You are on page 1of 21

Ще Створити блог Вхід

Southern California Architectural History


A Blog for fans of the cultural, architectural and design history of Southern California and related published material authored by John Crosse:
jocrosse@ca.rr.com

Wednesday, May 18, 2011 Featured


Posthttps://socalarchhistor
R. M. Schindler, Richard Neutra and Louis Sullivan's "Kindergarten y.blogspot.com/2018/12/sch
indler-scheyer-eaton-ain-
Chats" case-study.h

(Click on images to enlarge). Schindler-Scheyer-Eaton-Ain:


A Case Study in Adobe
(Click on images to enlarge) Marjorie
Eaton House, Trace Road, Palo Alto,
Gregory Ain, architect, designed
1939. Courtesy UC-Santa B...

Translate

Select Language
Powered by Translate

Popular Posts
Schindlers-Westons-
Portrait of Louis H. Sullivan, from Kindergarten Chats on Architecture, Education and Democracy by Sullivan and edited by Claude F. Bragdon, Scarab Fraternity Press, 1934, Kashevaroff-Cage
frontispiece. and Their Avant-
Garde Relationships

Louis Henry Sullivan is the taproot of the genealogical tree of modern architects in Southern California. His apprentices Irving Gill
and Frank Lloyd Wright had a profound influence on the evolution of modern architecture in the Southland which in turn attracted
Living Lightly on the
Frank's son Lloyd, Viennese emigres R. M. Schindler and Richard Neutra and their eventual apostles Harwell Hamilton Harris, Land: Bernard
Gregory Ain and Raphael Soriano (see below). (Author's note: Chicago History Museum link provides an excellent summary of Sullivan's life and career). Judge's "Triponent"
and "Tree" Houses

Playa del Rey:


Speed Capital of the
World, The Los(t)
Angeles
Motordrome, 1910-
1913

Irving Gill, Homer


Laughlin and the
Beginnings of
Modern Architecture
in Los Angeles, Part
I: 1893-1911

Frank Mead: 'A New


Type of Architecture
in the Southwest,'
Part II, 1907-1920

Irving Gill, Homer


Laughlin and the
Beginnings of
Modern Architecture
in Los Angeles, Part
II, 1911-1916

The Schindlers and


the Hollywood Art
Genealogy of Los Angeles Modern Architecture from American Architects and the Mechanics of Fame by Roxanne Kuter Williamson, p. 32.
Association, 1921-
1926
R. M. Schindler and Richard Neutra became aware of Louis Sullivan and his work through the teachings and work of Adolf
Loos and their fascination with Sullivan apprentice Frank Lloyd Wright's Wasmuth Portfolio first published in Berlin, Germany in
1910 by Ernst Wasmuth. Schindler discovered Wasmuth in 1911 and Neutra first saw it in 1914, the year Schindler left Vienna for Frederick L. Roehrig,
the U.S. They both met while studying under Loos from 1912-14. The Millionaire's
Architect

Richard Neutra and the California Art


Club: Pathways to the Josef von
Sternberg and Dudley Murphy
Commissions
The Schindlers in
Carmel, 1924

Blog Archive
► 2019 (7)
► 2018 (4)
► 2017 (10)
► 2016 (4)
► 2015 (11)
Announcement for an Adolf Loos Lecture, "Ornament and Crime" on February 21, 1913 which was likely attended by both Schindler and Neutra. From Adolf Loos by Alessandra Coppa,
24 Ore Cultura, 2013, p. 114. ► 2014 (12)
► 2013 (13)
Loos had visited the U.S. between 1893-96 and became enthralled with Chicago and it's Adler & Sullivan-designed skyscrapers ► 2012 (6)
and later regaled his students with tales of the booming Midwestern metropolis and Sullivan's work. Thus the previous ▼ 2011 (17)
genealogical diagram should be amended to include a dashed line connecting Sullivan to Loos and extending to Schindler and ► December (4)
Neutra. The table below also places Wagner, Sullivan, Loos, Wright, Schindler, and Neutra in historical context with their
► September (1)
published doctrines. (See also the Pauline Schindler discussion on architectural lineages near the end of this article.)
► July (1)
► June (1)
▼ May (2)
R. M. Schindler,
Richard Neutra and
Louis Sullivan...
Richard Neutra and
the California Art
Club: Pathwa...

► March (1)
► February (1)
► January (6)

► 2010 (34)
► 2009 (10)

Schindler-Neutra Genealogy in a Trans-Atlantic Context from "The Wagnerschule and Adolf Loos," by August J. Sarnitz in RM Schindler: Composition and Construction edited by Lionel
March and Judith Sheine, Academy Editions, 1993, p. 32.
Links of Interest
American Architect Archives

American Magazine of Art

Archinect

Architecture Books Online

Archives of American Art

Art Deco Society of Los Angeles

Art Institute of Chicago Exhibition


History

Arts & Architecture

Baldwin Hills Village and the Village


Green

Barbara Lamprecht archiTEXTural

Breuer Digital Archive

Brooklyn Daily Eagle

Auditorium Building, 50 E. Congress St., Chicago, 1889. Adler and Sullivan, architects. Buckminster Fuller Virtual Institute

Buff & Hensman: An Annotated and


Illustrated Bibliography

California Art Club History

California Art Research

California Digital Newspaper


Collection

California Historical Society

California Preservation Foundation

Calisphere

Chicago Tribune Archives

Chronicling America

City of Los Angeles Historical Building


Permits

City of Los Angeles Office of Historic


Resources
Craftsman, The

Das Neue Frankfurt

Das Werk

De Stijl

Die Form

Digital Public Library of America

El Palacio Digital Archive

Esther McCoy Papers

Frank Lloyd Wright Library

Hathi Trust Digital Library

Hisrorical Newspapers Online

Historic Los Angeles

Historic Places LA

"New Offices of Adler & Sullivan, Architects, Chicago," Engineering and Building Record, June 7, 1890, p. 5. Historical Society of Southern
California

Ironically, Gill and Wright were still working together in Sullivan's office (see above) about the time Loos arrived to view the 1893 Innen-Dekoration
Chicago World's Columbian Exposition which included Sullivan's massive Transportation Building, the most modernist-leaning
Internet Archive
building in the exposition (see below). (See also my "Irving Gill, Homer Laughlin and the Beginnings of ModernArchitecture in Los Angeles, Part I: 1893-1911").
John Cage Trust

John Lautner Bibliography

Julius Shulman Resources, Getty


Research Institute

KCET

Los Angeles City Directories

Los Angeles Conservancy

Los Angeles County Assessor Maps

Los Angeles Herald

Los Angeles Historic Resources


Inventory

Transportation Building, World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893. Adler & Sullivan, architects. Los Angeles Public Library Photo
Collection

Sullivan wrote of the deleterious impact of the Exposition's architecture on his hard-fought battle for the acceptance of a more Maynard Parker Collection
modern architectural language,
Modern San Diego

