Daniel Bluestone: Saving Wright's Robie House, 1957

Smart Lecture

Daniel Bluestone: Saving Wright's Robie House, 1957

Lecture
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CWAC 157
Add to Calendar 2018-10-18 17:00:00 2018-10-18 19:00:00 Daniel Bluestone: Saving Wright's Robie House, 1957 Architectural historian and director of the Preservation Studies Program at Boston University Daniel Bluestone (PhD ’84) explores the contentious yearlong international preservation campaign spurred by the Chicago Theological Seminary’s 1957 plan to demolish Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House and replace it with a married student dormitory. With assistance from Frank Lloyd Wright and officials of the University of Chicago, the successful campaign to save the Robie House reflected critical economic and racial tensions in post-war American culture, memory, and urban renewal. The debates over the Robie House transformed the very nature of the preservation movement in the United States.  Audience Q&A and reception to follow. Free Presented by the Department of Art History, in collaboration with the Frank Lloyd Wright Trust, as part of the 2018/19 Smart Lecture series supported by the Smart Family Foundation  CWAC 157 Department of Art History drupal@seastar.uchicago.edu America/Chicago public
Chicago Daily Tribune March 1957 article on Robie House

Architectural historian and director of the Preservation Studies Program at Boston University Daniel Bluestone (PhD ’84) explores the contentious yearlong international preservation campaign spurred by the Chicago Theological Seminary’s 1957 plan to demolish Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House and replace it with a married student dormitory. With assistance from Frank Lloyd Wright and officials of the University of Chicago, the successful campaign to save the Robie House reflected critical economic and racial tensions in post-war American culture, memory, and urban renewal. The debates over the Robie House transformed the very nature of the preservation movement in the United States. 

Audience Q&A and reception to follow.

Free

Presented by the Department of Art History, in collaboration with the Frank Lloyd Wright Trust, as part of the 2018/19 Smart Lecture series supported by the Smart Family Foundation