Michael Dwyer (architect): Difference between revisions
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==Architectural Practice== |
==Architectural Practice== |
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===Buttrick White & Burtis=== |
===Buttrick White & Burtis=== |
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Michael Dwyer was associated from 1981 to 1996 with the New York architecture firm [[Buttrick White & Burtis]], where he helped design several notable projects including the [[Saint Thomas Choir School#History|Saint Thomas Choir School]], a fifteen story boarding school in [[Midtown Manhattan]], completed in 1987.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https:// |
Michael Dwyer was associated from 1981 to 1996 with the New York architecture firm [[Buttrick White & Burtis]], where he helped design several notable projects including the [[Saint Thomas Choir School#History|Saint Thomas Choir School]], a fifteen story boarding school in [[Midtown Manhattan]], completed in 1987.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://isusmodernist.org/PA/PA-1992-03-S.PDF#page=88|title=St. Thomas Choir School|last=Miller|first=Clay|date=March 12, 1992|work=Progressive Architecture|access-date=September 14, 2020|language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| title= Young Voices Soar at the New St. Thomas Choir School| date= September 17, 1987 |url= https://www.nytimes.com/1987/09/17/garden/young-voices-soar-at-the-new-st-thomas-choir-school.html | author= Joseph Giovannini | work= The New York Times | access-date= May 1, 2020}}</ref> Writing in ''The New York Times'', architecture critic [[Paul Goldberger]] placed the school "among the city's best examples of contextual architecture."<ref>{{cite web| title= Four projects honored for design| date= June 29, 1990 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1990/06/29/arts/4-proje-honored-fordesign.html | author= Paul Goldberger | work= The New York Times | access-date= September 17, 2023}}</ref> |
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[[File:Central_Park_New_York_October_2016_004.jpg|thumb|150px|The Dana Discovery Center, Central Park. (Buttrick White & Burtis Architects)]] |
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Another project, the [[Harlem Meer#Restoration (1986-1993)|Dana Discovery Center]], was a venue for environmental education in New York's Central Park, the centerpiece of the [[Central Park Conservancy]]'s 1990–93 restoration of Harlem Meer, an eleven-acre lake in the park's northeast corner.<ref name="NY2000-1">{{cite book |last1=Stern |first1=Robert A.M. |title=New York 2000 |date=2006 |publisher=The Monacelli Press |location=New York |page=788 |url=https://archive.org/details/newyork2000archi0000ster/page/788/mode/1up?view=theater |access-date=July 18, 2022}}</ref><ref name="Branch 25">{{Cite news|url=https://usmodernist.org/PA/PA-1991-08.PDF#page=23|title=Flirting with Folly in Central Park|last=Branch|first=Mark Alden|date=August 1991|work=Progressive Architecture|access-date=April 10, 2021|language=en-US}}</ref> In a 1993 interview with the journal ''Progressive Architecture'', Dwyer said that the building's "picturesque character" was intended to reinforce the park's "romantic landscape design."<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://usmodernist.org/PA/PA-1993-12.PDF#page=46|title=Learning by the Rules|last=Arcidi|first=Philip|date=December 1993|work=Progressive Architecture|access-date=May 1, 2020|language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="NY2000-1" /> |
Another project, the [[Harlem Meer#Restoration (1986-1993)|Dana Discovery Center]], was a venue for environmental education in New York's Central Park, the centerpiece of the [[Central Park Conservancy]]'s 1990–93 restoration of Harlem Meer, an eleven-acre lake in the park's northeast corner.<ref name="NY2000-1">{{cite book |last1=Stern |first1=Robert A.M. |title=New York 2000 |date=2006 |publisher=The Monacelli Press |location=New York |page=788 |url=https://archive.org/details/newyork2000archi0000ster/page/788/mode/1up?view=theater |access-date=July 18, 2022}}</ref><ref name="Branch 25">{{Cite news|url=https://usmodernist.org/PA/PA-1991-08.PDF#page=23|title=Flirting with Folly in Central Park|last=Branch|first=Mark Alden|date=August 1991|work=Progressive Architecture|access-date=April 10, 2021|language=en-US}}</ref> In a 1993 interview with the journal ''Progressive Architecture'', Dwyer said that the building's "picturesque character" was intended to reinforce the park's "romantic landscape design."<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://usmodernist.org/PA/PA-1993-12.PDF#page=46|title=Learning by the Rules|last=Arcidi|first=Philip|date=December 1993|work=Progressive Architecture|access-date=May 1, 2020|language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="NY2000-1" /> |
