History of American Architecture: Cranbrook in Context

Monday, March 2nd 6:30pm
39221 Woodward Avenue
Bloomfield Hills, MI 48304

Monday Evenings, January 27 through March 2, 2020 | 6:30pm
Cranbrook Art Museum deSalle Auditorium
39221 Woodward Avenue, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48304

Lecturer: Kevin Adkisson, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research

$75 for Adults; $25 for Full-time Students with ID
Free for Cranbrook Academy of Art and Cranbrook Schools Students (Cranbrook students must register by sending an email from their Cranbrook address to center@cranbrook.edu)

Advance registration required (Fee includes all five lectures)
This Lecture Series is eligible for American Institute of Architects Continuing Education Credits (AIA/CES).

PRESENTED BY CRANBROOK CENTER FOR COLLECTIONS AND RESEARCH

Join Kevin Adkisson for this five-week lecture series surveying the history of American architecture through the lens of Cranbrook’s distinct and impressive architectural history.

Each week, the 75-minute, image-based lecture will start with a close study of one of Cranbrook's buildings, and then expand to use the campus as a way of seeing the development of modern architecture from the late 19th century to the present day.  By tracing the evolution of architecture at Cranbrook and its design and social context, attendees will come to more fully understand and analyze the built landscape we live in every day. All levels of architecture knowledge are welcome.

Lectures will introduce major themes and theories that have shaped American architecture, along with significant individual projects and their architects. The course will both analyze the architecture of Cranbrook and introduce you to less familiar people and places who have shaped the history of architecture.

WEEKLY TOPICS

WEEK ONE

The Arts & Crafts Movement 1897—1918

Cranbrook House, Albert Kahn, architect, 1908

  • Greek Theater
  • Tower Cottage
  • Boathouse
  • Japanese Garden
  • Meetinghouse (Brookside)
  •  

WEEK TWO

Nostalgia and the Avant-Garde, 1918—1932 

Kingswood School for Girls, Eliel Saarinen, architect, 1931

  • Saarinen House
  • Cranbrook School for Boys
  • Christ Church Cranbrook
  • Arts & Crafts Courtyard
WEEK THREE

Stripped Classicism and American Modernism, 1932—1950 

Cranbrook Academy of Art Museum & Library, Eliel Saarinen, architect, 1942

  • Cranbrook Institute of Science
  • Church School Wing at Christ Church Cranbrook
  • Thornlea Studio
WEEK FOUR

Midcentury Modernism and Monumentality, 1951—1974 

Edison House, William P. Smith, architect, 1966

  • Frank Lloyd Wright Smith House
  • Kresge Apartments
  • Tamarack Apartments
  • Gordon Hall of Science
WEEK FIVE

Late Modernism and Alternatives, 1975—2005 

Natatorium, Tod Williams and Billie Tsien, architects, 1999

  • DeSalle Auditoirum
  • Early Childhood Center
  • Cranbrook Institute of Science
  • New Studios Building
  • House of the Poet
  • Arrival Feature and Entrance Feature

Each week’s lecture will begin with a close study of an individual work at Cranbrook through building plans, landscape study, construction documents and photographs, and contemporary color photography. The lectures will then expand outward, looking at the building’s architect and architectural inspirations to help place the work within its larger context. Lectures will explore contemporaneous buildings at Cranbrook, in Detroit, and around the country. The goal of each lecture is to provide a specific case study in 20th-century architecture that teaches us more about the design of the wider world.

ABOUT KEVIN ADKISSON
Curatorial Associate Kevin Adkisson of Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research works on preservation, interpretation, and programming across the many buildings and treasures of Cranbrook. A native of north Georgia, Adkisson has his BA in Architecture from Yale, where alongside work in design studios he took courses in the history of architecture and in American decorative arts and worked for four years at the Yale University Art Gallery’s Furniture Study. Adkisson is completing his MA from the University of Delaware’s Winterthur Program in American Material Culture, with a thesis examining the role of postmodernism in shopping mall architecture. 

Before coming to Cranbrook, Adkisson worked for Robert A.M. Stern Architects (RAMSA) in New York as a research and writing associate. At RAMSA, he assisted design teams in researching historical reference imagery to be used in the design of the firm’s signature modern-traditionalist aesthetic. He also assisted in image research for Stern’s books, Paradise Planned: The Garden Suburb and the Modern City (2013) and Pedagogy and Place: 100 Years of Architecture Education at Yale (2016). Kevin Adkisson also worked at Kent Bloomer Studio in New Haven, Connecticut on the design and fabrication of architectural ornament.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
The History of American Architecture Lecture Series is presented by Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research. The fee includes admission to all five lectures. Although the lectures build on each other, attendance at all five lectures is not required. Regretfully, discounted tickets cannot be sold to individual lectures and admission cannot be transferred to other people.

Our Lecture Series has historically sold out, with maximum capacity of 200 guests. Parking at Cranbrook Art Museum is limited; overflow parking is available in the parking structure at Cranbrook Institute of Science. Visitors who wish to park at Cranbrook Art Museum are encouraged to arrive at least twenty minutes prior to the lecture’s start at 6:30pm. 

All lectures will be held in Cranbrook Art Museum's deSalle Auditorium. For more information, please contact Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research at 248.645.3307.

A reading list will be provided after the lecture series; there are no written assignments or evaluations. Lectures will be followed by a brief question and answer session based on time available.

Lectures will be cancelled if Cranbrook is closed for inclement weather. Cancellations will be announced by email and on the Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research website, www.center.cranbrook.edu. Make up lectures will be held on March 2 and March 9, as needed.

This lecture series is eligible for American Institute of Architects Continuing Education credits (AIA/CES). Each lecture is one learning unit (LUs), for a total of five LUs. AIA/CES Self Report Forms are available online through the AIA National website. Please call the Center or your local AIA chapter for more information.

PHOTO CREDITS (FROM TOP TO BOTTOM)

Banner image: Eliel Saarinen. Elevation, Plan, and Sections of Green Lobby, Kingswood School Cranbrook. Ink, colored pencil, and graphite on tracing paper. 28 x 52.5 inches. Collection Cranbrook Art Museum.

Cranbrook House, 2018. James Haefner, photographer. 

Kingswood School Exterior, 2016. James Haefner, photographer. 

Cranbrook Art Museum Exterior, 2016. James Haefner, photographer. 

Edison House, Courtesy Cranbrook Archives. 

Cranbrook Schools Williams Natatorium, 2018. James Haefner, photographer. 

History of Architecture Lecture series, 2019. Kathryn Dimond, photographer.

Kevin Adkisson Staff Photo by P.D. Rearick, CAA '10.