Nalina Moses

ARCHITECT, WRITER, CURATOR

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BOOK LEARNING
My first college art history course was a survey that covered all of Western achievement, from scratchings on cave walls to video installations.  The syllabus focused on paintings and sculptures, with a handful of buildings from each e…

BOOK LEARNING

My first college art history course was a survey that covered all of Western achievement, from scratchings on cave walls to video installations.  The syllabus focused on paintings and sculptures, with a handful of buildings from each era thrown in, to broaden the perspective.  One of them was the Guaranty Building in Buffalo by Louis Sullivan, from 1896.  I can still remember the small, square, black and white picture of it, not much larger than a postage stamp, in my textbook. And I can recall the reasons we learned that the building was, for its time, so remarkable: its steel frame, its impressive height, and the strong vertical rhythms of its facades.  I’ve kept this image of this building with me for decades.

So it was a surprise, when visiting Buffalo for the first time, to see that the Guaranty Building is dressed in thick terra-cotta tiles the color of an uncooked, unwashed sweet potato.   And to see that each of these tiles is cast with a dense filigree of twisting vines, leaves and blossoms, rendered with both Celtic and classical accents.  And to see that the building overpowers: it stands, sternly, squarish, twenty-three stories high and half a block wide, on a prominent corner downtown.  It’s brutal mass and angelic surface serve up dual, flickering identities.  No longer a monument trapped in a photograph, the building is, now, for me, a complex, living thing.

Photograph by dIPENdAVE.

November 05, 2014 by Nalina Moses
November 05, 2014 /Nalina Moses /Source
ARCHITECTURE, Louis Sullivan, Buffalo, Guaranty Building, ART HISTORY
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