Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
April/May 1984 | Volume 35, Issue 3
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
April/May 1984 | Volume 35, Issue 3
Today the Avery Library, with some two hundred thousand volumes and over one hundred thousand architectural drawings, continues to grow through a vigorous acquisition program of books and magazines and through gifts of drawings by prominent architects. Among its most prized holdings are a copy of the first printed book on architecture, Alberti’s De re aedificatoria , dating from 1485, and nearly every major edition of Vitruvius’s De architectura , the only book on architecture surviving from antiquity and which was first published in a modern language in 1521. But most impressive to the layman are the drawings, striking works of art that reflect the stylistic spectrum of American architecture from the serene classicism of the late eighteenth century to the futuristic vision of the 1930s.
The earliest American architectural renderings at Avery date from the end of the eighteenth century. Relatively few drawings survive from the earlier period, because craftsmen and builders tended to work directly from European pattern books, which reproduced plans and elevations of all types of buildings. The American architect of the late eighteenth century, like his foreign counterpart, began creating his own drawings as his designs became increasingly complex. In the eighteenth century, before academic programs in architecture were founded in the United States, practitioners either served an apprenticeship with established architects or taught themselves. The Englishman George Hadfield, for instance, trained under James Wyatt for six years before emigrating to the United States in 1795 to superintend the building of the Capitol; another Englishman, Richard Upjohn, arrived here trained as a cabinetmaker and began his distinguished architectural career as a draftsman in a Boston firm in 1834; and Alexander Jackson Davis, the originator of the Gothic country villa, first worked as an architectural illustrator. This nonacademic training continued even into this century: Wallace K. Harrison, who designed Rockefeller Center and the United Nations, started out as a draftsman in the office of McKim, Mead, and White.
Even after the first formal school of architecture in the United States opened in 1866 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, architects still looked to Europe for academic training. The Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris became the mecca for American architectural students.
Richard Morris Hunt, the first American at the Ecole, attended from 1846 to 1854. Henry Ogden Avery himself studied there for seven