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Montgomery Schuyler (18431914).
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With a handful of like-minded writers, Montgomery Schuyler founded a
new kind of magazine in 1891ARCHITECTURAL RECORDa publication
that almost immediately became one of the most important and influential
of its kind.
Already a journalist of some repute, but lacking any architectural training,
Schuyler soon became an exponent of a progressive American esthetic and
the leading architectural critic of his time. His point of view was founded
on the critical premise that "the radical defect of modern architecture
in general, if not of American architecture in particular, is the estrangement
between architecture and building, between the poetry and the prose."
He believed that architecture is building, and he aimed to repair the
damage and set the record straight for the sake of the American public.
Schuyler's point of view essentially became that of the magazine.
Edward R. Smith, Reference Librarian of the Avery Architectural Library
at Columbia University, wrote the following for RECORD at the time of
Schuyler's death:
The large and genial atmosphere of the older time has persisted in
the personality of several men who are well within the field of our
friendly recollection. Such [a one] was Montgomery Schuyler, of the
same generation as [Russell] Sturgis, and intimately associated with
him. He had the same large sympathies and the same breadth of knowledge.
He had not the same incisive force, but instead a gentle and temperate
quality of mind, which is perhaps quite as valuable. He was not a trained
architect, as Sturgis was, but by much study and constant association
with active men he became sufficiently conversant with detail. Perhaps
the lack of more definite equipment made possible the broad and human
point of view, which he held better than any American writer on architecture.
* * *
The World's Fair at Chicago was the formal introduction of the new
school of architects, who, trained in Paris, have done so much to bring
us into sympathy with the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. Most of us have now
pinned our faith to classicism in some form, and swear by Piranesi:
but to all this Mr. Schuyler was temperamentally antipathetic. He treats
the wonderful Chicago ensemble of 1893 in a characteristic manner; generously
conceding the splendid results, but pleasantly suggesting the doubt,
whether, after all, the result of this vast experiment will be permanently
beneficial. We have gone far enough now with the classic movement to
begin to consider whether our kind friend had not some reason for his
fears. The main interest in Mr. Schuyler's work centers in his large
grasp of the principles and record of architecture in America. Within
the limits of this article it is only possible to show the splendid
sketch, which he has left, and to express the deep regret that there
is no hand with sufficient cunning to raise the pen which he has laid
down.
From: MONTGOMERY SCHUYLER and the HISTORY of AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE,
by Edward R. Smith
Vol. XXXVI, No. 3, September 1914, pp. 264-267.
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