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⚫ | Michael Dwyer was an advocate of New York's prewar, classical style of architecture and a protagonist of its resuscitation. In a 1995 review of architecture's nascent classical revival by ''The New York Times'', reporter Patricia Leigh Brown wrote that, "Michael Dwyer...an architect at Buttrick White & Burtis...has recently completed a classical-style yacht" and a "town house on the Upper East Side,"<ref name="NYT Brown">{{cite news |last1=Brown |first1=Patricia Leigh |title=Architecture's young old fogies |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1995/02/09/garden/architecture-s-young-old-fogies.html |access-date=March 25, 2022 |work=The New York Times |date=February 9, 1995}}</ref> a house characterized by [[Robert A.M. Stern]], dean of [[Yale School of Architecture|Yale's School of Architecture]], as "scholarly...reflecting the elegant manner of [[Ange-Jacques Gabriel]]."<ref name="NY2000-2">{{cite book |last1=Stern |first1=Robert A.M.|title=New York 2000 |date=2006 |publisher=The Monacelli Press |location=New York |page=932 |url=https://archive.org/details/newyork2000archi0000ster/page/932/mode/1up?view=theater |access-date=July 18, 2022}} The house is at 14 East 81st Street.</ref> |
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⚫ | Interviewed by Brown for the article, dean Stern opined that the young classicists were "perhaps the true radicals of their time," whereas architect [[James Stewart Polshek]], formerly dean of [[Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation|Columbia University's School of Architecture]] called them "bizarrely backward" and "lacking new ideas." Asked to weigh in, Yale historian [[Vincent Scully]] declared that "classicism speaks fundamentally to what people want, to security and dignity and permanence."<ref name="NYT Brown">{{cite news |last1=Brown |first1=Patricia Leigh |title=Architecture's young old fogies |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1995/02/09/garden/architecture-s-young-old-fogies.html |access-date=March 25, 2022 |work=The New York Times |date=February 9, 1995}}</ref> |
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===Meatpacking District=== |
===Meatpacking District=== |
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[[File:MMDA-Photos - 2007-05-21 - Establishment Gansevoort St -1.jpg|thumb|150px|The gallery Establishment in New York's Meatpacking District.]] |
[[File:MMDA-Photos - 2007-05-21 - Establishment Gansevoort St -1.jpg|thumb|150px|The gallery Establishment in New York's Meatpacking District.]] |
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In 1996, Dwyer and interior designer Ungkun Sae-Eng formed Dwyer & Sae-Eng, an architecture and design firm, after which they repurposed an auto-repair garage on Gansevoort Street in Manhattan's newly |
In 1996, Dwyer and interior designer Ungkun Sae-Eng formed Dwyer & Sae-Eng, an architecture and design firm, after which they repurposed an auto-repair garage on Gansevoort Street in Manhattan's newly-formed, [[Meatpacking District|historic Meatpacking District]] to do double-duty as a space for Dwyer's architecture studio and a venue for Establishment, Sae-Eng's showcase for Southeast Asian art and antiques. |
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===Cultural |
===Cultural projects=== |
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[[File:George F. Baker Jr. house.jpg|thumb|150px|George F. Baker Jr. House, at 75 East 93rd Street, New York City, a restoration project.]] |
[[File:George F. Baker Jr. house.jpg|thumb|150px|George F. Baker Jr. House, at 75 East 93rd Street, New York City, a restoration project.]] |
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In 1997, Dwyer restored the exterior of the [[George F. Baker Jr. Houses|George F. Baker Jr. House]], built in 1918 and designated a landmark in 1969 by the city's [[Landmarks Preservation Commission]] whose report called it "an outstanding example of a modified Federal style...one of the finest works in New York City by the architects, [[Delano and Aldrich]]." |
