Edward Durrell Stone

views updated May 11 2018

Edward Durrell Stone

The American architect, educator, and designer Edward Durrell Stone (1902-1978) was an early practitioner of the International Style, but took his architecture in a new direction after 1940. He was particularly known for his design for the U.S. embassy in New Delhi, India, and for the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.

Edward Durrell Stone was born in Fayetteville, Arkansas, on March 9, 1902. He attended the University of Arkansas (1920-1923) located in his home town, but received no degree. His first job—for the firm of Coolidge, Shepley, Bulfinch and Abbott in Boston—was to work on the restoration of Massachusetts Hall at Harvard as an apprentice to Henry R. Shepley (1923-1925). In 1926 Stone won the competition for a special scholarship to Harvard and attended for one year. Eclecticism was on the way out in architecture, and Stone switched to MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) where Jacques Carlu was beginning to experiment with modern design. The following year Stone won the Rotch travelling scholarship for two years of study and travel in Europe.

His return to America in November 1929 coincided with the stock market crash. He managed to join the firm of Schultze and Weaver in New York and worked on the design for the interior of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. In 1930 he married Orlean Vandiver, whom he had met in Europe. Stone also worked with the consortium of architects designing Rockefeller Center, New York (1929-1935). He was appointed chief designer of the two theaters: Radio City Music Hall and The Center Theater. During this period Stone met Howard Myers, the editor of The Architectural Forum and a leading exponent of modern architecture. Their friendship was life-long.

Striking Out on His Own

In 1933 Stone became an architect in his own right with the commission for the Mandel House in Mount Kisco, New York (1933-1935). He made use of an open plan, concrete, steel, glass block, and strip windows in this modern house and saw it as the first house in the East in the International Style. He built several other private residences, but the Depression made commissions scarce and he went to work for Wallace K. Harrison.

During this time the informal headquarters for architects and journalists in New York City was Rose's Restaurant on West 51st Street. Rose was considered a patroness of the arts as she provided meals to sustain artists and others between odd jobs.

From 1935 to the beginning of World War II Stone supplemented his income by teaching advanced design at New York University's night school of architecture. His students were men working in architectural offices who could not afford full-time studies. He again turned to teaching in the late 1940s for three years at Yale, in 1953 for one year at Princeton, and in 1955 and 1957-1959 at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.

In 1937 the trustees of the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) formed a building committee to select architects to design a new building on West 53rd Street in New York City. Stone and Philip L. Goodwin, one of the trustees, were named associate architects for the design (1937-1939). Open flexible gallery space capable of change for exhibitions was required, and as a result Stone and Goodwin placed the auditorium in the basement, the stairs and service facilities at one end of the building, and office spaces and the library on the upper floors. A walled garden for sculpture was set to the rear of the building as an oasis from the hectic pace of the city. The design for this important building was done in the International Style.

Disenchantment with International Style

Toward the end of the 1930s Stone began to question the use of the International Style in residential design. Generally, it had not won acceptance because it was sparse and cold. The style had begun shortly after World War I in a period of deprivation. Economics was the prime consideration, and the use of reinforced concrete—a less expensive material—and the exclusion of ornament from the design reduced the expense of a building. Even more influential on Stone's change of mind was the cross-country trip to California he took in 1940. During this trip he saw the "good" and "bad" architecture of the United States and visited Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin in Wisconsin. On the return trip he visited Taliesin West near Phoenix, Arizona, where he became more aware of how Wright attuned each complex to the natural beauty of its site: the pastoral green of Wisconsin and the harsh desert environment of Arizona. Stone viewed his repudiation of the International Style as trading a European style architecture for an indigenous style which would be strongly influenced by Wright's work.

Collier's magazine provided an opportunity for Stone to design in this new direction. Stone and John Fistere, a journalist who wrote on architecture, were asked to design Collier's "House of Ideas" (1940), which would make new ideas in home furnishings and building materials available to the public. Located on the terrace adjacent to Rockefeller Center's International Building, Stone introduced the use of natural redwood for the exterior walls and plywood as an interior surface material.

