Archive for the 'Knoxville' Category

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Candoro Marble Works

Candoro Entrance

Candoro Entrance

Garage

Garage

This little gem can be found in the small community of Vestal just across the river from downtown Knoxville. It was designed in 1923 by Charles Barber.

We are inspired by its simplistic beauty. The building has total command of its site. Look at the view down the entrance road through the alley of cedar trees, what an amazing, formal entry! The garage to the side is more of a Mediterranean style, while the front facade is Classical, yet they blend well. The intricate details in the stonework show that this came from the shop of some very skilled craftsmen.

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Dulin House: John Russell Pope

dulin-house-today

Dulin House, Knoxville, Tennessee

This little known and easily missed house located at 3100 Kingston Pike comes from the studio of one of the most famous residential architects to design a house built in Knoxville.  The Dulin House was designed in 1915 by John Russell Pope (1874-1937), a prominent architect from New York.  Pope’s main focus in practice was residential, but he completed a number of commercial and public buildings throughout the Northeast, including the Jefferson Memorial and the National Gallery of Art.

The Dulin House closely resembles Pope’s first residential commission, the Jacobs Residence, located in Newport, Rhode Island. Interestingly, the Dulin House was the original home of what is now known as the Knoxville Museum of Art. The museum, formerly the Dulin Gallery of Art, was founded by Mary Katherine Dulin Folger and was housed there from 1961 to the late 1980’s.  The 10 year span between Popes work on the Jacobs Residence and Dulin Residence reveals a maturing architect who was refining his style we might now refer to as modern classicism.

dulin-house-whiteholm

The Jacobs Residence, Rhode Island

Pope graduated from Columbia University in 1894 and also studied for three years at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He traveled extensively in Europe during this time and gained his love of Classicism.

Reference: James B. Garrison. Mastering Tradition: The Residential Architecture of John Russell Pope. New York: Acanthus, 2004.