Preferred Title:
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Ford House
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Image View:
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View into the central pavilion, showing terrace and upper balcony
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Creator:
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Bruce Alonzo Goff (American architect, 1904-1982)
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Location:
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site: Aurora, Illinois, United States
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Location Note:
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404 South Edgelawn Avenue
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Date:
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1947-1950 (creation)
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Cultural Context:
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American
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Style Period:
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Modernist; Modern; Twentieth century
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Work Type 1:
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house
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Classification:
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architecture
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Material:
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coal; glass; wood; steel
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Technique:
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construction (assembling)
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Subjects:
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architectural exteriors; dwelling; balcony
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Description:
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Experiences gained from incorporating found materials in the residential and recreational facilities that he designed for the armed forces in the Aleutian Islands, due to wartime shortages of conventional building materials, continued to shape his post-war work. In other designs of this period Goff exploited more regular geometries, but still with unique results that were partly dependent on his continued exploration of unlikely materials. Examples include the Ford house (1947-1950), Aurora, IL, whose intersecting partial domes are made of Quonset hut components supported on base walls of coal, and the Wilson house (1950-1953), Pensacola, FL, composed of pipe-framed interlocking cubes. (Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.oxfordartonline.com/)
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Collection:
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Archivision Addition Module Three
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Identifier:
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1A1-GB-FH-B11
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Rights:
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© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.
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