Cover image for Cass Gilbert, architect : modern traditionalist
Title:
Cass Gilbert, architect : modern traditionalist
Personal Author:
Series:
Sources of American architecture
Publication Information:
New York : Monacelli Press, 1999
Physical Description:
194 p. : ill. ; 27 cm.
ISBN:
9781885254900
Personal Subject:

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000010229691 NA737.G5 I74 1999 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

American architect Cass Gilbert built many of the major monuments of his generation. Inspired by design throughout the ages -- ancient Greece and Rome, medieval and Renaissance Europe, and contemporary traditions such as the Richardsonian Romanesque -- he created buildings for the sites, clients, and programs of his own time. Gilbert began his architectural career in St. Paul, Minnesota (his childhood home), in 1885. In 1895, Gilbert won the competition for the Minnesota State Capitol, which would be completed ten years later. In 1899, Gilbert won another important competition, this one for the United States Custom House in New York City, where he soon moved his practice. Gilbert's career reached its peak in the 1910s and 1920s with civic and commercial buildings of great significance: the Woolworth Company Building (at its 1913 completion the tallest building in the world) and the New York Life Insurance Company Building, both in New York City, the United States Military Ocean Terminal in Brooklyn, and the United States Supreme Court Building in Washington, D.C. These landmark works, emblematic of Gilbert's mastery of form and expression, reaffirm his position as a leader in design and in the profession.


Author Notes

Sharon Irish is affiliated with the School of Architecture at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her scholarship includes studies in nineteenth- and twentieth-century monumental architecture of the Americas, public history, and urban technology. She has previously published articles on Cass Gilbert, and, with Edward Kaufman, she compiled a book-length bibliography on medievalism in the art and architecture of Britain and North America.