"Meanwhile the virus of the World's Fair, after a period of incubation ... began to show unmistakable signs of the Modernist Journals Project
nature of the contagion. There came a violent outbreak of the Classic and the Renaissance in the East, which
Mural Conservancy of Los Angeles
slowly spread Westward, contaminating all that it touched, both at its source and outward.... By the time the market
had been saturated, all sense of reality was gone. In its place, had come deep seated illusions, hallucinations, Museum of Modern Art Exhibition
absence of pupillary reaction to light, absence of knee-reaction-symptoms all of progressive cerebral meningitis; the History
blanketing of the brain. Thus Architecture died in the land of the free and the home of the brave.... The damage New Mexico Digital Collections
wrought by the World's Fair will last for half a century from its date, if not longer." (The Autobiography of an Idea by Louis Sullivan).
Oakland City Directories
I do not wish to delve into the text of Sullivan's Kindergarten Chats with this article but only to give the reader a sense of the
Old NYC
impact the nature-loving Sullivan had on both Schindler and Neutra through their relationships with him. A close reading of the
Chats however, will provide numerous hints that Sullivan's writings profoundly influenced Schindler's philosophical articles Online Archive of California
on "Space Architecture" and Neutra's development of his theories on "Biorealism" which he expounded upon in his Survival Online Books Page
Through Design, Nature Near and other published work. (See for example below and Nuetra's 1935 review of the Chats further below. Also see my Pauline
Gibling Schindler: Vagabond Agent for Modernism, 1927-1936 for more on the publication of Schindler's "Space Architecture" in the February 1934 issue of Dune Forum edited by Pauline Pacific Coast Architecture Database

Schindler.). Paradise Leased

Pasadena Digital History

Philadelphia Architects Database

San Diego City Directories

San Diego Historical Landmarks

San Diego History Center

San Diego Save Our Heritage


Organization

San Francisco City Directories

Santa Monica History Museum

Santa Monica, Imagine

Society of Architectural Historians,


Southern California Chapter

Southern California Architectural


History

The Argus

Realismo biologico: Un neuvo Renacimiento humanistico en arquitectura by Richard Neutra, Editorial Nueva Vision, Buenos Aires, 1973. Serulnic House living room, Julius Shulman Job UC-Berkeley Environmental Design
No. 2092, November 2, 1955, courtesy Getty Research Institute. (From my collection). Archives

UC-Santa Barbara Architecture and


Schindler moved to Chicago in 1914 with the ultimate goal of working with Wright. His first Chicago employment was with the firm Design Collections
of Ottenheimer, Stern & Reichert between 1914 and 1918. Schindler met Wright in December, 1914 and finally began working for
UCLA Library Research Guides
him on February 5, 1918. In December, 1918 Schindler, then living at Wright's Oak Park Studio while Wright was in Japan
working on the Imperial Hotel, invited Sullivan for a visit where they met for the only time. See Sullivan's acceptance letter below. UNZ.org - Periodicals, Books, and
(For much more on the initial meeting of Wright and Schindler see my "Irving Gill, Homer Laughlin and the Beginnings of ModernArchitecture in Los Angeles, Part II, 1911-1916"). Authors

USC Digital Library

USModernist Masters Gallery

Water and Power Associates Digital


Collection

Wendingen Dutch

Wendingen English

Worldcat

ZIMAS

Facebook Badge

Louis Sullivan to R. M. Schindler letter, 12-12-1918. Courtesy UC-Santa Barbara Art Museum, Architecture and Design Collections, R. M. Schindler Papers. John Crosse

From The Architectural Annual, Second Edition, 1901, p. 284.

A by then destitute Sullivan was unsuccessfully trying to find a publisher for his Kindergarten Chatswhich he had recently spent
five months revising and editing into book format. The "Chats" were originally conceived as fifty-two separate articles that
appeared weekly in the Interstate Architect and Builder from February 16, 1901 to February 8, 1902 (see review above). It was an
extended dialogue between a student and the master who leads him through a kind of spiritual and psychological confrontation Create Your Badge
with nature before introducing him to social and building analysis - Sullivan's preferred method of architectural instruction. In a
1901 letter to the editor in response to criticism of one of his "Chats" Sullivan responded with the below excerpt describing his
plan for a gradual and organically developed thesis comprised by the sum of its 52 parts. Followers

Підписки (75) Далі

The Interstate Architect and Builder, May 11, 1901, p. 6.

A month after visiting Schindler in Oak Park Sullivan wrote Wright, "I finished the book [Kindergarten Chats] but there are Стати прихильником
publication troubles, so that I am uncertain as to when the work will appear. However I can wait six months or a year until
publishers get over being crazy, as they certainly are now." (Sullivan, Cliff Dwellers to FLW Imperial Hotel, Japan, January 20, 1919 in Frank Lloyd Wright: Letters
to Architetcs by Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer, Cal State University Fresno, 1984, p. 13).).
Tracking Code
Learning of Sullivan's plight during his visit to Wright's studio in Oak Park, Schindler offered to ask his mentor and Sullivan
admirer Loos for help in finding an Austrian or German publisher.
Desperately short on funds, Sullivan entrusted Schindler with his only copy of the manuscript. After two attempts to get in contact
with Loos, the manuscript was finally sent off to Vienna on March 11, 1920. (Vienna to Los Angeles: Two Journeys by Esther McCoy, Arts + Architecture
Press, Santa Monica, CA, 1979, p. 44-5).

Schindler informed Wright in Japan of his scheme to help Sullivan find a publisher to which he replied,

"Your book scheme looks good to me. I hope something can be realized on those volumes, although being printed
in German "queers" them just now I suppose in many places." (Frank Lloyd Wright to R. M. Schindler, March 15, 1919. Getty Research
Institute, Frank Lloyd Wright Letters).
Adolf Loos, photographer and date unknown. (From Wikipedia).

Schindler did not hear from Loos for a period of months and wrote Neutra, then working at the American Friends' (Quakers) Relief
Mission in Vienna, to go see him and find out about the status of the manuscript. Neutra's July 15, 1920 reply was without any
news of the manuscript but instead mentioned that Loos was thinking about moving his school to Paris and had asked if he could
find out if Sullivan might be interested in heading it up. (McCoy, p. 144).

Schindler relayed the inquiry to Sullivan in a fascinating August 26, 1920 letter (see below) in which he described Loos's love of
America and publications on same, him being the only serious opponent against the architectural atrocities of the "Secession,"
and his controversial, ornament free work. He closed with, "Although not having any direct news about the manuscript, I hear that
Loos said that he would try to publish one of your books, and the above offer convinces me that he is in possession of the
manuscript and has read it." (RMS letter to Louis Sullivan, August 26, 1920). (See below).

RMS letter to Louis Sullivan, August 26, 1920. Courtesy UC-Santa Barbara Art Museum, Architecture and Design Collections, R. M. Schindler Papers.

Sullivan replied in an August 31st letter that he might be interested in lecturing in Paris but, at his age, he had no interest in
becoming the head of a school. He was much more interested in the status of his manuscript. About this same time Neutra wrote
to the American Red Cross attempting to find a way to enter the United States to join Schindler. Neutra opened his plea with, "I
am an architect and am hoping to go to America to study the Middle Western Architecture, the work of Richardson, Sullivan and
Frank Lloyd Wright who in our opinion is the worlds first architect today." (Richard Neutra to Miss Elsa von Elst, Foreign Language Bureau, American Red
Cross, August 14, 1920, Courtesy UC-Santa Barbara Art Museum, Architecture and Design Collections, R. M. Schindler Papers.).

