PARTNER ORGANIZATION
Lake Forest Preservation Foundation Presents
Enclave of Elegance: Architecture, Interior Design and Gardens at
Their Best
4 Historic Homes, 5 Gardens and
Reception
Saturday, September 27, 1:00 to 3:30 PM Tour, 3:30
to 4:30 PM Reception
Tickets in Advance - General $95
- Patron $150, Day of Event purchase - $120
Organized with the assistance of
SAH Member and Lake Forest historian Art Miller, this tour offers rare access
to a range of sites from 1920s chic
to the latest in traditional architectural and design high style. The benefit House and Garden Walk funds preservation
projects. With four neighboring houses
and five gardens, the last for a reception, the event promises to combine the
kind of history, classic and current high style, and great stories locals
travel abroad or to the east or west coasts to experience. To attend this stellar walk please visit the Foundation website, www.lfpf.org
and or call the office at 847-234-1230.
Advance tickets must be purchased
by September 24. Tickets are limited.
SOCIETY OF ARCHITECTURAL HISTORIANS CHICAGO
CHAPTER: FALL SCHEDULE
When: Monday, Sept. 29, 2014;
5:00 p.m. reception, lecture at 5:45 p.m.,
Where: AIA Chicago, 35 E. Wacker
Dr., 2nd
What: Author Susan Benjamin’s
upcoming slide lecture, “Strikingly Modern”, given in memory of the late Thomas
Earle (a longtime member of CCSAH), defines Chicago’s great residential
architecture of the 1930s through1960s. The influence of Frank Lloyd Wright and
Mies van der Rohe was great on subsequent practitioners of Modern residential
architecture, those who designed many of the best houses in the Chicago area: i.e.
Harry Weese, Edward Dart, James Speyer, Bertrand Goldberg, Edward Humrich,
Bruce Graham, and David Haid, among others. Arguably every mid- century
architect in Chicago reverberated off of them--Wright and Mies were the
“elephants in the room”. Their ideas and work were accepted or rejected, but
never ignored. Learn also about the challenges of preserving a Modernist icon
owned by the Village of Schaumburg--the 1938 Paul Schweikher Home and Studio. Susan will also explain how certain tax
incentives and landmark designations, both local and national, can help save
modernist houses, citing Dart and Weese houses.
Cost: Free to members, $10.00 for
non-members.
RSVP: For questions, and to sign
up, please contact Judy Freeman: by email: jrfree3500@aol.com,
or telephone: 773-929-0329
Evanston Lakefront Houses Walking Tour
When: Saturday, October 11, 2014,
1:00 to 4:00 p.m.
Where: Meet at the Charles Gates
Dawes mansion, now the Evanston History Center, at 225 Greenwood Street,
Evanston, IL 60201 (nine minutes east of the Dempster stop on the Purple Line
toward Linden) at 12:45 p.m. for a 1:00 tour of the museum and more.
What: Tour of the Dawes house by historian
Kris Hartzell, followed by a walking tour of lakefront architecture in the
vicinity of the museum, including the Japanese Consular Residence, the Arthur
Orr house of 1888 by J. L. Silsbee (F. L. Wright’s first employer), with its
gambrel roof. Shingle Style clapboard, stone bases and round porches, and also the
eclectic 1892 C. F. Bradley house by architects Bosworth & Chase, among
several other notable houses. This tour is given in honor of the new book, Evanston:
150 Years, 150 Places, Design Evanston 2013, by authors Kris Hartzell, Stuart
Cohen, Heidrun Hoppe, Laura Saviano and Jack Weiss. This tour is limited to about
thirty persons, so please reserve early.
Cost: Museum tour and walking
tour admission fee is $15.00 for CCSA members, $20.00 for non-members.
RSVP: For further details, and/or
to reserve a spot, please contact Judy Freeman by email: jrfree3500@aol.com
or by telephone: 773-929-0329.
Eric Holubow, Urban Archaeologist and
Photographer
When: Monday, October 27, 2014,
6:00-7:30 p.m.
Where: American Institute of
Architects Chicago Chapter office, 35 E. Wacker Drive, Suite 250
What: Urban archaeologist and
architectural photographer Eric Holubow will speak on his new book: Abandoned:
America’s Vanishing Landscape (Schiffer Publishing, $50.00), as well as his oeuvre
of photography. Eric’s photos speak:
“For a relatively young country, America is rich in decaying ruins that cover
its landscape.” Through his striking photography, Eric Holubow provides a
glimpse inside these perilous structures to reveal the slow but unforgiving wear
and tear that has befallen many of the country’s forgotten sites. What
transpires is a surprising, yet undeniable beauty beneath the rubble and
decrepitude. Eric Holubow's compelling
work forces us to pay attention to formerly grand, significant landmarks and
institutions that have long been ignored, and reminds us of the tragic fate
that they and everything we know eventually share.”
Cost: $10.00 for members, $15.00 for
non-members
RSVP: Judy Freeman, email: jrfree3500@aol.com
RSVP: Judy Freeman, email: jrfree3500@aol.com
Annual Holiday “Show and Tell” Slide Show
Dinner at Cliff Dwellers
When: Wednesday, Dec. 3. 2014,
from 5:30 to 9:00 p.m.
Where: Cliff Dwellers, 200 S.
Michigan, 22nd floor
What: Please save the date for our
very own annual party of historical architecture slide shows. Current SAH members who have ideas for
presentations should contact Bill Locke, wlocke@ameritech.net
or 312-932-9790.