life, 3," Gottlieb, 451, 450 Wood, Grant, "American Gothic," 413, 414,
Upton House, Paradise Valley, Ariz., 333, 332, 416, 424, 445^46, 454
335 wood, in chair design. 125; characteristics and
kinds of, 177-183; in construction, 525-528;
values of colors. 352, 353 (insert). 355-356 products of, 120, 1S1-1S3, 121; sculpture in,
Van de Velde, Henry, quoted. 331 S2, 100, 169, 172, 467, 471-472, 4S6: surface
van der Rohe. Mies, chair, 126. 124, 125; Sea-
treatment of, 180
gram Building. '02. 501, 503; Tugendhat
wood grains, 176, 178, 121, 175, 177; in block
house, 332, 323, 331, 335
printing, 249
van Gogh. Vincent, "Rain," 359, 357, 360;
woodcuts, 243, 247, 248, 250, 324-325, 249-251
"Starry Night," 40S, 405, 407-410
wool and woolens, 228-229, 232, 227-228
van Ruisdael, Jacob, "Wheatfields," 338, 334,
Wright, Don, 238
340
448-456 Wright, Frank Lloyd, 373; Johnson and Son
variety, in art. 309-312.
variety in unity, 306-316
Co. buildings. 162, 161-163; Kaufmann
vases and jars,' ceramic, 131, 197, 199, 203, 209, House, 542, 541; Morris Store, 158, 157-160;
213, 327, 343: glass. 215, 220, 222 Taliesin North, 26-27, 13, 25-26; Taliesin
vaulting, 512-514; barrel, 512; Gothic, 514-519 West. 527, 526, 528
Vaux, Calvert, 68 Wright, Lloyd, Wayfarer's Chapel, 96, 94-95,
Venetian glass, 215, 222, 223-234 384
"Venice, Number 1," Congdon, 423, 425, 448 wrought iron, 189
Verrocchio, Andrea del, "Madonna and Child,"
474, 475^76 zinc etching, 259