Bernard Maybeck
Bernard Maybeck | |
---|---|
Born | New York City, US | February 7, 1862
Died | October 3, 1957 | (aged 95)
Alma mater | École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts |
Occupation | Architect |
Awards | AIA Gold Medal (1951) |
Bernard Ralph Maybeck (February 7, 1862 – October 3, 1957) was an American architect in the Arts and Crafts Movement of the early 20th century. He worked primarily in the San Francisco Bay Area, designing public buildings, including the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco, and also private houses, especially in Berkeley, where he lived and taught at the University of California. A number of his works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[1]
Biography
[edit]Maybeck was born in New York City, the son of a German immigrant and studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, France.[2] He moved to Berkeley, California, in 1892. He taught engineering drawing and architectural design at the University of California, Berkeley from 1894 to 1903, and acted as a mentor for a number of other important California architects, including Julia Morgan and William Wurster.[3] In 1951, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the American Institute of Architects.[citation needed]
Maybeck was equally comfortable producing works in the American Craftsman, Mission Revival, Gothic revival, Arts and Crafts, and Beaux-Arts styles, believing that each architectural problem required development of an entirely new solution. While working in the office of A. Page Brown in San Francisco, Maybeck probably contributed to the Mission Style California Building at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago and was one of the designers of the San Francisco Swedenborgian Church, which included the first Mission Style chair.[4]me=nris/>[5] For the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition, he designed the domed Palace of Fine Arts[6] and also the "House of Hoo Hoo", a "lumberman's lodge" made of rough-barked tree trunks. The Palace of Fine Arts was seen as the embodiment of Maybeck's elaboration of how Roman architecture could fit within a California context. Maybeck said that the popular success of the Palace was due to the absence of a roof connecting the rotunda to the art gallery building, along with the absence of windows in the gallery walls and the presence near the rotunda of trees, flowers and a water feature.[7] In 1928, he designed the Harrison Memorial Library in Carmel in a Spanish Eclectic style.[8][9]
In his long-time home city of Berkeley, the 1910 First Church of Christ, Scientist, Berkeley is designated a National Historic Landmark and is considered one of his masterpieces.[10][11] In 1914 he oversaw the building of the Maybeck Recital Hall in Berkeley. On flatter sites such as the city of San Francisco, the campus of the University of California, Berkeley, and the Loch Lin General Plan for Principia College in Illinois, his proposals were guided by more formal Beaux Arts planning principles.[12]
One of Maybeck's most interesting office buildings is the home of the Family Service Agency of San Francisco at 1010 Gough Street, from 1928, which is on the city's Historic Building Register. Some of his larger residential projects, particularly those in the Berkeley hills such as La Loma Park, have been compared to the ultimate bungalows of the architects Greene and Greene.[13]
Maybeck had many ideas about town planning that he elaborated throughout his career. As a citizen of Berkeley from the 1890s, he was intimately involved in the Hillside Club. His associations and work there helped evolve ideas about hillside communities. Maybeck developed a number of firm beliefs in how civilization and the land should relate to each other.[14] Two overriding principles would be: 1) the primacy of the landscape - geology, flora and fauna were not to be subdued by architecture so much as enhanced by architecture 2) roads should pattern the existing grade and not be an imposition upon it. There were other principles he would elucidate, such as a shared public landscape, but these were key, and helped Berkeley evolve into a paradigm for hillside living that was organic and unique.[15] Maybeck's visions for communities in the East Bay were also a conscientious counterpoint to across the bay where in San Francisco city planning was much more conventional, forced, and regimented into expansive grids of streets. Its grids, imposed in places on very steep grades, resulted in extremely steep streets, sidewalks and urban transitions, some almost comically so.
He also developed a comprehensive town plan for the company town of Brookings, Oregon, a clubhouse at the Bohemian Grove, and many of the buildings on the campus of Principia College in Elsah, Illinois.[16][17]
A lifetime fascination with drama and the theater can be seen in much of Maybeck's work. In his spare time, he was known to create costumes, and also designed sets for the amateur productions at the Hillside Club.[18]
Bernard Maybeck died in 1957 and is buried in the Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland, California.[citation needed]
Works
[edit]-
Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco
-
Lynwood Pacific Electric Railway Depot, Los Angeles, California
-
Automobile dealership, San Francisco
Notable works include:
- Charles Keeler House & Studio (house 1895, studio 1902) — Maybeck's first private client, Berkeley Hills, Highland Place, North Berkeley, California.[19]
- Swedenborgian Church (1895) — 3200 Washington Street at Lyon Street, Pacific Heights, San Francisco, California, NRHP-listed.
- Wyntoon, with architect Julia Morgan (1898−1902) — private estate of Phoebe Apperson Hearst−Hearst family, rural Siskiyou County, California.