In 1997, Dwyer restored the exterior of the [[George F. Baker Jr. Houses|George F. Baker Jr. House]], built in 1918 and designated a landmark in 1969 by the city's [[Landmarks Preservation Commission]] whose report called it "an outstanding example of a modified Federal style...one of the finest works in New York City by the architects, [[Delano and Aldrich]]." |
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From 1998 to 2007, he was the consulting architect to |
From 1998 to 2007, he was the consulting architect to New York's [[Cosmopolitan Club (New York City)|Cosmopolitan Club]], a private social club for women, helping to restore its clubhouse, designed by architect [[Thomas Harlan Ellett]] and winner of the [[Architectural League of New York|Architectural League's]] 1933 gold medal. |
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===Residential projects=== |
===Residential projects=== |
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On a parallel track, Dwyer prepared designs for the upper strata of New York's private sector, including apartments on Manhattan's east side ([[960 Fifth Avenue]], [[720 Park Avenue]], and [[River House (New York City)|River House]]); its west side ([[The Dakota]], [[The |
On a parallel track, Dwyer prepared designs for the upper strata of New York's private sector, including apartments on Manhattan's east side ([[960 Fifth Avenue]], [[720 Park Avenue]], and [[River House (New York City)|River House]]); its west side ([[The Dakota]], [[The Majestic]], and [[The San Remo]]); and houses in diverse locations such as [[Bridgehampton, New York|Bridgehampton]], [[East Hampton (village), New York|East Hampton]], |
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Southampton, [[Rye, New York|Rye]], [[Greenwich, Connecticut|Greenwich]], and [[Nantucket]]. |
Southampton, [[Rye, New York|Rye]], [[Greenwich, Connecticut|Greenwich]], and [[Nantucket]]. |
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In 1996, the preservationist [[Richard Hampton Jenrette|Dick Jenrette]] engaged Dwyer to design a major alteration to his [[Carnegie Hill]] townhouse at 69 East 93rd, which he described in his memoir, ''Adventures with old houses'':<ref>{{cite book |title=Adventures with Old Houses |date=2000 |publisher=Wyrick & Co. |location=Charleston, SC |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=668GiB6giAwC&dq=jenrette+baker+house+dwyer&pg=PA158 |access-date=May 3, 2022}}</ref>{{rp|158}}<ref>George F. Baker IV was born in 1939 and died in 2005.</ref> |
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<blockquote> |
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For the next seven years (1989–1996), I lived quite happily at No. 69 East 93rd Street...I liked the light and the height of the ceilings, but the house lacked a grand ceremonial entrance staircase as I had enjoyed next door at No. 67 East 93rd Street...I even went so far as to commission [[Michael Middleton Dwyer|Michael Dwyer]], my favorite young neo-classical architect in Manhattan, to design a new interior layout. His plan 'borrowed' half the six-car garage on the first floor and would have created an elegant entrance hall and elliptical staircase ascending to the ''piano nobile''...<ref>{{cite book |title=Adventures with Old Houses |date=2000 |publisher=Wyrick & Co. |location=Charleston, SC |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=668GiB6giAwC&dq=jenrette+baker+house+dwyer&pg=PA161 |access-date=May 3, 2022}}</ref>{{rp|161}} |
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</blockquote> |
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Jenrette abandoned his plan to renovate No. 69 when he bought the house next door for a second time and moved back to 67 East 93rd Street. |
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===Edgewater=== |
===Edgewater=== |
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[[File:Edgewater Guesthouse by Micheal Middleton Dwyer.jpg|thumb|150px]] |
[[File:Edgewater Guesthouse by Micheal Middleton Dwyer.jpg|thumb|150px]] |
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In 1997, Jenrette commissioned Dwyer to build a pair of classical pavilions at [[Edgewater (Barrytown, New York)|Edgewater]], Jenrette's villa on the Hudson River. Jenrette described them in his memoir: |
