Old House Journal

A TRIO OF MODERN MASTERS

COLLECTING BRUTALIST AND MODERN PIECES 1950–1970.

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MODERN MOVEMENT TRIO

Every era presents an opportunit­y to collect the work of favorite designers. For their 1951 Seattle house, Kevin Dodge and Darin Collins have been collecting lighting and sculptural work from three Modern masters: Harry Balmer, Gaetano Sciolari, and Paolo Soleri.

Brutalism is a mid-century modernist designatio­n for architectu­re and design defined by the use of such raw materials as concrete, glass, and metals. Rough surfaces, hard edges, organic forms, and metallic finishes are common. The name comes from the French term “béton brut,” meaning raw concrete. The American welder and sculptor Harry Balmer, whose works were produced by the Flemington Iron Works and Laurel Lamp Company, made Brutalist and Modern lighting and abstract sculptures that have become collectibl­e. His 1960s works are generally of blackened steel. Balmer also produced wood and iron furniture.

Gaetano Sciolari (1927–1994) was a trained architect and film director who returned to his hometown roots in 1949, when he became head of Sciolari lighting, the family business founded in 1892. In the 1950s, he was the designer for the internatio­nally known lighting manufactur­er Stilnovo. His designs blended modern streamlini­ng with such traditiona­l materials as opaline glass and brass. Sciolari’s designs for his own company were embraced by top designers in Europe and the U.S. during the 1960s. The work, influenced by Cubism and Deconstruc­tivism, was often seen as futuristic. By the 1970s, Sciolari Lighting sold lamps in the U.S. through Lightolier and Progress Lighting, resulting in a high sales volume through the 1980s. Sciolari’s ‘Cubic’ series lighting, especially, was a go-to for TV and cinema set designers in the 1970s and ’80s.

The Italian architect Paolo Soleri (1919–2013) spent time with Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin West in Arizona and Taliesin in Wisconsin, during the late 1940s. Back in Italy, he designed a large ceramics factory—creating his unique style and also learning about ceramics and bronze casting. This background was put to use later in the design of buildings and also ceramic and bronze windbells, the sales of which provided income (and still does) for his experiment­al eco-town in Arizona.

in 1955, Soleri and his wife, Colly, moved to Scottsdale and soon began the practice of “arcology,” his term for a synthesis of architectu­re and ecology. In 1970, he created Arcosanti, an evolving site with buildings of silt-cast concrete, built by students and volunteers who paid for the experience. Imagined as a densely populated town of 5,000 people, the community reached its peak of 200 residents in the 1970s and today houses fewer than 60 disciples. The Soleris’ Cosanti Foundation is an educationa­l non-profit organizati­on exploring urban planning, with a philosophy influenced by Jesuit paleontolo­gist and philosophe­r Pierre Teilhard de Chardin. The architect’s home and studio in Paradise Valley, Cosanti, is an Arizona Historic Site and offers public tours year-round. The Arcosanti site, about 65 miles north of Phoenix, is active, with workshops, events, and regular tours: arcosanti.org

 ??  ?? (top to bottom) This Brutalist, patinated-steel ribbon lamp of ca. 1960 by Harry Balmer rests on a Tibetan side table in the living room of the 1951 Seattle house. • A vintage 1970s Gaetano Sciolari brass chandelier illuminate­s the stairwell that leads to the house’s lower level. • Tolling a welcome near the entry are bronze Soleri bells, originally designed by Paolo Soleri in the 1950s.
(top to bottom) This Brutalist, patinated-steel ribbon lamp of ca. 1960 by Harry Balmer rests on a Tibetan side table in the living room of the 1951 Seattle house. • A vintage 1970s Gaetano Sciolari brass chandelier illuminate­s the stairwell that leads to the house’s lower level. • Tolling a welcome near the entry are bronze Soleri bells, originally designed by Paolo Soleri in the 1950s.
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