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Eero
Saarinen
1910-1961
MArch
1934
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Horizontal expansiveness
and idealized geometric shapes mark such Saarinen classics as the Jefferson
Westward Expansion Memorial (the St. Louis arch beside the Mississippi) and
Dulles International Airport. His glass-and-steel structures for the General
Motors Technical Center (Warren, Michigan) or the IBM buildings in Minnesota
and in Yorktown, New York, set a prevailing mode for late-20th-century commerce
and industry. Gravity-defying concrete experiments like the TWA terminal at
John F. Kennedy Airport or the MIT auditorium were nearly as influential, demonstrating
the architect's dedicated search for forms appropriate to both the function
and the spirit of a building .
Saarinen's father,
a Finnish architect, had moved the family to the United States when the boy
was in his early teens. Intending to be a sculptor, Eero created successful
furniture designs and later approached buildings with a sculptor's eye and
sense of organic unity.
Many Saarinen works
were executed posthumously after he succumbed at 51 to brain cancer. He drew
on a classicist Yale training, plus European influences (especially Mies van
der Rohe), and a strong formalism that continued the Modernist, International,
objectivist school.
Saarinen is represented
in New York City by the CBS skyscraper and the Vivian Beaumont Theater at
Lincoln Center. But he worked less in urban centers than on corporate and
university campuses. "Universities," he remarked, "are the oases of our desert-like
civilization.they are the only beautiful, respectable pedestrian places
left." He contributed to such "oases" as MIT, Drake, Vassar, and the University
of Pennsylvania. At Yale, he designed Ezra Stiles and Morse colleges and the
"whale," Ingalls Rink.