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In recent years, I've begun making more of my own architectural imprint on the Edgewater property. This past year I added a small neo-classical guest house, built on a point of land across the lagoon to the north of Edgewater—far enough away not to compete with the main house. Designed by Michael Dwyer of New York, the guest house is a small Grecian temple with four columns of the Doric order framing a large porch looking downriver. Viewed from the front porch of Edgewater across the lagoon, the new structure serves as an architectural folly extending the sweep of the landscape to the north. |
In recent years, I've begun making more of my own architectural imprint on the Edgewater property. This past year I added a small neo-classical guest house, built on a point of land across the lagoon to the north of Edgewater—far enough away not to compete with the main house. Designed by Michael Dwyer of New York, the guest house is a small Grecian temple with four columns of the Doric order framing a large porch looking downriver. Viewed from the front porch of Edgewater across the lagoon, the new structure serves as an architectural folly extending the sweep of the landscape to the north. |
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The July 2018 issue of ''Architectural Digest'' featured Hollyhock, a new house in [[Southampton (village), New York|Southampton, New York]] designed by Dwyer for real estate executive [[Mary Ann Tighe]], a decade-long collaboration with interior designer Bunny Williams, reminiscent of the prewar houses of architect [[David Adler (architect)|David Adler]] and interior designer [[Frances Elkins]]. |
The July 2018 issue of ''Architectural Digest'' featured Hollyhock, a new house in [[Southampton (village), New York|Southampton, New York]] designed by Dwyer for real estate executive [[Mary Ann Tighe]], a decade-long collaboration with interior designer Bunny Williams, reminiscent of the prewar houses of architect [[David Adler (architect)|David Adler]] and interior designer [[Frances Elkins]]. |
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In Hollyhock's main wing, an entrance hall leads to an enfilade of three high-studded, south-facing rooms: a paneled dining room decorated with early 19th-century wall paper |
In Dwyer's plan for Hollyhock's main wing, an entrance hall leads to an enfilade of three high-studded, south-facing rooms: a paneled dining room decorated by Williams with early 19th-century wall paper and a neoclassical mantel; a living room with boiserie designed by Dwyer, painted a "rich watery blue" by Williams; and a 55-feet-long, pine-paneled library, divided into three spaces by projecting bookcases in the tradition of David Adler's Wheeler House library (1934), Bigelow & Wadsworth's reading room at the [[Boston Athenæum|Boston Atheneum]] (1914), Christopher Wren's [[Wren Library|library at Trinity College]] (1695), and Michelangelo's reading room at the [[Laurentian Library]] (1571). The principal feature of the entrance hall is Dwyer's design for an elliptical staircase, inspired by a design of Adler's that was inspired by a design of [[John Russell Pope]]'s, to which Dwyer added a black and white starburst marble floor.<ref name= "AD2018">Dan Shaw."Top Tier Design Team Breathes Elegance into a Southampton Estate," Architectural Digest (July 2018).</ref><ref name="bunny">{{cite book |last1=Williams |first1=Bunny |title=Love Affairs with Houses |date=April 2019 |publisher=Abrams |location=New York|isbn=9781419734649|page=13|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_YRsDwAAQBAJ |access-date=July 18, 2022}}</ref> |
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In Hollyhock's gardens, designed by landscape architect Quincy Hammond in the ''grande manière'', Dwyer built a guest house (a kind of modern-day [[Petit Trianon]]), a garden pavilion in the form of an [[orangery]], an arbor with |
In Hollyhock's gardens, designed by landscape architect Quincy Hammond in the ''grande manière'', Dwyer built a guest house (a kind of modern-day [[Petit Trianon]]), a garden pavilion in the form of an [[orangery]], an arbor with limestone columns supporting teak lattice panels, and a garage building in the guise of a caretaker's cottage. ([https://quincyhammond.com/projects/estate_southampton_new_york?view=gallery Link to photographs of Hollyhock's landscape.]) |
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[https://quincyhammond.com/projects/estate_southampton_new_york?view=gallery Link to photographs of Hollyhock's landscape.] |
