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When Sam Mockbee died, somewhere
down South a tree fellbig as an oak, a 57-year
marvel in its own place, it drew sustenance from generations
of loam and deep water, weathered storms and bent and
grew broad, threw off shade and color for all that came
and sat beneath it, sheltered all comers, an elemental
force that rained out new growth, and, on December 30,
returned to its own soil.
If art is seeing and making, to
an uncommon degree Sam Mockbee had the soul of an artist.
Although a gifted tale-teller, Sambos métier
was not the written word, the usual currency of his
region, but graphic and plastic expression. You
know, what I really love to do is make prints,
he confessed in a honeyed drawl from a porch swing more
than 20 years ago, after hearing Mississippi writers
Shelby Foote and Ellen Gilchrist read from their own
work. In the studio, this bearded, Richardsonian man
lightly skimmed over a drawing board in a far corner
of the room, apparently burning with his art, perpetually
encircled by a haze of smoke from colored pencils and
spray paint and student breath; then the drawings would
emerge from a messy pile of tracing paper and blow the
room clean.
His elemental love of making art,
of looking fearlessly and closely at his own world,
translated over time into three-dimensional architecture
for people. His houses for the affluent, fiercely unsentimental
and rooted in contemporary culture, were complex, unfashionable,
personal interpretations that drew inspiration from
vernacular traditionsincluding galvanized roofs,
rusting metal scraps, dogtrot forms, porchesand
recast them into jazz. Sambo found his voice and made
the South sing again.
With that same level gaze, this
iconoclast, a humorous, self-described subversive
who was going to war, saw injustice. Down
the back roads of his native region lay shacks with
plastic sheeting for doorways, where a reluctant hand
would draw the curtain, hiding its private troubles
from passersby. Consistently, unapologetically, Sambo
raised the curtain and went inside. Although he had
grown up in segregated Meridian, Mississippi, just an
hour from the earthen dam that once held the bodies
of civil rights martyrs, Mockbee came of age later in
the army, where he confronted a richer, more racially
multidimensional world: His art and his architecture
had discovered their subject.
Early on, his work stood apart.
In the late 1970s, his practice in Jackson, Mississippi,
included formally powerful, simple churches and residences.
After winning a Progressive Architecture Award for a
series of small houses for the rural poor in Madison
County, Mississippi, where he lived with his own family,
he eventually founded Auburn Universitys Rural
Studio with D.K. Ruth. Based in part on Clemson Universitys
semester in Genoa, Italy, Mockbee improbably reinvented
the semester abroad for Hale County, Alabama, a land
drenched in sunlight and greenness and rich soil but
blighted by persistent poverty.
Sambos Redneck Taliesin
raised the temperature in the humid little town and
attracted the students. The Rural Studio, which soon
garnered international attention, required total engagement
of student and teacher (including residency, first in
a Faulknerian mansion in Greensboro, later at a farmhouse
in Newbern). In a way their mothers never could have
imagined, students cooked and cleaned; studied regional
architectural history; drew; read literatures
great voices; played music; sat up late; met the townspeople;
and, especially, planned and built buildings with their
hands.
Unusual materials (abandoned tires,
shards of concrete, hay bales, and rejected windshields)
helped provide uncommon personality and presence for
the small structures they made, including houses, chapels,
and community centers. Simultaneously, the phenomenon
multiplied throughout the country, the Rural Studio
flourished, and Mockbees legend swelled.
In lectures, Mockbee frequently
quoted Albertis dictum that we must choose between
fortune and virtue. Sam Mockbee chose virtue,
not as judgmental prissiness, but in a robust, compassionate
sense of knocking on doors, finding need, and answering
it. By engaging students with authentic clients in Alabama
communities, he tapped into the natural optimism of
the young, freeing them from the more insular, abstract
cynicism and formal obsessions of the design studio.
A generation of students, now some 400 strong, inspired
by the Rural Studios social activism, has followed
in Mockbees prodigious wake. His real accomplishment,
his real art, may lie outside his artful buildings,
in the potential work and lives of those that follow,
nurtured and liberated and heading out to build. Who
among them might take his place?
Sambo, pax vobiscum.
Join Robert Ivy as he jots down
notes on his travels and the state of architecture today
in the Editor's Journal.
Check out our index
of past editorials.
If you wish to write to our editor-in-chief
you can email him rivy@mcgraw-hill.com.
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