Architecture as Art

Architecture as Art Exhibit, Nov. 2-Dec. 28
by Birmingham Historical Society

Before computers, there was art--true art--in architecture. Architects painstakingly drew designs by hand, mapping out minute details of buildings that brought glory to cities--and to style itself.

One such Birmingham treasure was D. O. Whilldin, whose career extended from 1904 to 1962. Still-standing structures include Legion Field, the Florentine Building, Phillips High School, Tuscaloosa High School, the Dr. Pepper Building, and a large number of civic structures, theaters, and fine residences.

The Birmingham Historical Society (BHS) displays 70 of the foremost drawings--from the small details for brass, copper or terra cotta embellishments to entire plans for Beaux-Arts buildings--in the exhibit Architecture as Art, November 2-December 28 in the Library Gallery at the Birmingham Public Library. Publication will follow early next year.

"The drawings had been privately held for a number of years, seldom seen," explains Marjorie White, Birmingham Historical Society director. "People will be utterly amazed. This is a fraction of the architect's prolific work. They were never intended for exhibition--most are construction drawings intended for the stone or wood carver or the terra cotta manufacturer." The Whilldin Collection, featuring some 90 projects, currently resides in the Archives Department of the Birmingham Public Library.

The exhibit is sponsored by the Birmingham Historical Society and the Birmingham Public Library. Admission is free; open during normal library hours.

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