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Hollyhock's tile roofs and stucco facades allude to [[Red Maples (Southampton, New York)|Red Maples]], a house designed by the architects [[Hiss and Weekes]], with gardens designed by [[Ferruccio Vitale]], that stood on the site from 1913 until its demolition in 1947.<ref name= "AD2018">Dan Shaw."Top Tier Design Team Breathes Elegance into a Southampton Estate," Architectural Digest (July 2018).</ref><ref name="bunny">{{cite book |last1=Williams |first1=Bunny |title=Love Affairs with Houses |date=April 2019 |publisher=Abrams |location=New York|isbn=9781419734649|page=13|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_YRsDwAAQBAJ |access-date=July 18, 2022}}</ref> |
Hollyhock's tile roofs and stucco facades allude to [[Red Maples (Southampton, New York)|Red Maples]], a house designed by the architects [[Hiss and Weekes]], with gardens designed by [[Ferruccio Vitale]], that stood on the site from 1913 until its demolition in 1947.<ref name= "AD2018">Dan Shaw."Top Tier Design Team Breathes Elegance into a Southampton Estate," Architectural Digest (July 2018).</ref><ref name="bunny">{{cite book |last1=Williams |first1=Bunny |title=Love Affairs with Houses |date=April 2019 |publisher=Abrams |location=New York|isbn=9781419734649|page=13|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_YRsDwAAQBAJ |access-date=July 18, 2022}}</ref> |
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===Critiques=== |
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⚫ | In its 2013 review of Michael Dwyer's work, the editors of ''The Franklin Report'' wrote, "...Dwyer has a strong command of historical reference and is adept at renovating prewar building interiors. Sources praise Dwyer's impressive intellect and charming nature while noting that the firm's 'confidence in its skills' may come across as rigid to unsuspecting clients." |
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⚫ | Michael Dwyer |
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⚫ | Interviewed by Brown for the article, dean Stern opined that the young classicists were "perhaps the true radicals of their time," whereas architect [[James Stewart Polshek]], formerly dean of [[Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation|Columbia University's School of Architecture]] called them "bizarrely backward" and "lacking new ideas." Asked to weigh in, Yale historian [[Vincent Scully]] declared that "classicism speaks fundamentally to what people want, to security and dignity and permanence."<ref name="NYT Brown">{{cite news |last1=Brown |first1=Patricia Leigh |title=Architecture's young old fogies |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1995/02/09/garden/architecture-s-young-old-fogies.html |access-date=March 25, 2022 |work=The New York Times |date=February 9, 1995}}</ref> |
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⚫ | In its 2013 review of Michael Dwyer's work, ''The Franklin Report'' wrote, "...Dwyer has a strong command of historical reference and is adept at renovating prewar building interiors. Sources praise Dwyer's impressive intellect and charming nature while noting that the firm's 'confidence in its skills' may come across as rigid to unsuspecting clients." |
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==Project List== |
==Project List== |
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*Hollyhock; Southampton, NY (new residence, guest house, garden pavilion, and arbor; completed 2017).<ref name="AD2018"/><ref name="bunny"/> |
*Hollyhock; Southampton, NY (new residence, guest house, garden pavilion, and arbor; completed 2017).<ref name="AD2018"/><ref name="bunny"/> |
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*Triplex penthouse; [[The San Remo]], New York City (alterations completed 2017).<ref>Kathryn Brenzel, "Inside the World of Luxury Renovations," ''The Real Deal'' (February 16, 2016).</ref> |
*Triplex penthouse; [[The San Remo]], New York City (alterations completed 2017).<ref>Kathryn Brenzel, "Inside the World of Luxury Renovations," ''The Real Deal'' (February 16, 2016).</ref> |
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==Bibliography== |
==Bibliography== |
Revision as of 18:39, 3 September 2024
Michael Middleton Dwyer | |
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Born | 1954 Philadelphia, PA, USA |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater |
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Occupation | Architect |
Buildings |
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Michael Dwyer is an American architect and author of books about architecture, including Great Houses of the Hudson River (2001) and Carolands (2006).