Late in the year Wright asked Schindler to move to Los Angeles to help his son Lloyd oversee construction of Aline Barnsdall's
Hollyhock House in Hollywood. Lloyd's inattention to detail on Olive Hill, likely exacerbated by his moonlighting on the Bollman
and Weber houses and various landscape design projects, raised Barnsdall's ire and resulted in Wright's summons to Schindler.
(For more on this see my "Tina Modotti, Lloyd Wright and Otto Bollman Connections,1920").

Taos Pueblo, October 1915. Photograph by R. M. Schindler. Courtesy UC Santa Barbara Art Museum, Architecture and Design Collections, Schindler Collection.

The Schindler's likely stopped in New Mexico en route to the Grand Canyon and Los Angeles so that Schindler could show
Pauline the Taos Pueblo (see above and below) he had first seen in 1915 while visiting Chicago painter friends Victor Higgins and
Walter Ufer after viewing the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco and the Panama-California Exposition in
San Diego. (For more on this see my "Edward Weston and Mabel Dodge Luhan Remember D. H. Lawrence").

The Schindlers (second and third from bottom) in the Grand Canyon, December 1920. Courtesy UC Santa Barbara Art Museum, Architecture and Design Collections, Schindler Collection.

The possibility of this stopover is evidenced by a letter from Schindler to Richard Neutra shortly after moving to Los Angeles
extolling the virtues of the indigenous native architecture of the Southwest. The letter also indicates that Schindler had absorbed
Sullivan's lessons on "Function and Form" from the "Chats" and that Sullivan was having trouble getting his books published
implying that he was unaware that Neutra had any knowledge of Sullivan's manuscript.

"The only buildings that testify to any true feeling for the earth from which they spring are the ancient
adobe buildings of the first settlers and their successors-Spaniards and Mexicans-in the Southwest. ...
Louis Sullivan is the founder of the "Western School." He was the first proclaim here that "Form follows function,"
and he sets out to give the skyscraper the form that is natural to it. He writes books on architecture, which have yet
to find a publisher in America, and his buildings represent the ultimate that is attainable - attainable, that is, by an
architect who has not yet fully grasped the third dimension of space, and whose gift for wonderful pencil sketches of
ornamentation still accommodates no truly secure feeling for materials." (R. M. Schindler letter to Richard Neutra, December 1920 or
January 1921, Translation from R. M. Schindler, Architect, 1887-1953 by August Sarnitz, Rizzoli, New York, 1988, p. 205).

R. M. and Pauline Gibling Schindler, Sophie and Edmund Gibling, Dorothy Gibling and Mark Schindler at Kings Road, summer 1923. (Sweeney, p. 93). Schindler Family Collection,
Courtesy Friends of the Schindler House.

Schindler and wife Pauline arrived in Los Angeles in early December 1920 to work on Wright's Olive Hill Aline Barnsdall
compound. Unbeknownst to Schindler, Sullivan's manuscript was now in Neutra's hands. He was trying to interest the Quakers in
publishing it without success. Finally, in July 1921, a year before completing work and moving into his new house on Kings Road
in West Hollywood (see above), Schindler received confirmation from Neutra that he indeed was in possession of the manuscript
and was trying to find a publisher himself. Esther McCoy, in her Vienna to Los Angeles: Two Journeys, illuminates through the
correspondence of Schindler and Neutra and letters from Sullivan to Schindler, the efforts Sullivan and Schindler made over the
next two years to get the manuscript back from Neutra. The letters from Sullivan to Schindler also portray his dire financial straits
and that Wright had authorized Schindler to disburse to him a much-needed $200. (Sullivan to Schindler letter, Chicago, September 8, 1921, McCoy,
p. 147).

Neutra apparently was still trying to find a publisher, an exercise that would serve him well when looking for a German publisher
for his own first book, Wie Baut Amerika? in 1926-7. He also likely practiced his English by poring over the "Chats" while
absorbing Sullivan's teachings and fantasizing about returning the manuscript to him in person, a dream that was not to be
realized until 1924.

In the fall of 1922 Loos submitted an unsuccessful but well-publicized Chicago Tribune Tower competition entry shortly after the
Schindlers had moved into their new house in Los Angeles and before Neutra arrived in Chicago in 1924 (see above). Loos's
entry, a seemingly serious attempt to win the $50,000 first prize, also appears to indicate that he and/or Neutra possibly translated
Sullivan's Chats before handing the manuscript back to Neutra the previous year. His design makes an obvious wink at Sullivan's
chapter, "A Doric Column," which derided in great detail its winning selection in a design competition for a memorial for the 200th
anniversary of the discovery and founding of the City of Detroit. Sullivan ended his hyperbolic Doric Column chapter chastising
the unnamed architect and the selection process with,

"So much for decay, so much for cynicism, for pessimism, for the downfall of the sturdy American pioneer, the
hunter, the trapper, the woodsman, the riverman, the greatest in the world, the hardiest, the truest and the best -
and their memory to consummate in what? A "Doric" Column! In any other land, in any other time, this would seem
a fairy tale, so faithless sounds the story - so inhuman a response." (Kindergarten Chats by Louis Sullivan, Scarab Press, p. 62). (Note:
Sullivan disparaged the Doric Column throughout the Chats).

Without benefit of knowing that Loos had likely read Sullivan's Kindergarten Chats, Katherine Solomonson wrote of the Loos entry
in her exhaustively researched book on the competition,

"Adolf Loos, like Bruno Taut, was particularly concerned with the Tribune building's representational qualities. His
column of gleaming granite - one of several immense columns submitted to the Tribune became one of the
competition's best-known but most ambiguous entries. Seen variously as a joke, a caustic critique, and a
sophisticated essay rich in metaphorical allusions, Loos's column has triggered wide-ranging interpretations:
it expresses the Tribune's growth and power, as it did that of the Roman Empire; it playfully alludes to a
newspaper's printed columns; it suggests that the Tribune is a pillar of society; it refers to the columnar metaphor
describing the skyscraper's tripartite elevation; it takes a critical stand against the American city; it is Dada; it is
ironic; it is utterly empty of meaning." (The Chicago Tribune Tower Competition: Skyscraper Design and Cultural Change in the 1920s" by Katerine
Solomonson, p. 118).

Loos must have been quite pleased with the multiple entendre his entry presented and must have had great fun with it's design,
obviously knowing that his hero Sullivan would likely see it and realize his inside joke.

"The Chicago Tribune Building," Adolf Loos on Architecture edited by Adolf and Daniel Opel, Ariadne Press, Riverside, CA, 1995, p. 169.

Despite possibly knowing of his Chicago idol Sullivan's utter disdain for the Doric column, Loos's entry was seemingly a serious
attempt to win the competition evidenced by his post competition article describing his project design inspiration published in early
1923. Loos's intimate knowledge of American skyscrapers from his three years spent in the U.S. is apparent in his piece.

