Stone Walls

A decorative semi-circular retaining wall with bench, designed and built by Shayne Izatt in New Haven, Connecticut. Photo courtesy Shayne Izatt

Stone walls. Driving down the roads of New England you see them companionably hugging the side of the road, or meandering away up a hill, or nestling between trees in the woods. As simple and natural as they look stone walls are a designed phenomenon, each one consciously constructed using a specific type of order which accommodates the shapes of rock.

A stone wall in New London, New Hampshire. Photo courtesy Bev Norton

Do you think of the famous Robert Frost poem “Mending Wall,” where a neighbor tells the curious Frost: “Fences make good neighbors”? Why they were built, or by whom? Was it a way to clear a field for farming, or to form a land-boundary marker?

Look closely and you will see that not all stone walls are the same. Some look like a pile of rubble, while others are meticulously executed in elaborate patterns, and others lie somewhere in between.  Regardless, each wall was created with careful deliberation and an eye for aesthetics. These stone walls could easily be called works of art.

The covers of two of Thorson’s works: Exploring Stone Walls and Stone by Stone. Both available from Bloomsbury Press.

Robert Thorson’s two books, “Exploring Stone Walls” and “Stone by Stone”, are necessary handbooks for anyone interested in learning more about stone walls. Thorson, a geologist by training, helps us decipher these mysterious anonymous creations. He helps us interpret the geological history of the local landscape through the stones; how to understand the miniature ecosystem that has established the wall as its home; and how to “read” a stone wall to deduce its specific life story.

A roadside stone wall in Franklin, New Hampshire. Photo courtesy Bev Norton www.flickr.com/photos/catchesthelight

He divides walls into hierarchical categories of intention and arrangement, and therefore design and artfulness. A dumped wall (which is self-explanatory) is the lowest level of order, followed by a placed wall, where single stones are maneuvered into a line. Next comes the stacked wall, where stones are balanced on top of each other, but without any real concern as to how they fit together. And finally, the laid wall, where stones are fitted together in a deliberate arrangement, and the chinked wall, where the gaps between laid stones are filled with smaller stones to create a smooth face.

Where each wall falls within the hierarchy tells you a lot about the intention and financial situation of the wall’s creator. A stacked wall may have been created by poor farmers, who were tilling the field by hand and so only needed to remove the largest stones. A carefully laid wall could be the creation of wealthier landowners, people who could afford machines to till the land that might be ruined by a smaller stone, or who wanted to impress with the design of their bounding walls. The stones themselves often bear the marks of the tools that positioned them.

Four levels of stone wall arrangement. Photos taken at the Shelburne Museum (www.shelburnemuseum.org) in Shelburne, Vermont. Courtesy Grace Jeffers

These days, stone walls are rarely created as the by-product of clearing a field for farming. They are more often looking for decorative walls or retaining walls in a landscaped garden or an entry gate. But contemporary stone wall designers have many of the same considerations of those historic craftsmen. Shayne Izatt, co-owner of Sightline scenery studio in New York City and a self-taught stone wall builder, likens the process to a puzzle, “except you get no help with having an image on the face and the pieces are a lot heavier!”

The author, Robert Thorson, as photographed by Lucy Nalpathanchil.

Of course, modern technology and tools give us an advantage over those early farmers, allowing us to more easily shape the stone to suit our needs. But true skill and art shine through in the same timeless way, in simply fitting together what nature has provided. As Shayne says, “I try not to ‘touch’ a stone when I’m building a wall. I find the joy in finding the right spot for each stone a challenge and the art of stone work.”

Newly created stone walls may be less about back-breaking creation, boundaries and functionality than those centuries-old ones you see criss-crossing the New England landscape, but they still have a story to tell, and one that will be read over centuries to come.

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INSPIRING STUDENTS…..

EVERYONE IN THE POOL! The class enjoys the once in a lifetime opportunity to soak their feet in a Frank Lloyd Wright pool!

As we posted before, we teamed up with the California College of Art to host this year’s student chair competition. Recently, Wilsonart and professor Russell Baldon decided to take advantage of the amazing partnership between 30 Southern Californian museums, galleries and cultural centers called “Pacific Standard Time.” Many of these institutions showcased work which explored the question: What is California Design? What does Californian design entail? What does it look like? And why?

Students explore the "California Design, 1930-1965: 'Living in a Modern Way'" exhibition at the LA County Museum

Students have the rare opportunity to examine the contructionof a Isamu Noguchi table inside the Storer house.Students explore the "California Design, 1930-1965: 'Living in a Modern Way'" exhibition at the LA County Museum

Brave professor Baldon took the class on a weekend field trip to Los Angeles and spent a day exploring three museums: LA County Museum’s California Design, 1930–1965: Living in a Modern Way (LACMA), Golden State of Craft: California 1960 – 1985 at the Craft and Folk Art Museum (http://www.cafam.org/), and Under The Big Black Sun: CALIFORNIA ART 1974-1981 at the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA (http://www.moca.org/). 

Students explore the "California Design, 1930-1965: 'Living in a Modern Way'" exhibition at the LA County Museum

Before heading back, the class had the privilege of touring the Storer House, one of four iconic “textile block” houses designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. The Storer residence is privately owned, so this was an extra special treat thanks to CCA student Leslie Boin Podell. The house has been impeccably restored with all of the original architectural details intact. We were even delighted to see the Frank Lloyd Wright designed linens on the bed!

Not even Hollywood could have scripted a more inspiring weekend!

Steve Sanchez looks out from the roof deck of the Storer House.

