Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of graphite and colored pencil on yellow tracing paper.

House Study, Aerial Perspective

1919

Bruce Alonzo Goff American, 1904–1982

Tulsa

By the time he was 12 years old, Bruce Goff was working as an apprentice at an architecture firm in Tulsa, Oklahoma, yet his most important influences were in Chicago. Goff’s correspondence with Frank Lloyd Wright fueled his independent drive, and projects from his teenage years show a remarkably sophisticated understanding of the Prairie School vocabulary of his mentor, as seen in this dramatic study for a small house.
Presented from an aerial perspective, Goff’s drawing highlights a choreographed procession from interior to exterior, as the stained-glass doors lead to a large, symmetrical porch with trailing flowerboxes and a reflecting pool.

Graphite and colored pencil on yellow tracing paper

Architecture and Design