"In producing this design the author constantly bore in mind the demand in the prospectus "to erect the
most beautiful and distinctive office building in the world," to erect a building that once seen, either in a photograph
or in reality, can never be forgotten, to raise a monument that will forever be associated with the image of the city of
Chicago, just as the dome of St. Peter's is with Rome and the leaning tower with Pisa, to design a building that for
the intelligentsia will immediately connect the newspaper, The Chicago Tribune, with a particular character.

How to achieve this? By erecting the highest building in the world, higher than the Woolworth Building? The
restriction on height to 400 feet made this impossible. By repeating the trick of the New York Herald or the Morgan
Building and making it lower than the surrounding buildings? Such imitation would run counter to the competition
requirements. Or by choosing new architectural forms without tradition, such as German, Austrian and French
architects use, forms from the Berlin of Cubism or the Belgium of the 1848 revolution? Alas, all these untraditional
forms are all too quickly replaced by new ones and the owner soon realizes his building is old-fashioned because
these forms change as fast as ladies' hats.

There seemed to be nothing for it, then, but to design the typical American skyscraper. When this movement started
it was easy to distinguish between them, but already the non-specialist finds it difficult to say whether the building
whose photograph he is looking at is in San Francisco or Detroit.

For his design, therefore, the author chose the column. There are precedents in the tradition for the concept
of a huge, freestanding column: the Column of Trajan was the model for Napoleon's column on PlaceVendome. I
was immediately assailed by architectural and aesthetic reservations. Is it permissible to build an inhabited column?
To that one must answer that precisely the most beautiful designs for skyscrapers have been taken from
monuments that were not intended for habitation and no one has yet objected to them for that reason. For example
the classical model of the tomb of King Mausolus for the Metropolitan Building and the model of the Gothic spire for
the Woolworth Building.
From Postcards and Poster Stamps of the Bugra.

(Author's note: Loos is also likely to have recalled the Doric Column that was part of the 1913 International Building Trade Fair in
Leipzig (see above) as he was preparing his Tribune Tower entry.)

(From Christie's).

"You can rest assured that despite this I found it difficult to bring myself to publish my idea. There are people who,
given the Catonian severity for which I have made a name for myself, would claim I was betraying my principles in
doing something they would quite happily accept from any other architect. I will state here and now that I have not
betrayed my principles and stand by my design unconditionally. With my close connections with the newspaper
business, being not only an architect but also a writer and contributor to all modern art journals, and having worked
in my younger days as art critic in New York, I am well aware how far one can go, in terms of architecture, with
a newspaper building. This design is worthy of a Chicago Tribune, for a small newspaper it would be presumptuous.

Most objections, I fear, will be directed at the lack of decoration in my project. This building is intended as a gigantic
demonstration of my doctrine that we replace the ornamentation of antiquity with the quality of our materials. It is to
be made of one material alone: black, polished granite (see below)."

Chicago Tribune Tower Competition entry, Adolf Loos, 1922. From Adolf Loos by Alessandra Coppa, 24 Ore Cultura, 2013, p. 103.
From Chicago Architectural League 1924 Exhibition Catalogue back matter. Neutra's employer, Holabird & Roche, architects.

"No illustration is capable of revealing the effect of this column. The smooth, polished surfaces of the cubic base
and the fluting of the column would make an overwhelming impression on the observer. It would be a
surprise, a sensation even in these modern and blase times.

The building is no higher than the regulations allow, but the perspective created by the abacus makes
it appear higher.

I have been lavish in the use of space. Monumentality is always achieved at the cost of space: high entrance halls,
broad staircases etc. The owner must remember that true grandeur is not characterized by petty utility but that the
most impressive effects are obtained by the opposite, as is proved by the New York Herald Building and the Morgan
Building.

The return between the base of the column and the plant building is to be of brick and terracotta, with the exception
of the cornice and the columns, which are to be of the same material as the main building. This will be the best way
of showing that the new building and the existing plant belong together.

The colossi over the entrance columns have their antecedent in tradition in the Temple of Jupiter at Acragas and in
the crouching figure of the Theater of Dionysos in Athens.
If the height restriction of four hundred feet should be removed the statue of a seated Roman tribune could be
placed on top of the column.

Until now huge columns have only been erected in the Roman style, never the Greek. Until now this idea was
slumbering in our imagination, now it has taken on form.

This huge, Greek Doric column will be built. If not in Chicago, then in another City. If not for the Chicago
Tribune, then for someone else. If not by me, then by another architect." ("Loos, Adolf, "The Chicago Tribune Column," Zeitschrift der
Oster. Ingenieur-und Architektenvereins, January 26, 1923).

How Loos's entry would look today had it been built, presaging the Post-Modern era by a full 60 years. (From archiV).

Loos's ending quote was precious indeed as it foresaw by 60 years the dawning of the Postmodernism Movement in architecture.
Loos's "Column" would have made a timeless statement on Michigan Avenue as seen above. As Loos predicted, his idea would
come to fruition in another city for another client by another architect. Michael Graves' 1995 Denver Public Library clearly
captures elements of Loos's now iconic 1922 design in a quite imaginative manner.
Denver Public Library, Michael Graves, architect. From Denver Library.

Left, second prize, Eliel Saarinen, Helsingfors, Finland. Right, first prize, John Mead Howells and Raymond Hood, New York. (Sullivan, Louis H., "The Chicago Tribune Competition,"
Architectural Record, February, 1923, pp. 154-155).

Sullivan's review of the competition in the February 1923 issue of the Architectural Record was also silent on Loos's "Column"
entry but instead focused upon a comparison between the first prize entry of John Mead Howells and Raymond Hood and that of
second place winner Eliel Saarinen. (See above). Sullivan's scathing critique of the Tribune's selection jury choice bemoaned of a
lost opportunity in the advancement of modern architecture,

"It's act has deprived the world of a shining mark, denied it a monument to beauty, to faith, to courage and to
hope. Deprived an expectant world of that Romance for which it hungers, and had hoped to receive." Sullivan
ended by repeating the stated goal of the Tribune, "It cannot be reitterated too emphatically that the primary
objective of The Chicago Tribune in instituting this Competition is to secure the design for a structure distinctive and
imposing - the most beautiful office building in the world." (Sullivan, Louis H., "The Chicago Tribune Competition," Architectural Record,
February, 1923, pp. 151-157).

Sullivan's remarks on Saarinen's design prophesied "A time to come, and not so far away, when the wretched and the yearning,
the sordid and the fierce, shall escape the bondage and the mania of fixed ideas."

From Chicago Architectural League 1924 Exhibition Catalogue back matter. Chicago Tribune Tower winning entry by Hood & Howells, architects. Author's note: Neutra would

certainly viewed this catalogue while visiting the exhibition. Schindler may also have seen it under construction while in town.).
"Awards in Architects' Competition for New Tribune Building," Chicago Tribune, December 3, 1922, p. I-3. Courtesy of the UC Santa Barbara, University Art Museum, Architecture and
Design Collections, R. M. Schindler Collection.