During World War II Stone served as a major in the U.S. Air Force (1942-1945) and worked as an architect designing buildings and ground facilities (hangars and runways). After World War II he established an office in Great Neck, Long Island, and designed houses. One of these residences was for Bernard Tomson, a lawyer who took an interest in the legal aspects of the architectural profession and eventually wrote a column and a book for architects to help them with their business affairs. Stone moved his offices to New York City and was joined by his nephew, Karl J. Holzinger, Jr., who worked with him for seven years. Commissions were primarily for residential designs which were done in an indigenous style based on modular wooden construction.

Building at Home and Abroad

After World War II Stone was asked to design a modern resort hotel in Panama which called for special consideration of the extremes of the equatorial climate. The design problems worked out for El Panama Hotel, Panama City (1946), were further refined when Stone designed resort hotels in San Salvador (1952) and Montego Bay, Jamaica (1952).

In 1948 Stone was asked to design a fine arts group for the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, to include facilities for architecture, painting, sculpture, music, and theater. Stone physically integrated the arts in three separate elements (a three-story classroom building, a concert hall, and a theater and library) linked by an exhibition gallery.

The Peruvian government selected Stone and Alfred Aydelott to design a general and maternity hospital for 900 patients in Lima (1950). Stone believed there was no more difficult or complicated architectural project than a hospital. This one took several years to complete, and it was necessary for the designers to live there for about six months in the early stages. While there, Stone travelled to Cuzco and Machu Picchu and started a collection of Pre-Incan pottery.

Stone credited his second marriage with bringing order to his life. On a night flight from New York City to Paris in 1953 he met Maria Elena Torchio, the American-born daughter of a Florentine architect and a Barcelona mother, and they were married in June 1954 in Beirut, Lebanon, by the archbishop of the Greek Orthodox Church.

In order to take architecture out of politics, the U.S. State Department appointed a board comprised of Henry R. Shepley, Ralph Walker, and Pietro Beluschi to advise them in selecting an architect to design the U.S. embassy at New Delhi, India. Stone was awarded the commission in 1954 and found he had to deal with a subtropical climate. Some of the devices he used to compensate for the extreme heat were a water garden for its cooling effect, terrazzo grilles for the external walls for their light filtering qualities, and a large rectangular canopy extending beyond the walls of the building for its shading ability. Stone placed his classical building on a platform so that automobiles could be parked in the space below, thus preventing their visual intrusion on the building. An Indian religious leader, Mohan Singh, and his son, Daljit, were chosen as builders. They brought the workers and their families to live at the site where they fabricated the building materials. The U.S. embassy was literally built by hand with a combination of Eastern and Western skills.

Toward a More Romantic Style

In 1955 Stone was asked to design a hospital and medical center for the city of Palo Alto, California, and Stanford University. He found it necessary to open an office in Palo Alto. The design he arrived at was to be compatible with the original quadrangle of three-story buildings designed by Shepley, Rutan, and Coolidge. Because this was earthquake country, reinforced concrete was the preferred building material. To imitate the rough stone of the earlier buildings, Stone created a geometric pattern in the concrete by nailing wooden blocks onto the casting forms. In the same year Stone designed a pharmaceutical plant for the Stuart Company in Pasadena. The company's founder, Arthur Hanisch, gave Stone a large site and a free hand to design the plant and amenities (recreation areas, courtyards, and a swimming pool) for the employees. The morale of the workers and the prestige of the company were influenced by the architecture, a trend recognized by corporations in the 1950s.

An American Institute of Architects (AIA) committee of five architects selected Stone to design the U.S. Pavilion (1957-1959) for the Brussels Exposition. The irregular site seemed best served by a circular building, and Stone adapted the principle of the bicycle wheel (inner and outer rings connected by radiating spokes) combined with translucent plastic panels to cover the 350 foot diameter interior open space of his design. This space allowed the United States to honor the Belgians' request to preserve the 11 willow trees planted 50 years earlier by King Albert. The white, crystal, and gold pavilion with its plaza and reflecting pool drew a cover story by TIME and an invitation from the Russians for Stone to visit their country.

Stone had long held the conviction that row housing made better use of land than the free-standing house on an individual lot. The open countryside around towns and cities should be preserved. LIFE was doing a series of essays on more livable homes and in 1958 asked Stone for a design. He suggested a row house development, noting that there was much historical precedent for it and that the "urban sprawl" of the American subdivision might be abandoned for it.

