Subdude Posted March 28, 2005 Share Posted March 28, 2005 Donald Barthelme March 25, 2005, 8:57PM Houston's mercurial modernist ----------------------------- Mid-20th-century style, Houstonian Barthelme put in the spotlight Tour, exhibit howcase Modern architecture By MICHELLE CROWE Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle The names Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier and Frank Lloyd Wright drop easily from the lips of architecture buffs. A fourth name, Donald Barthelme, might bring to mind one of the fathers of Postmodern fiction before it does his father, the architect. The elder Barthelme was an important Modernist in Texas from the late 1930s to the early 1950s. He's listed alongside the giants in John Peter's widely read 1958 book Masters of Modern Architecture, although much of his work isn't well-documented. Barthelme's last "pure" Houston project is a residence featured on next week's Rice Design Alliance home tour. Some have called it the most expensive tear-down in town, since the low-slung 1941 Bousquet-Wrightman house is on a River Oaks lot valued at about $1.6 million. When drawings and plans were discovered in the house's attic last year, preservationist Ben Koush spearheaded an effort to compile comprehensive Barthelme archives, also collecting stored documents from the architect's family. (The archives are now held by the University of Houston College of Architecture, and an exhibit on the Bousquet-Wrightman House is on display in the college's gallery.) Barthelme (1907-1996) was born in Galveston, attended Rice University and received a bachelor's degree in architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. He returned to Houston in the 1930s, working two years with John Staub, architect of many prominent local homes, before establishing his own office in 1939. It was a school, not a home, that catapulted Barthelme to prominence, says Koush, a co-founder of the group Houston Mod. Barthelme's design for West Columbia Elementary School in Brazoria County was featured in an exhibit at New York's Museum of Modern Art and also appeared in Time magazine in 1953. Architectural historian Gerald Moorhead says it exemplifies Barthelme's appreciation for materials and climatic response. "The school was done with a meager budget, using industrial materials including exposed steel and metal-framed windows. Natural ventilation was used along with broad overhangs to protect from the sun." Moorhead categorizes Barthelme's work as "not so much a style but an attitude." Koush says the school today is in poor condition, with an uncertain future. Barthelme's Adams Petroleum Center was swallowed up by the Texas Medical Center and torn down around 1996. His St. Rose of Lima Church Barthelme wrote himself more permanently into history with his design for the Hall of State at Dallas' Fair Park. The last names of 59 prominent Texans are carved into the building's frieze, and . the first eight surnames spell out Barthelme, minus the final "e": (Edward) Burleson, (Branch T.) Archer, (Thomas Jefferson) Rusk, (William Barret) Travis, (James Steven) Hogg, (Richard) Ellis, (Mirabeau B.) Lamar and (Ben) Milam. The Bousquet-Wrightman House features an open, informal plan designed more for comfort than formality. Zoned areas of use can be closed off -- an ingenious solution to the region's heat and humidity before air conditioning. The structure, like most residences of the Modern school, was meant to be a part of the surroundings, not dominate them. Another Houston Barthelme home -- the architect's own on Wynden Drive near Post Oak Lane -- was torn down about four years ago and replaced with four Mediterranean townhouses. It was quite a curiosity in the 1950s. Sunday drivers would cruise by to see the structure, which Donald Barthelme Jr. compared to Mies' Tugendhat House. (Both structures employed concrete and glass to striking effect.) Barthelme's Robert K. Hutchings Home in Galveston was on the Galveston Historical Foundation's home tour last year, but it bears little resemblance to the Bousquet-Wrightman House. It was built in 1934, when Barthelme worked for French-born architect Paul P. Cret. Its diagonally set door, curved entry and sharply sloped roof show Cret's Beaux Arts stamp. Barthelme's strong personality may be partly to blame for his slim portfolio. Koush says Barthelme was "forced out of the business because he was so difficult that contractors wouldn't work with him." His influence was possibly greater in the classroom: Barthelme also taught at Rice and the University of Houston. UH architecture alum Yolita Schmidt, who wrote a paper on Barthelme in the late 1980s, says he seemed to really like teaching, "and he liked instilling a sense of morals and ethics in the students." Barthelme -- by turns brilliant and mercurial, according to many -- also "lives" in books by his sons. The family's complicated dynamics figure into fiction by Donald Jr., the late novelist and co-founder of the University of Houston Creative Writing Program, as well as in the 1999 memoir Double Down: Reflections on Gambling and Loss, in which Frederick and Steven Barthelme (professors at the University of Southern Mississippi) chronicle the squandering of their six-figure inheritance. The Bousquet-Wrightman House is one of eight on the RDA tour, all built between 1940 and 1970 and chosen to highlight the development of Modern architecture locally. RDA, with input from Houston Mod, paid attention to the use of building materials such as concrete and steel and aimed for a broad representation of sizes and locations. "The houses are small in scale but stripped to the essence of what a house should be," Koush says. "Modern architecture is subtle. There are no fancy columns and moldings, so it takes a little while to appreciate. That's why these homes get demolished." michelle.crowe@chron.com What: Donald Barthelme: Bousquet-Wightman House, an exhibit of drawings, renderings and photos When: 8 a.m.