Schindler had actually been following the competition closely and kept a file of clippings sent to him by friends in Chicago. (See
example above). He also read Sullivan's critique and sent him a letter expressing his agreement evidenced by Sullivan's March 6,
1923 reply from The Cliff Dwellers Club.

"Dear Schindler,
Your interesting letter of Feb. 28th at hand, thanks for Frank Wright's address: its receipt has enabled me to write
him a couple of important letters.
Glad you like the Tribune 'Critique.' It has produced a sensation: and the issue has sold out.
You ask me why I don't write more? from which I take it you have not been following my 'Autobiography of an
Idea' - ten chapters of which have already appeared serially in 'The Journal of the Am. Inst. of Architects,' which
issues monthly. I have also written something on the Imperial Hotel. Good luck to you in spite of difficulties. Kindest
to the Missus.
Sincerely,
Louis H. Sullivan" (From McCoy's "Two Journeys," p. 149).

I have not yet been able to find any writings stating what Neutra and/or Schindler actually thought of their mentor Loos's tongue-
in-cheek Tribune Tower Competition entry. If a joke was intended they certainly would have gotten it immediately upon seeing his
entry rendering as they both "cut their teeth" on the "Chats" and would have undoubtedly agreed with his critique of the winning
entry in the Architectural Record. Neutra incorporated references to his idol Sullivan's work and writings and his thoughts on the
Tribune Tower winning design into his lectures on modern architecture as did Schindler. For example in a Pauline Schindler
review of Neutra's November 28, 1928 lecture in Carmel she wrote,

"He cited the principle which is the alpha and the omega of modern architecture, "Form Follows Function," and
distinguished between the functional architecture of the true modern, as compared with the formalist architecture of
the earlier pseudo-classicists in the United States who took the Greek Doric column (italics mine) and thought they
could make an American architecture with it. It is not the architect who now makes architecture said Mr. Neutra, but
the situation out of which it arises. He clarified this by criticizing adversely several typically false buildings including
the Chicago Tribune Building..." (Schindler, Pauline, "Neutra Renders Modern Architecture Intelligible," The Carmelite, December 5, 1928, p. 4).

Due to having to serve in World War I and lack of funds caused by the collapse of the European economy thereafter, Neutra was
unable to fulfill his dream of coming to America until late 1923. After a brief stay in New York, Neutra followed in Schindler's
footsteps to Chicago in late February 1924 where his goal was also to work with Wright. Shortly after arriving, Neutra visited all of
Sullivan's Chicago buildings of which he opined in his autobiography, "Here in the middle of North America, I thought was work
which could be compared with what Otto Wagner had been doing in Vienna of Central Europe. And that was the very highest
accolade I was capable of giving to anything built." (Life and Shape by Richard Neutra, p. 181).

Neutra further wrote that while still trying to find a publisher for Kindergarten Chats shortly after his move to Chicago,

"I also talked to a few people in Chicago about it, and they all laughed at me. Sullivan? they asked, - isn't he that old
drunkard? He's a pauper now, and is being supported by his friends; each one pitches in five dollars a month." (Life &
Shape, p. 182).

The Japanese Print: An Interpretation by Frank Lloyd Wright, Ralph Fletcher Seymour, 1912.

While researching Wright's and Sullivan's buildings and working for his new employer Holabird & Roche on the Palmer House
Hotel project, Neutra met a mutual friend of theirs and Schindler, the noted publisher, artist and Cliff Dwellers Club founding
officer Ralph Fletcher Seymour (see below), one of the people providing support to Sullivan. Seymour, whose office was in the
Fine Arts Building where Wright had also previously held court, had published in 1912 Wright's first ever book, The Japanese
Print: An Interpretation by Frank Lloyd Wright (see above).

Schindler and Seymour were close friends from his and wife Pauline's time in Chicago. Before meeting and marrying RMS
Pauline had lived with the Seymours with Marian Da Camara [Chace], future Kings Road housemate, while they were teaching at
the Ravinia School in 1917-18. Schindler and Seymour had been corresponding regarding Schindler designing a cottage for
Seymour in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California. It was likely through Seymour that Neutra finally met Sullivan. (Author's note: Seymour's Carmel
cottage was eventually built and both Pauline and RMS visited after their estrangement. For more on this see my "Schindler in Carmel, 1924." Schindler, Neutra and Seymour would all
lecture at Carmel's Denny-Watrous Gallery between late 1928 and 1931.).

Ralph Fletcher Seymour, ca. 1912. From Caxton Club Journal Caxtonian, May 2011.

Cliff Dwellers Club etching by Ralph Fletcher Seymour from Some Went This Way: A Forty Year Pilgimage Among Artists, Bookmen and Printers by Ralph Fletcher Seymour, p. 139.

Neutra soon found a broken-spirited Sullivan living in loneliness and poverty at the shabby Warner Hotel. After Neutra sent
flowers up to his room, Sullivan came down a while later and invited him to dinner at the Cliff Dwellers Club (see below). Sullivan
spoke of being forgotten and his ill health and Neutra tried to reassure him of his influence upon European architects. It was at
this meeting that Neutra finally returned Sullivan's Kindergarten Chats manuscript. (Richard Neutra and the Search for Modern Architecture by
Thomas S. Hines, University of California Press, 1994, p. 51) and Life & Shape, p. 182).

Louis Sullivan at the Cliff Dwellers Club circa 1920. From Chicago Patterns.
Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 1904 by Daniel Burnham with Cliff Dwellers' Club on top floor.

Many of Louis Henry Sullivan's last days were spent at the Cliff Dwellers Club atop Orchestra Hall on Michigan Avenue where
they let him have a writing desk and meals for free. He survived his last years largely on the handouts of friends. Besides
Seymour, architects Sidney K. Adler (former partner Dankmar's son), Max Dunning, George Nimmons, and Frank Lloyd Wright,
plus associates at the American and Northwestern Terra Cotta companies, paid his bills, loaned him money, and often bought his
meals. When Louis Henry Sullivan died on April 14, 1924, of kidney disease and inflammation of the cardiac muscles, they
covered his funeral expenses and cleared up his financial obligations. The $189 in his bank account, which had also come from
them, was almost all Sullivan owned. ("Sullivan, Louis H.," Encyclopedia of Architecture edited by Joseph A. Wilkes and Robert T. Packard, Wiley, 1989, p. 714).

Louis Sullivan, ca. 1923. From "Louis H. Sullivan (1856-1924," Architectural Record, June, 1924, p. 587.

Ralph Fletcher Seymour letter to R. M. Schindler, April 17, 1924. Courtesy UC-Santa Barbara Art Museum, Architecture and Design Collections, R. M. Schindler Papers.