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HAPPENING NOW IN CALIFORNIA…..

Twenty-six students learn about the history of the chair from design historian Grace Jeffers.

This fall, across Southern California approximately 30 institutions are hosting special exhibitions which feature only California artists and Craftsmen. This phenomenon is called Pacific Standard Time and is an initiative of the Getty Museum in Los Angeles. For more information check out http://www.getty.edu/pacificstandardtime/.

Danny Teague demonstrates laminate lay up.

But this isn’t the only good design happening in California. Up North, in San Francisco Wilsonart has teamed up with the California College of Art to host the next student chair competition! This year we are privileged to work with Professor Russell Baldon, who is the chair of the furniture department. Not only is Russell incredibly enthusiastic, he has as keen a knowledge of art as he does design. We can just tell we are going to see things that will make us look at laminate in a new and meaningful way.

As a preliminary exercise, the students made chairs out of “sticks”. All photos courtesy Russell Baldon

CCA, as it is commonly called, is known as one of the best design schools in the world. Originally called California School of Arts and Crafts and was Founded in Berkeley in 1907 the school has had many iterations of its name which included the words “art” and “crafts”. Some people still refer to it as California College of Arts and Crafts (CCAC) but the name changed in 2003 to California College of the Arts, or CCA, because of the confusion of the word “crafts” which the school used to refer to “a skill set” and not “simple art forms”.

Drawing and model making

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California Design, 1930-1965: “Living in a Modern Way.” (part 2)

Gertrud Natzler (b, Austria 1908-1971, active Los Angeles), Otto Natzler (b. Austria 1908-2007, active Los Angeles), Bowl, 1943;Earthenware; Height: 3.5 in (8.8cm); diameter: 8.5in. (21.5cm), LACMA, Gift of Rose A Sperry 1972 Revocable Trust; © 2007 Gail Reynolds Natzler, Trustee of The Natzler Trust; Photo © 2011 Museum Associates/LACMA

Opening October 1st at the LA County Museum, this new exhibition examines the state’s key role in shaping the material culture of the country at mid-century. California Design features more than 350 objects as well as two period re-creations. Last week, we introduced the exhibit. Now here’s a closer look at the four sections: “Shaping,” “Making,” “Living,” and “Selling.”

Shaping California Modern

In the 1920s boom economy, California experienced extraordinary population growth. Millions of new residents needed homes and furnishings, and in the 1930s, buildings and their contents started to be made in modern ways and in modern styles. By the onset of World War II, these innovators’ designs for homes and furnishings were characterized by a particular kind of modernism, one rooted in California culture and conditions. The general qualities associated with the state (optimism and democracy, fearless experimentation, and a love of new technology) and those specific to design (an affinity for light and brilliant color, openness to Asian and Latin influences, and an advocacy of fluid spaces and cross-disciplinary approaches) made California’s best products distinctive.

Making California Modern

Margit Fellegi (1903-1975, active Los Angeles), Cole of Claifornia (Los Angeles, 1925-present), Womans Swimsuit and Jacket, c. 1950; Cotton; LACMA, Gift of Doris Raymond/The Way We Wore; © 2011 The Warnaco Group Inc. All rights reserved. For Authentic Fitness Corp,, Cole of California; Photo © 2011 Museum Associates/LAMCA

After 1945, the United States became the world’s strongest industrial, military, and cultural power. California played a key role in this development, having dominated defense and aerospace production during World War II. After the war, this escalated production had a galvanizing effect on the design and manufacture of consumer goods in the state. California’s material culture was shaped by the imperative to apply innovative wartime materials and production methods to peacetime use. For example, Charles and Ray Eames began working with molded plywood to make leg splints for the Navy around 1943, and produced their now-iconic furniture made with this material a few years later.

California artists working in traditional craft media also responded to the spirit of modernism and experimentation. These “designer-craftsmen,” as they became known—including Edith Heath, David Cressey, Sam Maloof, and Margaret De Patta—tried to adapt new methods of production to make their work more accessible to the new middle classes. Whether handmade or industrially produced, the goal was to provide well-designed homes and furnishings for the millions of California newcomers who craved them.

Living California Modern

Straub & Hensman Buff; Recreation pavilion, Mirman House, Arcadia, 1958; Photo by Julius Shulman, 1959; © J Paul Getty Trust. Used with Permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the Getty Research Institute

The heart of the exhibition focuses on the modern California home, famously characterized by open plans and furnished with products from companies such as Van Keppel-Green and Architectural Pottery. The distinctive vocabulary of the California house and its furnishings at mid-century emerged from a response to the benevolent climate, which permitted indoor/outdoor living. Coupled with new construction techniques and domestic applications for materials such as steel, this allowed space to be made more permeable by completely freeing the wall. The use of steel enabled windows to be floor-to-ceiling; the size of these glass panels was made possible by new technology developed during World War II.

Selling California Modern

Julius Shulman declared, “Good design is seldom accepted. It has to be sold.” He was referring to his own role in staging architectural photography, but as this section demonstrates, the statement could be equally applied to exhibitions, stores, advertising, publications, and film, which were the principal agents in disseminating modern California design.

By the end of the 1960s, the relentless optimism that had made California the embodiment of the good life became far more subdued. Counterculture protests and ecological and social justice issues challenged the very idea of consumerism and unbridled growth. These shifting beliefs, however, do not diminish the unprecedented and lasting contributions of California design at mid-century. This exhibition tells a story of the exhilarating innovation and optimism about building a better, modern world that made California loom large in America’s, and indeed the world’s, imagination.

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