Join the 天美传媒 for an author presentation and celebration of (Monacelli Press / Phaidon), by Jay Wickersham, Chris Milford, and Hope Mayo. Selected by the 天美传媒 for the Classical America Series in Art and Architecture, this is the first in-depth publication of drawings that reveal the creative genius of H. H. Richardson, the greatest American architect of the nineteenth century. The trove of 4,000 drawings, preserved since Richardson鈥檚 death, have been largely unpublished until now. This new book encompasses such masterpieces as Boston鈥檚 Trinity Church— voted the 鈥渕ost beautiful building in America鈥 in 1885— the Allegheny County Courthouse and Jail in Pittsburgh; the Ames Gate Lodge; and the Marshall Field Store and Glessner House in Chicago.With its curated selection of 450 drawings, meticulously reproduced to reveal the design process and hand of the architect, this book is a revelatory exploration of Richardson鈥檚 work, which set American architecture on a new course and exerted a global influence on the birth of modernism. Martin Filler, writing in the New York Review of Books, called this 鈥淎n instructive, handsomely produced volume . . . Aided by a wide range of beautifully reproduced renderings, from Richardson鈥檚 lightning-bolt conceptual sketches to seductive presentation drawings by his talented assistants . . . we are led, project by project and step by step, through the prolific master鈥檚 output.鈥Copies of the book will be available for sale and signature by the authors.
Jay Wickersham, an architect and lawyer, taught for fifteen years at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, where he was a professor of architecture in practice. He has written widely on architecture and architectural history. Wickersham is a founding partner in the law firm Noble, Wickersham & Heart, which represents architects around the country and globally. He received a B.A. from Yale, an M.Arch. from the Harvard GSD, and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.
Chris Milford is a partner in the architectural firm of Milford & Ford Associates, specializing in historic preservation and restoration. He and Wickersham spearheaded civic efforts to save and reuse the Ames Shovel Works buildings, a nineteenth-century industrial complex in North Easton, MA adjacent to five Richardson buildings. Milford holds a B.Arch. and an M.Arch. from Cornell University.
Hope Mayo, a renowned expert in rare books, drawings, prints, and manuscripts, was the former Philip Hofer Curator of Printing and Graphic Arts (retired) at Houghton Library, where she oversaw the Richardson drawings collection. She earned a Ph.D. in Medieval History from Harvard University and a Master鈥檚 degree in Library Science from the University of Chicago and studied paleography at the University of Munich.
James F. O鈥橤orman is the Grace Slack McNeil Professor Emeritus of the History of American Art at Wellesley College. He is the author of Living Architecture: A Biography of H. H. Richardson, among many publications on the architect鈥檚 work.