Seymour notified Schindler of Sullivan's death in a letter stating that Wallace Rice was to deliver the eulogy at the funeral and that
Frank Lloyd Wright was to be an honorary pall-bearer (see above). A bereaved Neutra took off work from his new-found job at
Holabird & Roche to attend the funeral. He wrote to Dione of the event,

"Poor Sullivan is dead. I wrote to you two weeks ago that I had the good fortune to visit him "at home." Oh my,
Graceland Cemetery is a more suitable place than the Warner Hotel. I am sure it is not boasting when I tell you that
I am probably the only person in Chicago who daily enjoys his buildings. He was not an achiever, never became as
radical as the old Otto Wagner, but surely was one of the most significant Americans. Correspondingly, his funeral
was sad. He told me, trying to get his breath and quite desolate, "What is left of my endeavors? Nothing. What are
the young people doing? Oh my!" (Richard to Dione letter, Highland Park, May 1924. From Richard Neutra: Promise and Fulfillment, 1919-1932 , p.
122).

Seymour's above letter also referenced Sullivan's The Autobiography of an Idea, hurriedly published by Press of the American
Institute of Architects being presented to him on his deathbed. In his introduction Claude Bragdon, who would 10 years later
lovingly take on the task of editing the"Chats," fondly reminisced,

"Although his writings have appeared only in pamphlet form, and as contributions to journals of limited circulation
and short life, they were of a kind to imprint themselves upon the mind of youth, "wax to receive and marble to
retain." His Kindergarten Chats, impatiently awaited, week by week, as they appeared in a trade journal long since
vanished, hidden under draughting-boards until the exit of "the boss," and then eagerly read, destroyed for many
young men - I was one of them - the world of ideas into which they had been educated, but only to create another
and a better world of ideas in their stead.

The Chats proved to be a vigorous, bitter, bludgeoning assault upon the then existing architectural order (is it
different now, I wonder?), but they pointed out a way to freedom to any sincere young architectural talent stifling in
the tainted air of our industrialism or bogged in the academic morass. Large, loose, discursive, a blend of the
sublime and the ridiculous, as though Ariel had collaborated with Caliban, Kindergarten Chats remains in my
memory as one of the most provocative, amazing, amusing, astounding, inspiring things that I have ever read."

Seymour and erstwhile Sullivan apprentice, George Elmslie, formerly of the noted Prairie School team of Purcell & Elmslie,
collected Sullivan's possessions after his death for safekeeping, including the manuscript for Kindergarten Chats that Neutra had
recently returned. It was at the funeral that Neutra finally was able to meet Wright and tell him of his profound influence. A
flattered Wright invited him to dinner and even though he had no work, to visit Taliesin.

Helena Rubenstein, 1924 modeling a 1923 Paul Poiret dress. Nikolas Muray photo from The Jewish Museum.

Not long after Sullivan's funeral, Schindler wrote Seymour that he was planning a stopover in Chicago on his way to New York to
remodel Helena Rubenstein's Manhattan salon and Greenwich, CT residence. He had just completed a reception room-salon in
Hollywood for her at the southeast corner of Highland Ave. and Hollywood Blvd. just a block from Frank Lloyd Wright's Freeman
House. The project was photographed by Viroque Baker (see two below) who may have provided the introduction through her
considerable Hollywood Woman's Club connections. (For more on this see my "The Schindlers and the Hollywood Art Association," WSZW and "The Schindlers in
Carmel, 1924").

Helena Rubenstein Salon Reception Room, 1780 N. Highland Ave., Hollywood, 1924. R. M. Schindler, architect. Courtesy UC-Santa Barbara Architecture and Design Collections, R. M.
Schindler Collection. A special thanks to curator Jocelyn Gibbs for providing this image.

Ralph Fletcher Seymour letter to R. M. Schindler, ca. May 1924. Courtesy UC-Santa Barbara Art Museum, Architecture and Design Collections, R. M. Schindler Papers.
Seymour's above reply stated that they were looking forward to him staying with them while he was in Chicago and that Neutra
wanted to see him while he was passing through (see above). The late May layover enabled a renewal of his friendship with
Neutra on very friendly terms after their 10-year separation. This reunion most certainly heightened Neutra's eagerness to finally
make the fateful move to Los Angeles. (From R. M. Schindler by Judith Sheine, Phaidon, 2001, p. 65).

Like Schindler, Neutra also undoubtedly followed the Tribune Tower competition and witnessed much of its construction
firsthand before moving to Taliesin in the late fall and Los Angeles in February 1925. He also had an article published in Europe in
which he discussed the Tribune Tower structural system which he characterized as "extraordinary" notwithstanding its Gothic
cladding, and expressed his admiration for H. J. Burt's role in bringing to fruition the technology of the skyscraper. (Neutra, Richard, "Die
altesten Hochhauser und der jungste Turm," Die Baugilde, 6 (1924): 495-97, 505-7 and cited in Solomonson, p. 256).

Tribune Tower under construction from the southwest. Photograph by Eugene Cour, July 5, 1924. From Solomonson, p. 256. Original image courtesy of Chicago Tribune Company.

The above and below construction photos illustrate Burt's structural design and indicate how rapidly the structure rose. It seems
likely that Schindler and Neutra visited the site and discussed the building's structural aspects during RMS's late May visit on his
way to New York. Ironically, Neutra would not include any images of the Tribune Tower in either of his first two books, the 1926
Wie Baut Amerika? and the 1930 Amerika: Neues Bauen in der Welt, probably out of respect for Sullivan's opinions on the design
competition which they likely discussed during their only meeting shortly before his death. He did, however, include an extensive
illustrated construction chronology featuring the structural skeleton of the Palmer House project in his first book.

Tribune Tower under construction from the north. Photograph by Eugene Cour, September 22, 1924. From Solomonson, p. 258. Original image courtesy of Chicago Tribune Company.

Frank Lloyd Wright's six-page tribute to "The Master" was published in the July issue of Architectural Record. Wright wrote at
length of Sullivan's genius and the importance of his four masterpieces,

"Only the Chicago Auditorium, the Transportation Building, the Getty Tomb and the Wainwright Building are
necessary to show the great reach of creative activity that was Louis Sullivan's genius. ... When he brought in the
board with the motive for the Wainwright Building outlined in profile and in scheme upon it and threw it down on the
table, I was perfectly aware of what had happened. This was Louis Sullivan's greatest moment - his greatest effort.
The "skyscraper," as a new thing beneath the sun, an entity with virtue, individuality and beauty all its own, was
born." (Wright, Frank Lloyd, "Louis H. Sullivan - His Work," Architectural Record, July, 1924, pp. 28-33).

Wainwright Building, Adler & Sullivan, 1891.


Future (1928-1933) Neutra apprentice Harwell Hamilton Harris was also deeply influenced by Sullivan's writings even before he
had decided to become an architect as he recollected in his oral history about his art student days at Otis Art Institute,

"I had never heard of Sullivan, although I'm sure I had seen something of his, because it looked familiar to me when
I did see his work later. It was not until, as a student at Otis, [I] went into the office of the director on some matter or
other, that Karl Howenstein shoved over a typewritten sheet for me to read. It was something he had written for a
magazine, and the occasion for the writing was the death of Louis Sullivan. I read it and didn't forget it, and, less
than a year afterward, [Sullivan's] The Autobiography of an Idea was published. Howenstein spoke in his piece
about the influence of Sullivan. He had worked for a short time for Sullivan, but in Sullivan's much later years. He
talked, I remember, in this piece for publication about the influence that Sullivan had on draftsmen in various offices.
... I did read The Autobiography of an Idea, in 1926 I guess. I was very much taken with it and became a great
admirer of Sullivan." (Organic View of Design, p. 89. See also my "Richard Neutra and the California Art Club" and my "The Schindlers and the Hollywood Art
Association," for more on Howenstein).

