There's no doubt that Frederick Church was the ultimate late-19th-century Renaissance man.
He launched the Hudson River School of painting from the 250-acre New York estate he called Olana. He was an architect, a landscape architect, a celebrity and a conservationist. A peer of Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, he also served as commissioner for Central Park.
He sculpted the landscape at Olana for his painting, and designed his Persian-inspired home there. And when his son drew up a detailed plan for the property in 1886, he curiously indicated a site near the home for a summer house, marking it with a little red square.
Frederic Joseph Church Plan of Olana: Frederic Joseph Church, Plan of Olana, September 1886, ink and watercolor on paper, 22 1/8 x 36 ¼ in. Collection Olana State Historic Site. New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation.
Apparently, it was never built. But it's found new life today, through a traveling exhibition of drawings first displayed last August at Olana - and beginning on Jan. 31, at AIANY's Center for Architecture in Manhattan.
"We reached out to architects and landscape architects who have some knowledge of Church or Olana or the Hudson Valley, with some strong capabilities in terms of being designers," says Jane Smith, partner in Spacesmith Architecture and Interior Design and member of the AIANY executive board.
Frederic Edwin Church, Southwest Façade, Olana, c. 1870, watercolor, ink, and graphite on paper 13 x 21 15/16 in., OL.1980.40. Collection Olana State Historic Site, NYS OPRHP.
She and co-curator Mark Prezorski, landscape curator at the Olana Partnership, contacted members of the AIA and ASLA, seeking from each a single 11″ x 14″ drawing of a summer house for the property. Among the 21 respondents were Steven Holl, Adam Yarinski, Dana Tang and the late Diana Balmori.
Diana Balmori, Framing the Landscape
"What was cool was that I'd never been to Olana, so it gave us the opportunity to take a private tour of the whole property and the house - and it's unbelievable," says Tang. "Church was known as one of the great painters of his time, but this is really his masterpiece of an artwork."
Dana Tang, Night Sky at Olana
Each of the drawings - some are by hand and some are computer generated - is framed identically in maple and matted on white board behind low-glare glass, for an even-handed approach to their display, no matter the profession. "We wanted to combine architecture and landscape architecture together and have both approach this challenge from their own perspectives," Prezorski says.
Steven Holl, Polychrome Summer House
Like Church's Olana, they are a carefully studied balance of architecture, earthworks and the arts.
J. Michael Welton writes about architecture, art and design for national and international publications, and edits Architects + Artisans, where portions of this post first appeared. He is architecture critic for the News & Observer in Raleigh, N.C., and the author of "Drawing from Practice: Architects and the Meaning of Freehand" (Routledge, 2015)
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