- Boke House (1902) — for George Henry Boke (1869–1929), at 23 Panoramic Way, Panoramic Hill Historic District, Berkeley, California.[20][21]
- Faculty Club (1902, later additions by Maybeck and John Galen Howard) — University of California, Berkeley campus, NRHP-listed.[1][22][23]
- Grove Clubhouse−Maybeck Lodge (1903–04) — Bohemian Grove, the Bohemian Club 'campground' on the Russian River, Monte Rio, California.[24][25]
- Howard B. Gates House (1904) — Mission Revival style, at 62 South Thirteenth Street, San Jose, California.[26]
- The Outdoor Art Club (1904) — 1 West Blithedale Avenue, Mill Valley, Marin County, California, NRHP-listed.[1][27]
- Hillside Club (1906, rebuilt 1924) — Cedar Street, North Berkeley, a city designated Berkeley Landmark.[28] The original 1906 clubhouse was destroyed in the 1923 Berkeley Fire. Maybeck's brother-in-law, John White, designed the current clubhouse in 1924.
- Andrew Cowper Lawson House (1908) — 1515 La Loma Avenue, Berkeley, California; a Berkeley Landmark[29][30]
- Goslinsky Residence (1909) — 3233 Pacific Avenue, San Francisco, California
- Roos House (1909) — Tudor Revival and other styles, at 3500 Jackson Street at Locust, Pacific Heights, San Francisco, California, NRHP-listed & San Francisco Landmark.[1][31]
- First Church of Christ, Scientist (Berkeley, California) (1910) — 2619 Dwight Way, Berkeley, California, NRHP-listed[1]
- Rose Walk (1912) — public outdoor stairway and landscape, La Loma Park neighborhood in North Berkeley, California.[32]
- Chick House (1913) — for Guy Hyde Chick (1868–1930), in Chabot Canyon of the Berkeley Hills, at 7133 Chabot Road, Oakland Hills district of Oakland, California.[33][34]
- Temple of Wings (1914, designed in 1911) for Charles Calvin Boynton and Florence Treadwell Boynton, in the La Loma Park neighborhood at 2800 Buena Vista Way, Berkeley, California[35][36]
- Kennedy-Nixon house (1914, rebuilt 1923) — 1537 Euclid Avenue, La Loma Park district, North Berkeley, Berkeley, California.[37]
- Maybeck Recital Hall (1914, rebuilt 1923) — part of Kennedy-Nixon house complex, Euclid Avenue at Buena Vista Way, North Berkeley.[38]
- Palace of Fine Arts (1915, rebuilt 1965) — Panama-Pacific Exposition building, 3301 Lyon Street, Marina District, San Francisco, California, NRHP-listed.[1]
- Parsons Memorial Lodge (1915) — Sierra Club lodge at Tuolumne Meadows, Yosemite National Park, California, NRHP-listed.[1]
- Erlanger House (1916) —270 Castenada Avenue, Forest Hill neighborhood, San Francisco, California.[39]
- Lynwood Pacific Electric Railway Depot (1917) — Lynwood, South Los Angeles region, California.
- Byington Ford House (1922) — Pebble Beach, California[40]
- Bernard Maybeck house and studio (1924) — architect's own residence and studio, Maybeck Twin Drive, La Loma Park district, North Berkeley, California.[41]
- Phoebe Hearst Gymnasium for Women, with architect Julia Morgan (1927) — Oxford Street, University of California, Berkeley campus, NRHP-listed.[1]
- Earle C. Anthony Packard Showroom (1927) — Beaux-Arts style, on Van Ness Avenue at Ellis Street, San Francisco, now British Motors, San Francisco Landmark.[42]
- Earle C. Anthony House (1927) — Medieval, Gothic, Spanish and Tudor Revival elements, at 3431-3441 Waverly Drive, Los Feliz district, Los Angeles, California.[43][44][45]
- Later the Countess Bernardine Murphy Donohue estate (c.1950−c.1970) with gardens designed by Florence Yoch & Lucile Council.[46] Later the Convent of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and the Cardinal Timothy Manning House of Prayer for Priests complex (1975−2011).[47][48]
- Earle C. Anthony Packard Showroom (1928), remodel of 1911 Greene and Greene design — on Olympic Boulevard and Hope Street, South Park district of Downtown Los Angeles, the present day Packard Lofts condos.[49]
- Associated Charities of San Francisco Building (1928) — 1010 Gough Street at Eddy, San Francisco, the present day Family Service Agency of San Francisco center, San Francisco Landmark.[50]
- Historic districts with Maybeck designed works include
- Panoramic Hill Historic District — in the Berkeley Hills, in Berkeley and Oakland Hills, Oakland, California, NRHP-listed.