Thanksgiving at Kings Road, 1923. Herman Sachs, far left, others at table clockwise from Sachs include Karl Howenstein and Edith Gutterson, Anton Martin Feller, E. Clare Schooler (lover
of Dorothy Gibling), person partially obscured at right (unidentified), Betty Katz, Alexander R. Brandner, unidentified, and Max Pons (obscured to Sachs' right). Another photo exists from
the opposite side of the table which includes Dorothy Gibling (frequent long-term guest at Kings Road) to Betty Katz's right. Photo by R. M. Schindler. From the UCSB Art Museum R. M.
Schindler Papers and "Life at Kings Road: As It Was 1920-1940" by Robert Sweeney in The Architecture of R. M. Schindler, p. 97. (I am indebted to architectural historian William Scott

Blair, steward of the Feller Archive, for identifying Feller and sharing his tragic story with me and help identifying the others in the photo.)

Howenstein's Sullivan tribute was written about the time Neutra met Wright at Sullivan's funeral and shortly thereafter moved to
Taliesin with wife Dione to work for Wright. Friends of the Schindlers in Chicago, Karl Howenstein and Edith Gutterson (center
back above) had also met while working at the Art Institute of Chicago. Edith fondly reminisced years later about her and Karl's
evenings spent in Sullivan's company,

"During the years 1915- 17 I was working at the Art Institute in Chicago and met Karl Howenstein, who eventually I
married. He was an architect (really more interested in men's souls than their dwellings, and a great admirer of
Sullivan 's ideas and of the man himself. I saw Sullivan possibly six times in this manner. Karl and I would meet him
and take him to the Tip-Top Inn [Pullman Building at Michigan Ave. and Adams St.], where we would get a table by
the window where we would look down on the lights of the city, and off to the darkness of the lake. We would sit
there for several hours, eating cheese sandwiches and drinking beer, while Sullivan talked. Karl always felt that his
words, spoken, were more fraught with meaning and carried overtones of meaning not possible in the written word,
and now I know what he meant. His mind would range from one point to another, from one subject to another, but
not rambling. Each thought and point grew organically out of the preceding. I wish I could remember the
actual contents of the talks, but it is no use pretending that I recall them, except that I do recall hearing the name of
a great number of philosophers mentioned, among them Rudolph Steiner. (It was only later that I personally
met Anthroposophy myself). I think that thing I remember best is the impact of his real concern for men, the human
being, and his spiritual and emotional needs. There was no patronizing, or feeling that he in any way knew the
answer, only a deep desire to share whatever he comprehended. There was nothing of the 'Master' about him, as
there was about Wright or Neutra. Of course. Wright called him 'Master', but I have the feeling Sullivan would
have accepted this half humorously. I remember his eyes, gentle at times, but when really, roused, fire would flash
from them. He was an essentially kind man, in the way I feel Dr. Steiner was." (Prairie School Review, Vol. 10, 1972, pp. 1-20).

It was Edith who was then dating and discussing marriage with RMS who introduced him to Pauline Gibling in early 1919.
Howenstein and Gutterson moved to Los Angeles in 1922 and lived for two years in the Schindler's Kings Road House.
Howenstein would become Director of the Otis Art Institute and Curator of the Los Angeles Museum of History, Science and Art.

Herman Sachs (far left above) exhibited his "applied arts" at the Art Institute of Chicago and also established the Chicago
Industrial Arts School at Jane Addams' Hull-House in late 1920 just as the Schindlers were moving to Los Angeles (see below).
(Note: Neutra also briefly lived and worked at Hull-House just after arriving in Chicago in 1923). Sachs moved to Los Angeles in 1923 after a brief stint as
Director of the Dayton Art Museum.

"Program for the Chicago Industrial Art School, Hull-House" by Herman Sachs. From my collection.
The Viennese Feller (to Edith's left in the above photo) and Alexander Brandner (across the table in the light shirt) were fellow
architects that Schindler helped enter the U.S. and collaborated with. Feller's wife had given birth to a baby girl about a month
prior to this picture and tragically committed suicide two weeks later, likely accounting for Feller's depressed demeanor. Feller was
then working in Frank Lloyd Wright's Los Angeles office on nearby Harper Ave. with Swiss architect Werner Moser, another Kings
Road visitor with wife Sylva, and Kameki and Nobu Tsuchiura who had also worked on Wright's Imperial Hotel in Tokyo. They all
moved to Taliesin the following February where the Neutra's met and worked beside them later in the year (see below). ("Identified in
Death Leap," Los Angeles Times, November 9, 1923, p. II-1). (I am indebted to William Blair Scott, Steward of Feller's Papers, for bringing this to my attention.)

From left to right, Frank Lloyd Wright, Richard Neutra, Sylva Moser, and new baby, Kameki Tsuchiura, Nobu Tsuchiura, Werner Moser on the violin and Dione Neutra on the cello in the
living room at Taliesin, 1924. From Richard Neutra: Promise and Fulfillment, 1919-1932 , p. 52).

Neutra moved to Taliesin with wife Dione and new son Frank in September 1924 before relocating to California in February
1925 to finally achieve his dream of joining Schindler.

The Neutras at Taliesin, 1924. From left, Dione, Richard, FLW's namesake baby Frank, and Dione's mother Lilly Niedermann. From Richard Neutra: Promise and Fulfillment, 1919-1932 , p.

51.

FLW having a Kindergarten Chat with baby Frank Neutra at Taliesin, 1924. From Richard Neutra: Promise and Fulfillment, 1919-1932 , p. 51.

While working at Taliesin in late 1924 and sitting at lunch opposite Wright, Neutra,

"... opened a letter [from Ralph Fletcher Seymour], and inside was a topaz stickpin, sent to me with an appreciative
and hopeful letter. It told me that I was worthy to have the pin which Sullivan had worn in better days and which his
friends had now redeemed from the pawn shop. They thought I deserved it for my enthusiasm and friendliness to
the old master. Glowing, I, who was nobody, rushed around the table to Mr. Wright. "Do you recognize it?" He shook
his head, and I gave him the letter. It was a mistake. He read and silently gave me back these tokens. He seemed
sad. The necktie pin I have never worn. It is in a bank safe." (Life & Shape, p. 185).
FLW and Richard Neutra at Taliesin, 1924.

The event was so meaningful to Neutra that he wrote about it years later in a letter to Seymour,

"Your considering me a worthy heir of something that Sullivan owned has immensely encouraged me through the
many dark hours of being derided and seeming to fail to reach any goal in this difficult profession. ... Always when I
had a tough time, I used to look at the pin and read your letter. ...I wonder whether you guessed what you
contributed to my effort and career when you wrote me suddenly that I, an unknown young man, was worthy to
have that token and would live up to it." (Hines, p. 54).

