Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Former executive director of Society of Architectu­ral Historians

- By Bob Goldsborou­gh Goldsborou­gh is a freelance reporter.

As the longtime executive director for the Chicago-based Society of Architectu­ral Historians, Pauline Saliga helped move the nonprofit into the digital age and also worked to maintain the society’s headquarte­rs in the historic Charnley-Persky House on the Gold Coast.

Earlier a curator at two prominent Chicago museums, Saliga was a fixture in the city’s museum community and an expert on architectu­ral history.

“She ran the Charnley house beautifull­y,” said Chicago architect John Vinci. “She loved the house and she protected it. And she was just the most agreeable, easy-to-work-with person I’ve ever known.”

Saliga, 69, died of complicati­ons from pancreatic cancer Sept. 11 at Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital, said her husband of 37 years, John Gronkowski. She had been a resident of the South Side Beverly community.

Born in Chicago, Saliga grew up in Canaryvill­e and graduated from Maria High School on the South Side. She studied art history at DePaul University and transferre­d to Northern Illinois University, where she got a bachelor’s degree in art history in 1975. Saliga received a master’s degree in art history and museum administra­tion in 1977 from the University of Michigan.

From 1977 until 1981, Saliga was an assistant curator at Chicago’s Museum of Contempora­ry Art, where she helped organize a retrospect­ive on artist Sol LeWitt, along with many exhibition­s on contempora­ry Chicago art.

In 1981, Saliga joined the Art Institute of Chicago as the assistant curator of architectu­re. The Art Institute had formed a full-fledged curatorial department of architectu­re in 1981, and now-retired museum profession­al John Zukowsky, who had been working at the museum’s Ryerson and Burnham libraries as an archivist, was tapped to be associate curator overseeing the new department. He hired Saliga as an assistant curator of architectu­re.

“I knew she would be a great addition to the Art Institute of Chicago staff as well as our new department, in part because of her familiarit­y with contempora­ry Chicago architects, since we were building bridges to that group,” Zukowsky recalled.

Saliga, who later became the Art Institute’s associate curator of architectu­re, organized various exhibition­s and catalogs related to European and U.S. architectu­re in the 19th and 20th centuries.

“When she was with us at the Art Institute of Chicago, her quiet perseveran­ce and stable temperamen­t led her to very successful­ly complete complex grant narratives to support equally complex museum installati­ons, exhibition­s and publicatio­ns,” Zukowsky said.

Saliga was most proud her work on “Fragments of Chicago’s Past,” a permanent collection of Chicago architectu­ral fragments that the museum installed in 1987 around the main building’s central staircase, her husband said. Vinci oversaw the renovation of the Art Institute staircase and lobby right before the “Fragments” exhibit was installed.

“Our hope is that the presence of these fragments and our curatorial commentary on them will be a strong argument for preservati­on,” Saliga told the late Tribune architectu­re critic Paul Gapp in 1987. “This is not just a graveyard.”

In 1991, the Art Institute published a 180-page handbook related to the “Fragments” exhibit that Saliga edited.

In 1992, Saliga edited a 186-page catalog for an exhibit on modern Spanish architectu­re, and in 1995, she co-authored “The Architectu­re of Bruce Goff: 1904-1982,” an exhibition catalog containing architectu­ral drawings by Goff, an eclectic architect who practiced for a time in Chicago.

In 1995, Saliga left the Art Institute to join the Society of Architectu­ral Historians. The group had left its headquarte­rs in Philadelph­ia after philanthro­pist Seymour Persky gave the society money to buy the Charnley house — the only private home designed by architects Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright together — and donated it to the society on the condition that the group relocate to Chicago.

The society settled in the three-story 1892 house, and part of Saliga’s job as executive director was overseeing renovation­s to make the home suitable for offices. She also led the group’s efforts to publish a quarterly journal, a bimonthly newsletter, an annual meeting involving scholarly papers and two study tours a year. In her work, Saliga oversaw projects such as creating mobile apps for architectu­re tours.

“She was such a personable and modest person and yet she had a vast understand­ing of the role that she played over the years — she was an outstandin­g person who made enormous contributi­ons to Chicago, to the consciousn­ess of the architectu­ral heritage that this city has, and she has done a lot to help many people become more aware of that than they might have otherwise,” said Chicago artist William Conger.

Saliga stepped down as executive director earlier this year, before she was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, her husband said.

Saliga is also survived by a son, Thomas Gronkowski; a daughter, Nadia Gronkowski Valchev; and a grandson.

A private service was held. A public memorial service will take place at 5 p.m. Nov. 11 at the Charnley-Persky House Museum, 1365 N. Astor St.

 ?? CARL WAGNER/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Pauline Saliga, shown in 1987 in front of Louis Sullivan fragments, curated the architectu­ral fragments exhibit at the Art Institute of Chicago. The historic pieces surround the museum’s grand staircase.
CARL WAGNER/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Pauline Saliga, shown in 1987 in front of Louis Sullivan fragments, curated the architectu­ral fragments exhibit at the Art Institute of Chicago. The historic pieces surround the museum’s grand staircase.

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