Architectural Practice
Buttrick White & Burtis
Michael Dwyer was associated from 1981 to 1996 with the New York architecture firm Buttrick White & Burtis, where he helped design several notable projects including the Saint Thomas Choir School, a fifteen story boarding school in Midtown Manhattan, completed in 1987.[1][2] Writing in The New York Times, architecture critic Paul Goldberger placed the school "among the city's best examples of contextual architecture."[3]
Another project, the Dana Discovery Center, was a venue for environmental education in New York's Central Park, the centerpiece of the Central Park Conservancy's 1990–93 restoration of Harlem Meer, an eleven-acre lake in the park's northeast corner.[4][5] In a 1993 interview with the journal Progressive Architecture, Dwyer said that the building's "picturesque character" was intended to reinforce the park's "romantic landscape design."[6][4]
Classical revival
Michael Dwyer was an advocate of New York's prewar, classical style of architecture and a protagonist of its resuscitation. In a 1995 review of architecture's nascent classical revival by The New York Times, reporter Patricia Leigh Brown wrote that, "Michael Dwyer...an architect at Buttrick White & Burtis...has recently completed a classical-style yacht" and a "town house on the Upper East Side,"[7] a house characterized by Robert A.M. Stern, dean of Yale's School of Architecture, as "scholarly...reflecting the elegant manner of Ange-Jacques Gabriel."[8]
Interviewed by Brown for the article, dean Stern opined that the young classicists were "perhaps the true radicals of their time," whereas architect James Stewart Polshek, formerly dean of Columbia University's School of Architecture called them "bizarrely backward" and "lacking new ideas." Asked to weigh in, Yale historian Vincent Scully declared that "classicism speaks fundamentally to what people want, to security and dignity and permanence."[7]
Meatpacking District
In 1996, Dwyer and interior designer Ungkun Sae-Eng formed Dwyer & Sae-Eng, an architecture and design firm, after which they repurposed an auto-repair garage on Gansevoort Street in Manhattan's newly-formed, historic Meatpacking District to do double-duty as a space for Dwyer's architecture studio and a venue for Establishment, Sae-Eng's showcase for Southeast Asian art and antiques.
Cultural projects
In 1996, Dwyer was the architect for the Eleanor Roosevelt Monument in New York's Riverside Park, where he supplemented landscape architect Kelly and Varnell's circular oak bosque and Penelope Jencks' bronze statue with granite medallions set into the surrounding bluestone paving (one inscribed with a quotation from a 1958 speech of Roosevelt's; the other with a quotation from Adlai Stevenson's 1962 eulogy for her).[9][10]
In 1997, Dwyer restored the exterior of the George F. Baker Jr. House, built in 1918 and designated a landmark in 1969 by the city's Landmarks Preservation Commission whose report called it "an outstanding example of a modified Federal style...one of the finest works in New York City by the architects, Delano and Aldrich."
From 1998 to 2007, he was the consulting architect to New York's Cosmopolitan Club, a private social club for women, helping to restore its clubhouse, designed by architect Thomas Harlan Ellett and winner of the Architectural League's 1933 gold medal.
Residential projects
On a parallel track, Dwyer prepared designs for the upper strata of New York's private sector, including apartments on Manhattan's east side (960 Fifth Avenue, 720 Park Avenue, and River House); its west side (The Dakota, The Majestic, and The San Remo); and houses in diverse locations such as Bridgehampton, East Hampton, Southampton, Rye, Greenwich, and Nantucket.
In 1996, the preservationist Dick Jenrette engaged Dwyer to design a major alteration to his Carnegie Hill townhouse at 69 East 93rd, which he described in his memoir, Adventures with old houses:[11]: 158 [12]
For the next seven years (1989–1996), I lived quite happily at No. 69 East 93rd Street...I liked the light and the height of the ceilings, but the house lacked a grand ceremonial entrance staircase as I had enjoyed next door at No. 67 East 93rd Street...I even went so far as to commission Michael Dwyer, my favorite young neo-classical architect in Manhattan, to design a new interior layout. His plan 'borrowed' half the six-car garage on the first floor and would have created an elegant entrance hall and elliptical staircase ascending to the piano nobile...[13]: 161
Jenrette abandoned his plan to renovate No. 69 when he bought the house next door for a second time and moved back to 67 East 93rd Street.