The pin is now the proud stewardship of Neutra biographer Thomas S. Hines. Per Raymond Neutra, "My mother gave it to Tom
Hines because she thought he would treasure it and see that it found an ultimate home." (e-mail to the author, 06-24-2011). Sullivan's pin
could not be in better hands.

The Neutras left Taliesin in late February 1925 and traveled to Los Angeles and moved the Schindler's Kings Road House in early
March (see below). There they would remain until May 1930 when Neutra began his fateful world tour. (See "The Foundations of Los Angeles
Modernism" for more details on this period).

Richard, Dione and Frank Neutra and RMS at Kings Road, 1928. Photo by Jean Murray Bangs, later wife of later Neutra disciple Harwell Hamilton Harris. (McCoy Papers, Archives of
American Art)

Pauline Schindler wrote of Neutra in late 1928 in The Carmelite, a newspaper in Carmel-by-the-Sea she was editing after leaving
her husband,

"'Form Follows Function' said Louis Sullivan. 'This is the basis for the new architecture.' Richard Neutra, who
lectures in Carmel at the studio of Denny and Watrous next Sunday evening, is what we might call a direct
architectural descendant of Louis Sullivan. Every profession and every art which has great teachers has its
lineages. The greatest of those who called Sullivan "Master" was Frank Lloyd Wright. ... Louis Sullivan became a
great influence upon American architecture because he could not only understand consciously what he was driving
at; he could not only build buildings which illustrated the principle that form follows function; but he could make his
meaning clear to the rest of the world. Richard Neutra is one of the two or three true descendants of the lineage of
Sullivan and Wright, to whom architecture is not merely an expression of a civilization but a conditioning agent of
future cultures." (Schindler, Pauline, "The Architecture of the Future," The Carmelite, November 28, 1928, p. 11). (Also see my Pauline Gibling Schindler:
Vagabond Agent for Modernism, 1927-1936 for more details).
Kindergarten Chats by Louis Sullivan, Scarab Fraternity Press, 1934. (From my collection).

It would not be until 1934, ten years after Sullivan's death, that Kindergarten Chats would finally be published in book form (see
above). It was through the foresight of George Elmslie's saving of Sullivan's papers that ten years after his death, SCARAB, the
professional intercollegiate architectural fraternity, published Kindergarten Chats on the occasion of it's Silver Anniversary. Editor
Claude F. Bragdon states in his introduction that,

"Several attempts were made, both before and after Sullivan's death in 1924, to have the essays issued in book
form, but all proved abortive. Though no names were mentioned, the Chats contained strictures on then-living
architects which might be construed as libelous; and intemperate language, the slang of the day, bad puns,
tiresome jokes, so marred the facade of this masterpiece that for publication in book form emendations and
excisions were imperative. Sullivan refused to perform this task himself, nor would he submit to anyone else's
editorship. His literary executor and long-time associate, Mr. George G. Elmslie, and other interested parties, having
now placed this delicate and difficult matter in my hands, I have done the best I could with it."

Book design by Sullivan pupil Eugene Voita.

Back cover with Neutra blurb.

Neutra's blurb on the back cover read, "In 'America: A New Building in the World,' I have endeavored to set a monument to Louis
H. Sullivan, a fine and great man." (See above). Indeed, Neutra included numerous Sullivan projects in his second book
published in 1930. California Arts & Architecture published Neutra's review of the Chats shortly after publication (see below).
Neutra wrote,

"[Sullivan] in his lalks to the young designer had fundamentally shaken the arbitrariness and stylistic eclecticism of a
transitory period and found new bearings for a contemporary architecture, preparing its consistent growth to
something comparable with what architecture loyal to its time had meant in periods of the past. The
Darwinian theory on an unavoidable relation of organic development to its influential surroundings, a theory which in
the nineteenth century impressed the minds and spread fom biology to other fields of application, is reflected in
Sullivan's functional philosophy." (See below).
"Kindergarten for Infant Architects," by Richard Neutra, California Arts & Architecture, June 1935, p. 25.

Louis H. Sullivan: Kindergarten Chats and Other Writings by Louis H. Sullivan, edited by Elizabeth Athey, Wittenborn, 1947.

Long out of print, a second edition of the Chats was published by George Wittenborn in 1947 featuring cover design and
typography by Paul Rand as part of the highly collected Documents of Modern Art series (see above). This edition restored the
manuscript from the Bragdon edition back to the way Sullivan had originally revised it in 1918 and added other selected writings
by Sullivan to add context and perspective. The publisher's comments reflected,

"From June to October 1918, Sullivan worked over the manuscript and produced the text which follows, and which
therefore represents its definitive form. The actual manuscript gives the impression that Sullivan revised in the exact
meaning of the word, that he gave attention to every sentence and paragraph, that his alterations of word and
phrase, his cutting and rewriting, were the product of genuine reconsideration and a desire for greater clarity. The
redundant or unprecise adjective was discarded, the specific term was substituted for the more general or the
vague one repetitive passages were deleted. Throughout this revision and the text here published was prepared
directly from the original manuscript it may be said that the secondary has been sacrificed to the primary."

Kindergarten Chats and Other Writings by Louis H. Sullivan, Dover, 1979.

The Chats are still easily findable via the 1979 Dover reprint of the Wittenborn edition (see above). Both Neutra and Schindler's
stays in Chicago profoundly influenced their subsequent development. Meeting Sullivan while there and attempting to help
cement his legacy with the publication of his Kindergarten Chats must have nostalgically taken them back to their days in Vienna
and their very similar chats with their like-minded Sullivan admirer and mentor Adolf Loos.

Recommended Further Reading and Sullivan Resources:


For a thoughtful analysis on the impact of Sullivan's Kindergarten Chats and period correspondence regarding their development
I recommend the multi-talented Claude Bragdon's fascinating autobiography, More Lives Than One.

For an in-depth discourse on the Chats see the excellent "Louis Sullivan's Kindergarten Chats [or] Form really does follow
Function" by Samantha Krukowski.

For a brilliant scholarly study of the interrelationships between Sullivan and Loos and the little-known H. P. Berlage - Louis
Sullivan interactions I highly recommend "An Exchange on the Surface: Sullivan, Berlage and Loos" by Wim de Wit who
generously provided his article for this linkage. This unpublished paper, made available here for the first time, was presented as
part of the Louis Sullivan at 150 International Symposium in Chicago, one of Wim's stops along his remarkably similar journey to
Los Angeles as R. M. Schindler and Richard Neutra which I hope to write about in the future. You can also listen to Wim's lecture
live at Louis Sullivan at 150 along with all the other presentations and the keynote address by one of my favorite historians, Jean-
Louis Cohen, whose Scenes of the World to Come is truly a masterpiece of architectural research.

For additional reading on Sullivan and the 1893 Chicago World's Fair: Columbian Exposition I recommend:

Louis Sullivan: The Function of Ornament by Wim de Wit

Grand Illusions: Chicago's World's Fair of 1893 by Wim de Wit

Other books by de Wit

Posted by John Crosse at 12:24 PM

Labels: Adolf Loos, Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Sullivan, R. M. Schindler, Richard Neutra

Newer Post Home Older Post

Copyright John Crosse. Powered by Blogger.

You might also like