This same year Huntington Hartford chose Stone to design his gallery of modern art to be located at Columbus Circle in New York City. Due to the small site, Stone arranged the galleries vertically and selected poured concrete for its plastic possibilities. The entire building was surrounded by an arcade which provided protective covering for prospective museum goers. The romantic design Stone used here was in sharp contrast to the severe International Style he had used 20 years earlier for the MOMA.

The Kennedy Center and Work in New York

In the fall of 1958 Stone began work on a plan for the National Cultural Center (Kennedy Center) in Washington, D.C. (1958-1971). He developed two schemes for the 11-acre site on the Potomac River which included an opera house, a concert hall, and a theater under one roof with parking facilities at a lower level. The first scheme placed the three auditoria around a grand central circular hall, while the second scheme arranged them in a row and separated them by entrance lobbies. Cost was the deciding factor in the selection of the second scheme. Hopes for a truly national cultural center of stature would have been better served by the first scheme. The critics used terms such as bland and uninspiring to describe the Kennedy Center.

As Stone designed more complex and larger scale projects, such as the State University of New York at Albany campus (1962), he turned to an academic style of architecture that sought formal simplicity. Though work such as this received less than complimentary acclaim, Stone retained his popular appeal.

One of his last works, the PepsiCo World Headquarters, Purchase, New York (1971-1973), was representative of the low suburban office building. In a move from Park Avenue to an old polo field, PepsiCo acquired a 112-acre site where building height was restricted to 40 feet by a local zoning code. Stone designed a series of seven three-storied buildings to be set on a mounded site of ten acres. He created an interplay between the buildings and open spaces, with each building connected to its neighbor only at the corner. Patterned precast concrete panels were used to enrich the exterior surfaces of these low horizontal structures, while sculpture was placed in the surrounding landscape.

Further Reading

Numerous articles on Stone may be found in The Architectural Forum and The Architectural Record. Additional material may be found in Progressive Architecture and other American architectural journals. Stone is listed in Contemporary Architects edited by Muriel Emanuel (1980). Stone wrote two books: The Evolution of an Architect (1962) and Recent and Future Architecture (1967). Information on the International Style is provided in Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Philip Johnson, The International Style: Architecture Since 1922 (1932). □

Stone, Edward Durell

views updated Jun 08 2018

STONE, Edward Durell

(b. 9 March 1902 in Fayetteville, Arkansas; d. 6 August 1978 in New York City), innovative modern architect whose distinctive style, seen in buildings from New York's Museum of Modern Art to Washington, D.C.'s John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, has been the subject of both praise and condemnation.

Stone was the son of Benjamin Hicks Stone and Ruth Johnson. After studying art at the University of Arkansas for three years, Stone joined his older brother, a practicing architect, in Boston. There he took courses at night through the Boston Architectural Club while pursuing an apprenticeship with the firm of Coolidge, Shepley, Bulfinch, and Abbott. In 1926 Stone won a competition entitling him to study architecture, first at Harvard and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He proceeded to win a second MIT competition, the reward for which was two years' study and travel in Europe.

Upon his return to the United States in 1929, Stone obtained immediate employment helping to design the interior of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City and then the fabled interior of Radio City Music Hall. Several years of journeyman work followed, enabling him to open his own firm in 1936 with a major commission: the Museum of Modern Art (1937), which was praised as an embodiment in glass and concrete of the art it was intended to house. The building displayed the motifs for which he would become known: circular windows, overhanging flat roofs, and decorative concrete facades.

Stone built hangars and other utilitarian structures for the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II, an experience that influenced his postwar designs. After the war he built a number of resort hotels incorporating the cantilever methods he had learned in the military. In 1954 he designed the American Embassy in New Delhi, India, featuring a pierced concrete grillwork and an overhanging roof that protected the interior from direct sun and heat. The building, set on a platform over a sheltered parking area, seemed to float above its site.

