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William Muschenheim, FAIA
Muschenheim Residence, Ann Arbor, Michigan 1954
Because teachers are important...

More about William Muschenheim,
Architect
In spring of 1965, during my undergraduate architecture studies at the
University of Michigan, I had the good fortune to have as my design professor,
William Muschenheim. At that time he was in his 60s, but was one of the
sharpest minds and most liberating architectural philosophers with whom
I had come into contact. He opened my mind to "modern" architectural
thought and perception more than any other teacher in my formal education.
Studying with Bill was like growing new wings. He was one of those rare
teachers, who instead of pushing a personal approach or philosophy of design
upon the student, would quietly observe what the student was trying to explore,
and then open new doors and help him express the ideas in the most contemporary
creative way.
I remember, that during the evolution of a student's design--at a critical
point when the design could turn out good or mediocre--he would take the
student to the College library, and selecting a certain book, say, "Here,
look at this--I think it will help you..." Then he would look right
in your eyes, and you knew you had better check the book out! The chosen
book, rather than being a patternbook to copy, was usually a catalyst that
triggered the student to open up to new perceptions--and the design project
did improve. He believed that architecture was not revolutionary, but was
a constant rethinking of universal principles. Being "NEW" was
simply a process of expressing those principles with honesty, while utilizing,
artistically, the materials and technology available in one's lifetime.
In the summer of 1966, having finished my UofM undergraduate degree, and
waiting to go to Harvard GSD that Fall, he invited me to work in his office,
which was located in his Ann Arbor residence (photos above). Muschenheim
was a sophisticated New Yorker, who had studied in Vienna with Peter
Behrens in the 30s, and worked with Joseph
Urban in New York on many major commissions in the 40s and 50s. In the
30's he had designed New York's first Guggenheim Museum and its innovative
lighting system. When the Guggenheims asked him to work with Frank Lloyd
Wright on the design for the second museum, he declined. What a great loss
for the Big Apple...
His Ann Arbor residence was a snythesis of his deep cultural experience,
a brilliant "Modern-International" house. For a young Michigan
kid who had grown up in a wooden farmhouse in the boondocks, working in
this house was an unforgetable learning experience.
His wife, Lisa, (seated in the picture above) was fighting terminal cancer
that summer, but spent a lot of time with me telling me stories about her
life and years with Bill. She was originally from Vienna, the daughter of
a famous New York City music conductor, and in her early days was close
to the composer, George Gershwin. She was a lady of great depth and humor.
One time in a servious mood, I asked Bill what it was like to be an architect
living in the early "modernist" period, when all the old rules
of architecture were being broken. He smiled and said in his soft voice,
matter-of-factly, "It didn't seem like a revolution, we just lived
it honestly, responding naturally, a day at a time...." Having listened
to us from the other room, Lisa piped in, in her sardonic Viennese accent,"Oh
yes, Villie!, like all those parties we used to have--we used to kill ourselves
to make them seem casual and effortless!"
That summer we all became good friends.
Bill and Lisa, Namaste!
Your comments and feedback are welcome. Please contact Dennis
Holloway, Architect, via e-mail:
archvr@rcybermesa.com

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