- Maybeck designed residences include the Boke House (1902) at 23 Panoramic Way[1]
- Principia College Historic District — River Road, Elsah, Illinois, NRHP-listed.[1]
- Maybeck designed the 'English village' campus master plan, and campus buildings including the Colonial Revival style Chapel (1931-34) at 1 Maybeck Place.[51]
- Professorville Historic District — roughly bounded by Embarcadero Road, Addison Avenue, and Emerson and Cowper Streets, in Palo Alto, California, NRHP-listed.[1][52]
- Maybeck designed the "Sunbonnet House" (1899, restored 2004) for Emma Kellogg.[53]
- Tahoe Meadows Historic District (founded 1924) — first planned open space community in Lake Tahoe region, on US 50 between Ski Run Boulevard and Park Avenue, South Lake Tahoe, El Dorado County, California, NRHP-listed.[1][54][55]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ [1] One of his early jobs was with the architectural firm of Carrere and Hastings working as a draftsman on the monumental Ponce de Leon Hotel built for Standard Oil magnate Henry Flagler in St. Augustine, Florida. Maybeck's father also worked on the project, as a woodcarver "Two of San Francisco's best-known landmarks were built by Germans: Joseph Strauss designed the 1937 Golden Gate Bridge, and Bernard Maybeck, son of a German immigrant, designed the Palace of Fine Arts."
- ^ Cardwell, Kenneth (1977). Bernard Maybeck; Architect, Artisan, Artist. Salt Lake City: Peregrine Smith. pp. 38–40.
- ^ Freudenheim, Leslie. Building with Nature: Inspiration for the Arts & Crafts Home (Gibbs Smith, 2005)163ff and 60–68
- ^ Noehill.com San Francisco Landmarks: Swedenborgian Church (1895), 3200 Washington Street at Lyon Street
- ^ Way, Natalie (December 23, 2023). "'Architectural Jewel': Century-Old Bay Area Craftsman Designed by Bernard Maybeck". Realtor.com. Retrieved July 18, 2024 – via SFGate.
- ^ Macomber, Ben. The Jewel City, 1915, pp. 25, 101–102.
- ^ Seavey, Kent (2007). Carmel, A History in Architecture. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia. p. 114. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
- ^ Hale, Sharron Lee (1980). A tribute to yesterday: The history of Carmel, Carmel Valley, Big Sur, Point Lobos, Carmelite Monastery, and Los Burros. Santa Cruz, California: Valley Publishers. p. 67. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
- ^ "Maybeck And His Work". Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved March 29, 2011.
- ^ Berkeley Landmarks: First Church of Christ, Scientist
- ^ "Bernard Maybeck at Principia College" in Craig, Robert, The Art and Craft of Building, Gibbs Smith, 2004 p. 112.
- ^ Freudenheim, pp. 186 and 154ff.
- ^ Freudenheim, Leslie, op. cit., 100.
- ^ The Arts and Crafts Movement in California; Living the Good Life, Kenneth R. Trapp et.al., Abbeville Press, 1993, p.60
- ^ Vernacular Language North. Bernard Maybeck, Grove Clubhouse, Bohemian Club of San Francisco. Archived 2003-09-01 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved March 4, 2009.
- ^ KETC: Living St. Louis: The Architecture of Principia College
- ^ Fraser, Annie (1925). Hillside Club Yearbook 1924-1925. Berkeley: Hillside Club. p. 24.
- ^ Berkeleyheritage.com, Berkeley Landmarks: Charles Keeler House & Studio, photo gallery + info.
- ^ Great Buildings Architecture: Boke House, by Bernard Maybeck (1902), Bay Regional shingle style, photo gallery + info.
- ^ Berkeleyheritage.com: "Maybeck's Boke House: Made by One Crusader for Another"
- ^ Berkeleyfacultyclub.com: The Faculty Club at UC Berkeley, website
- ^ Berkeleyfacultyclub.com: UC Berkeley Faculty Club History Archived 2015-09-06 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Mix, Robert. "Bernard Maybeck: (1902–1905)". Vernacular Language North. Archived from the original on September 1, 2003. Retrieved September 4, 2012.
- ^ "Maybeck Lodge, Bohemian Grove". Calisphere. University of California. Retrieved September 4, 2012.
- ^ HABS−Historic American Buildings Survey: Howard B. Gates House, San Jose, Santa Clara County, CA
- ^ "The Outdoor Art Club, Mill Valley: History". Archived from the original on February 13, 2018. Retrieved June 30, 2015.
- ^ Hillside Club of Berkeley: History
- ^ "Maybeck Made La Loma Park His Own Country". Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association (BAHA). Retrieved July 3, 2023.