As Stone's reputation grew during the 1960s, he repeated these motifs in numerous commissions. In a controversial action, he renovated his Manhattan townhouse in 1964, covering the entire facade with a four-story pierced screen. For the headquarters of the National Geographic Society, erected in Washington, D.C., in 1964, Stone employed a two-story base with overhang and a second overhang on the main roof. For the Center for Continuing Education at the University of Chicago (now a graduate-student residence hall), he imposed bold geometric patterns on the concrete of the exterior walls and the overhanging roof and extended the preternaturally thin columns (which had become another recurring motif) to the full height of the structure. Perhaps Stone's finest work in this vein was a pair of libraries, one for the University of South Carolina and the other for the city of Davenport, Iowa, in which the roof overhang served a functional purpose similar to that performed in New Delhi: protecting the interior (and its books) from the effects of direct sun. The South Carolina library won the American Institute of Architects' First Honor Award in 1963.

Stone's designs brought him equal amounts of praise and criticism. The extreme thinness of his columns, made possible by Stone's mastery of cantilever design, was attacked as masking the true form of his buildings; the columns, however, contributed to the illusion of a "floating" building, which was particularly valuable in either a lush or unattractive landscape, as Stone demonstrated with the Huntington Hartford Museum (now the property of the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs). The pierced-concrete facade appears to hover on structural piers that are split into large circular voids at the second-story level, decisively separating the beauty of the building from the bustling traffic and intrusive signs at street level. Some critics recommended the building for landmark status; Ada Louise Huxtable, however, called it "a Venetian palazzo on popsicle sticks."

Inevitably, Stone was approached to do ever larger projects. Between 1964 and 1972 he designed two campus master plans, one for the University of Alaska in Anchorage and the other for the State University of New York at Albany; a headquarters building for General Motors in mid-town Manhattan; a headquarters building for the Standard Oil Company (now the Aon Center) in Chicago; the PepsiCo World Headquarters in Purchase, New York; and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., whose three performance halls and associated public areas total some 1.5 million square feet.

At large scales the delicacy of Stone's vision could be overwhelmed by the sheer magnitude of concrete and marble; the lobbies of the JFK Center are one hundred feet high, and the four-hundred-acre campus in Albany remains unfilled decades after its inception. But on the more human scale of the PepsiCo headquarters, in particular, Stone fused metal, glass, and natural materials to achieve an architecture that works both visually and functionally. And even when he failed in the view of critics, he did so in some cases because his materials were not adequate to the realization of his vision. A visitor to Chicago sees the Aon Center reaching for the sky while the nearby Sears Tower clutches the ground, and the fact that the Corten steel of the latter has better withstood the brutal Chicago winters does not invalidate Stone's choice of marble.

Stone married Orlean Vandiver on 5 December 1931; they had two children. They were divorced in 1951, and on 24 June 1953 Stone married Maria Elena Torchio. The architect often said that it was she who infected his designs of the late 1950s and 1960s with their famous "romanticism." Nevertheless, that marriage did not last, and Stone married for the third time, to Violet Campbell Moffat, in 1972. Stone died after a brief illness in New York City on 6 August 1978.

Stone gained fame as an architect working in the international modern style, but transformed in the late 1950s and became the world's foremost proponent of romanticism in large structures. Although his greatest work undoubtedly is found in his more modest structures, his large buildings have proved to be extremely efficient in operation, praised for their sensuous good looks yet condemned as examples of "architectural populism."

Stone's autobiography is titled The Evolution of an Architect (1962). Additional information on his architectural vision can be found in his Recent and Future Architecture (1967). An obituary is in the New York Times (8 Aug. 1978).

Hartley S. Spatt

Stone, Edward Durell

views updated May 14 2018

Stone, Edward Durell (1902–78). American architect. He absorbed the lessons of the Modern Movement in the 1920s, working on the Rockefeller Center, NYC (1929), where he designed the interior of the Radio City Music Hall. His best International Modernist buildings were the Mandel House, Mount Kisco, NY (1932–3), and (with Philip Lippincott Goodwin (1885–1958) ) the building for the Museum of Modern Art, NYC (1936–9). After the 1939–45 war his work became rather more personal and formal as he moved away from International Modernism, and turned to regional influences. His US Embassy, New Delhi, India (1954), and Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, DC (1961–71), were axial, symmetrical, and paraphrases of Classicism.

Bibliography

Christopher (1984);
Kalman (1994);
Placzek (ed.) (1982);
Stone (1962, 1967);
van Vynckt (ed.) (1993)

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