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Architect Drawings : A Selection of Sketches by World Famous Architects Through History

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Morgan, Julia (1872–1957)<br />

Student rendering <strong>of</strong> a theater in a palace, Ecole des Beaux-Arts, 1902, Environmental<br />

Design Archives, 8.75 13 in., Graphite, ink, watercolor and gouache on yellow<br />

tracing paper, mounted on cream drawing paper<br />

An architect practicing in the early twentieth century, Julia Morgan completed nearly seven hundred<br />

buildings. Her work did not reflect a particular style, but responded to site conditions and client needs.<br />

Designing with function as her priority, she also had a concern for details, light, color, and texture<br />

(Boutelle, 1988). Many <strong>of</strong> her buildings displayed Renaissance, classical, vernacular, Arts and Crafts,<br />

Spanish, and Native American references.<br />

Born in San Francisco, Morgan began her architectural education at the University <strong>of</strong> California,<br />

Berkeley, in 1890. While studying for an engineering degree, she met the architect/pr<strong>of</strong>essor Bernard<br />

Maybeck. He encouraged her interest in architecture, and she worked in his <strong>of</strong>fice for a year following<br />

her graduation. She moved to Paris in 1896 and soon after she was admitted to the Ecole des<br />

Beaux-Arts, becoming the first woman matriculated into the architecture program. She returned to<br />

the United States in 1902 to begin her own practice.<br />

As diverse as her architectural language, her repertoire <strong>of</strong> projects varied from domestic to institutional<br />

to commercial. Her first projects included university commissions such as a bell tower and gymnasium<br />

for Mills College in Oakland, followed <strong>by</strong> a Sorority House and the Baptist Divinity School<br />

for Berkeley. From churches such as the First Swedish Baptist Church and Saint John’s Pres<strong>by</strong>terian<br />

Church, to markets (Sacramento Public Market) and hospitals (Kings Daughters Home), she controlled<br />

the design <strong>of</strong> every project. Well known for her numerous buildings for the YWCA, the most<br />

prominent are in Oakland (1913–1915), Honolulu (1926–1927) and San Francisco (1929–1930).<br />

In her association with the Hearst family she produced two celebrated houses. Morgan first finished<br />

the Hacienda del Pozo de Verona for Phoebe Hearst before designing a mansion complex on the<br />

southern coast <strong>of</strong> California for media tycoon William Randolph Hearst. Named San Simeon, the cottages<br />

were completed in a style described <strong>by</strong> Hearst as ‘Renaissance style from southern Spain’<br />

(Boutelle, 1988, p. 177). The main building, fashioned after a church, was designed to display Hearst’s<br />

collection <strong>of</strong> paintings and art objects.<br />

Most <strong>of</strong> Morgan’s architectural drawings were destroyed when she closed her <strong>of</strong>fice in 1950,<br />

although some <strong>of</strong> her sketches from the Ecole des Beaux-Arts still exist (Boutelle, 1988). This sketch<br />

(Figure 6.7) dated December 3, 1901 was a preliminary design for her final Ecole competition. The<br />

program called for a theater in a palace. Receiving a ‘first mention’ for the project, the sketch demonstrates<br />

tremendous skill in beaux-arts composition and decoration. It represents an artistic control<br />

over ink and wash to achieve a complete impression. Details and ornament seem to have been thoroughly<br />

explored even though the swags and balustrades have been rendered as a series <strong>of</strong> squiggly<br />

‘w’s.’ It displays qualities that may be considered simultaneously precise and imprecise. Not necessarily<br />

a paradox, the sketch represents the beaux-arts technique <strong>of</strong> explaining the totality while providing<br />

minimal articulation <strong>of</strong> detail. From a distance, the sketch appears complete with shadow and<br />

reflection. All parts have been included – even the draping <strong>of</strong> the doorway curtains. On closer<br />

inspection, the doubled lines show the apparent search for the appropriate curve. These lines stop<br />

short <strong>of</strong> intersection exhibiting the sketch’s preparatory quality. The pilasters have been indicated <strong>by</strong><br />

simple horizontal and vertical marks and appear to list to the left showing her hurried lines. Being<br />

both precise and imprecise, this sketch seeks interpretation.<br />

157

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