-7:45 p.m. Mondays-Thursdays, 8 a.m.-4:45 p.m. Fridays and 10 a.m.-4:45 p.m. Saturdays; through April 22 Where: University of Houston College of Architecture (entrance 18 off Elgin), first-floor Archives Gallery Information: 832-87 Brought to you by the HoustonChronicle.com Link Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dalparadise Posted March 31, 2005 Share Posted March 31, 2005 March 25, 2005, 8:57PMHouston's mercurial modernist-----------------------------Mid-20th-century style, Houstonian Barthelme put in the spotlight Tour, exhibit howcase Modern architectureBy MICHELLE CROWECopyright 2005 Houston ChronicleThe names Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier and Frank Lloyd Wright drop easily from the lips of architecture buffs. A fourth name, Donald Barthelme,might bring to mind one of the fathers of Postmodern fiction before it does his father, the architect.The elder Barthelme was an important Modernist in Texas from the late 1930s to the early 1950s. He's listed alongside the giants in John Peter's widely read 1958 book Masters of Modern Architecture, although much of his work isn't well-documented. Barthelme's last "pure" Houston project is a residence featured on nextweek's Rice Design Alliance home tour. Some have called it the mostexpensive tear-down in town, since the low-slung 1941 Bousquet-Wrightman house is on a River Oaks lot valued at about $1.6 million. When drawings and plans were discovered in the house's attic last year, preservationist Ben Koush spearheaded an effort to compileĀ comprehensive Barthelme archives, also collecting stored documents from theĀ architect's family. (The archives are now held by the University of Houston College of Architecture, and an exhibit on the Bousquet-Wrightman House is on displayin the college's gallery.)Barthelme (1907-1996) was born in Galveston, attended Rice University and received a bachelor's degree in architecture at the University ofPennsylvania. He returned to Houston in the 1930s, working two years with John Staub, architect of many prominent local homes, before establishing his own office in 1939.It was a school, not a home, that catapulted Barthelme to prominence, says Koush, a co-founder of the group Houston Mod. Barthelme's design for West Columbia Elementary School in Brazoria County was featured in an exhibit at New York's Museum of Modern Art and also appeared in Time magazine in 1953.Architectural historian Gerald Moorhead says it exemplifies Barthelme'sappreciation for materials and climatic response. "The school was done with a meager budget, using industrial materials including exposed steel andmetal-framed windows. Natural ventilation was used along with broadoverhangs to protect from the sun." Moorhead categorizes Barthelme's work as "not so much a style but an attitude." Koush says the school today is in poor condition, with an uncertain future.Barthelme's Adams Petroleum Center was swallowed up by the Texas Medical Center and torn down around 1996. His St. Rose of Lima Church Barthelmewrote himself more permanently into history with his design for the Hall of State at Dallas' Fair Park. The last names of 59 prominent Texans are carved into the building's frieze, and . the first eight surnames spell outBarthelme, minus the final "e": (Edward) Burleson, (Branch T.) Archer,(Thomas Jefferson) Rusk, (William Barret) Travis, (James Steven) Hogg,(Richard) Ellis, (Mirabeau B.) Lamar and (Ben) Milam.The Bousquet-Wrightman House features an open, informal plan designed more for comfort than formality. Zoned areas of use can be closed off -- aningenious solution to the region's heat and humidity before air conditioning. The structure, like most residences of the Modern school, wasmeant to be a part of the surroundings, not dominate them.Another Houston Barthelme home -- the architect's own on Wynden Drive near Post Oak Lane -- was torn down about four years ago and replaced with four Mediterranean townhouses. It was quite a curiosity in the 1950s. Sundaydrivers would cruise by to see the structure, which Donald Barthelme Jr.compared to Mies' Tugendhat House. (Both structures employed concrete and glass to striking effect.)Barthelme's Robert K. Hutchings Home in Galveston was on the GalvestonHistorical Foundation's home tour last year, but it bears little resemblance to the Bousquet-Wrightman House. It was built in 1934, when Barthelme worked for French-born architect Paul P. Cret. Its diagonally set door, curved entry and sharply sloped roof show Cret's Beaux Arts stamp. Barthelme's strong personality may be partly to blame for his slim portfolio. Koush says Barthelme was "forced out of the business because he was so difficult that contractors wouldn't work with him." His influence was possibly greater in the classroom: Barthelme also taught at Rice and the University of Houston. UH architecture alum Yolita Schmidt, who wrote a paper on Barthelme in the late 1980s, says he seemed to really like teaching, "and he liked instilling a sense of morals and ethics in the students."Barthelme -- by turns brilliant and mercurial, according to many -- also "lives" in books by his sons. The family's complicated dynamics figure into fiction by Donald Jr., the late novelist and co-founder of the University of Houston Creative Writing Program, as well as in the 1999 memoir Double Down: Reflections on Gambling and Loss, in which Frederick and Steven Barthelme (professors at the University of Southern Mississippi) chronicle thesquandering of their six-figure inheritance.The Bousquet-Wrightman House is one of eight on the RDA tour, all builtbetween 1940 and 1970 and chosen to highlight the development of Modernarchitecture locally. RDA, with input from Houston Mod, paid attention to the use of building materials such as concrete and steel and aimed for a broad representation of sizes and locations. "The houses are small in scale but stripped to the essence of what a house should be," Koush says. "Modern architecture is subtle. There are no fancy columns and moldings, so it takes a little while to appreciate. That's why these homes get demolished."michelle.crowe@chron.comWhat: Donald Barthelme: Bousquet-Wightman House, an exhibit of drawings,renderings and photosWhen: 8 a.m.