- ^ "A Tale of Two Houses". Modern Magazine. October 19, 2017. Retrieved July 3, 2023.
- ^ Noehill.com San Francisco Landmarks: Roos House (1909), 3500 Jackson Street, Presidio Heights, photo gallery + info.
- ^ Rose Walk, by Bernard Maybeck (1912), pedestrian street, public stair, and landscape, photo gallery + info.
- ^ Buildings Architecture: Chick House, by Bernard Maybeck (1913), Bay regional shingle style[permanent dead link], photo gallery + info.
- ^ Berkeleyheritage.com: Guy Hyde Chick: The Man Behind the Chick House", photos + info.
- ^ Cerny, Susan (January 28, 2002). "The Temple of Wings 2800 Buena Vista Way, Berkeley, CA". Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association (BAHA).
- ^ Ketcharp, Diana (October 7, 1991). "On the Wings of Uncertainty". Oakland Tribune. pp. B1, B2. Retrieved November 28, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Berkeleyside.com, "Landmark Bernard Maybeck Kennedy-Nixon house for sale in Berkeley" (2012).
- ^ Maybeck Studio for the Performing Arts (Maybeck Recital Hall), part of Maybeck's Kennedy-Nixon compound.
- ^ Dwell.com, "A Century-Old Arts and Crafts Home by Bernard Maybeck Lists for $4.25M"] (2019).
- ^ "Architect and engineer". Architect and Engineer, Inc. San Francisco. 1905. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
- ^ Great Buildings Architecture: Maybeck House and Studio, by Bernard Maybeck (1924), Bay Area Modern style, photo gallery + info.
- ^ Noehill.com, San Francisco Landmark #153: Earle C. Anthony Packard Showroom
- ^ Michael Locke @ Flickr: Earle C. Anthony House, architect Bernard Maybeck (1927), info + image #1.
- ^ Michael Locke @ Flickr: image #2
- ^ Michael Locke @ Flickr: image #3
- ^ Murphy Donohue estate gardens − "Landscaping the American dream: the gardens and film sets of Florence Yoch, 1890-1972"; by James J. Yoch; H.N. Abrams, 1989.
- ^ LA Times: Cardinal Timothy Manning House of Prayer for Priests, founder John D. McAnulty (April 2009) (Earle C. Anthony estate).
- ^ LA Curbed: "Katy Perry and Elderly Nuns Fighting For Control Of Spectacular Los Feliz Convent" (June 2015)[permanent dead link] (Earle C. Anthony estate).
- ^ Los Angeles Downtown News: "A Heap of Downtown History In Neon 'Packard' Sign", Earle C. Anthony Packard Showroom.
- ^ Noehill.com, San Francisco Landmark #111: Associated Charities of San Francisco / Family Service Agency of San Francisco Building
- ^ HABS−Historic American Buildings Survey: Principia College, Chapel, 1 Maybeck Place, Elsah, Jersey County, IL
- ^ NPS.gov: Professorville Historic District, Palo Alto, Santa Clara County, California
- ^ The Sunbonnet House, 1061 Bryant Street, Professorville Historic District, Palo Alto, CA
- ^ Tahoemeadows.org: Tahoe Meadows National Historic District
- ^ Tahoemeadows.org: Photo gallery
External links
[edit]- Media related to Bernard Maybeck at Wikimedia Commons
- Maybeck Foundation—a non-profit preservation and education foundation Archived 2006-12-05 at the Wayback Machine
- Maybeck at Principia College
- A High School named after Bernard Maybeck in Berkeley
- Bernard Maybeck at Find a Grave
- Sargeant, Winthrop (May 17, 1948). "Bernard Maybeck". Life. pp. 141–153. Retrieved April 12, 2018.
Selected works
[edit]- Maybeck's Work at Brookings Oregon and a selection of his essays and drawings
- Pictures of the First Church of Christ, Scientist in Berkeley
- Pictures of Family Service Agency headquarters in San Francisco
- FSA Building on list of SF Landmarks
- Photograph of the interior of Maybeck Lodge at the Bohemian Grove
- Roy Flamm Photographs of Buildings Designed by Bernard Maybeck, ca. 1950-1955, The Bancroft Library
- Archival holdings of the Environmental Design Archive of UC Berkeley
- Architects from California
- Bernard Maybeck buildings
- Arts and Crafts architects
- Beaux Arts architects
- Spanish Revival architects
- Mediterranean Revival architects
- 1862 births
- 1957 deaths
- American people of German descent
- Burials at Mountain View Cemetery (Oakland, California)
- American alumni of the École des Beaux-Arts
- Artists from Berkeley, California
- Culture of Berkeley, California
- University of California, Berkeley faculty
- Architecture in the San Francisco Bay Area
- Recipients of the AIA Gold Medal