-7:45 p.m. Mondays-Thursdays, 8 a.m.-4:45 p.m. Fridays and10 a.m.-4:45 p.m. Saturdays; through April 22Where: University of Houston College of Architecture (entrance 18 offElgin), first-floor Archives GalleryInformation: 832-87Brought to you by the HoustonChronicle.com Link<{POST_SNAPBACK}>Barthelme's grandson is a Houston-area custom home builder, doing some of the best work in the area -- They do a lot in The Woodlands, Royal Oaks, etc. They also have several townhouse developments either under construction or available in the Museum District area.See his company here: http://www.rohewright.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phillip Posted September 2, 2008 Share Posted September 2, 2008 anyone on the mod board know if there are any remaining copies of a modernism suitable for everyday use?several months of calls to brazos have yielded nothing but continued promises to order a copy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Willowisp Posted September 2, 2008 Share Posted September 2, 2008 As far as Brazos and other bookstores we are all sold out. However, we may have a few copies left at our events. Or, those may be sold out as well (Spaceage will probably know). Only 250 were made and I think it was not until all were sold that it was a breakeven venture (of course we're non-profit).We have discussed at Board meetings doing a second printing, but nothing is in the works as of yet.Perhaps we should make a pdf version for research purposes. I'll ask about that.For browsing, I know it's at Rice and probably UH, maybe at the Downtown library.Jasonanyone on the mod board know if there are any remaining copies of a modernism suitable for everyday use?several months of calls to brazos have yielded nothing but continued promises to order a copy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sevfiv Posted September 2, 2008 Share Posted September 2, 2008 There are some used copies floating around sites like Alibris:http://www.alibris.com/booksearch?title=Do...or+everyday+use Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SpaceAge Posted September 3, 2008 Share Posted September 3, 2008 The MFA-Houston book store had copies of the catalog Donald Bartheleme: A modernism suitable for everyday use, 1939 - 1945 last week. I think they are $20.00 there. Their bookstore is very well stocked with a wide variety of art and architecture books. It is located in the newer brownish boxy building, not the wonderful Mod building by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. The bookstore is just inside the ground floor entrance on Binz/Bissonnet Street. I found a signed book titled Harvin C. Moore Houston Architect yesterday. It's a 60 page catalog that tells about Moore, lists his work in the archives at HMRC and features illustrations of some of the works. He designed in traditional and moderne styles. He received his BS in architecture from Rice Institute in 1930. Harvin Moore was perhaps the first local architect to become active in historic preservation and co-founded the Harris County Heritage Society. He retired in 1979. His son Barry Moore took over the firm. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
texasdago Posted September 3, 2008 Share Posted September 3, 2008 I'll double check but I might have a couple of extra copies Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Willowisp Posted September 3, 2008 Share Posted September 3, 2008 At the Gwen Wright lecture (at the MFA) the MFA Bookstore manager and I were really pushing the "buy one now because when they're gone, they're gone" aspect. I guess they have the few remaining copies.Houston Mod is keen on a reprinting, possibly with an epilogue or something lamenting the destruction of the main house described in the book so I was possibly out of line suggesting the pdf idea.Speaking of Barthelme, in the new Cite there's a mention of a story in which Barthelme was hired at UH in 1962 and then Jenkins and the rest of the professors didn't want to work for him. Can anyone tell the whole story of that?JasonThe MFA-Houston book store had copies of the catalog Donald Bartheleme: A modernism suitable for everyday use, 1939 - 1945 last week. I think they are $20.00 there. Their bookstore is very well stocked with a wide variety of art and architecture books. It is located in the newer brownish boxy building, not the wonderful Mod building by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. The bookstore is just inside the ground floor entrance on Binz/Bissonnet Street. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phillip Posted September 5, 2008 Share Posted September 5, 2008 thanks to all, particularly spaceage. just picked up my copy (153/250) after work today.i'm looking forward to reading it.by the way, willowisp, i saw your house in atomic ranch: it looks great. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Don Julio Posted March 21, 2009 Share Posted March 21, 2009 Anybody here remember Don Barthelme? There is a 581 page biography about him that has just been published. There is a review in today's New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/pages/books/review/index.html?8dpc Also a great pic of the interior of the Barthelme pad in 1951. Very hip! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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