Edgewater
In 1997, Jenrette commissioned Dwyer to build a pair of classical pavilions at Edgewater, Jenrette's villa on the Hudson River. Jenrette described them in his memoir:
In recent years, I've begun making more of my own architectural imprint on the Edgewater property. This past year I added a small neo-classical guest house, built on a point of land across the lagoon to the north of Edgewater—far enough away not to compete with the main house. Designed by Michael Dwyer of New York, the guest house is a small Grecian temple with four columns of the Doric order framing a large porch looking downriver. Viewed from the front porch of Edgewater across the lagoon, the new structure serves as an architectural folly extending the sweep of the landscape to the north.
Michael Dwyer also relocated the swimming pool and added a charming pool house, again in classical style with four Doric columns along the side of the pool. The effect is quite Roman—rather like a small corner of Hadrian's Villa. From guest house to pool house and back to the main house provides a scenic one-mile roundabout walk, mostly along the winding riverbank.[14]
Hollyhock
The July 2018 issue of Architectural Digest featured Hollyhock, a new house in Southampton, New York designed by Dwyer for real estate executive Mary Ann Tighe, a decade-long collaboration with interior designer Bunny Williams, reminiscent of the prewar houses of architect David Adler and interior designer Frances Elkins.
In Dwyer's plan for Hollyhock's main wing, an entrance hall leads to an enfilade of three high-studded, south-facing rooms: a paneled dining room decorated by Williams with early 19th-century wall paper and a neoclassical mantel; a living room with boiserie designed by Dwyer, painted a "rich watery blue" by Williams; and a 55-feet-long, pine-paneled library, divided into three spaces by projecting bookcases in the tradition of David Adler's Wheeler House library (1934), Bigelow & Wadsworth's reading room at the Boston Atheneum (1914), Christopher Wren's library at Trinity College (1695), and Michelangelo's reading room at the Laurentian Library (1571). The principal feature of the entrance hall is Dwyer's design for an elliptical staircase, inspired by a design of Adler's that was inspired by a design of John Russell Pope's, to which Dwyer added a black and white starburst marble floor.[15][16]
In Hollyhock's gardens, designed by landscape architect Quincy Hammond in the grande manière, Dwyer built a guest house (a kind of modern-day Petit Trianon), a garden pavilion in the form of an orangery, an arbor with limestone columns supporting teak lattice panels, and a garage building in the guise of a caretaker's cottage. (Link to photographs of Hollyhock's landscape.)
Hollyhock's tile roofs and stucco facades allude to Red Maples, a house designed by the architects Hiss and Weekes, with gardens designed by Ferruccio Vitale, that stood on the site from 1913 until its demolition in 1947.[15][16]
Critiques
In its 2013 review of Michael Dwyer's work, the editors of The Franklin Report wrote, "...Dwyer has a strong command of historical reference and is adept at renovating prewar building interiors. Sources praise Dwyer's impressive intellect and charming nature while noting that the firm's 'confidence in its skills' may come across as rigid to unsuspecting clients."
In 2015, the Institute of Traditional Architecture ranked Dwyer No. 21 on its list of the world's top 50 architects working in the traditional idiom.
Gallery
See main gallery at Wikimedia Commons
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Venetian window at the Edgewater Garden Pavilion.
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Pool House at Edgewater.
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Longview, on Lake Agawam in Southampton, New York.
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Detail of entrance door at Longview.
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Detail of staircase at Longview.
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Stone cottage in Southampton, New York.
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Classical house in East Hampton, New York.
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The entrance court at Hollyhock in Southampton, New York.
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The portico at the entrance to Hollyhock.
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Garden gate and guest house at Hollyhock, Southampton, New York.
Project List
- 35 Meter Cruising Yacht (interior architecture; completed 1994).[17]
- Nureyev Apartment; The Dakota, New York City (interior architecture; completed 1995).[7]
- Eleanor Roosevelt Monument, Riverside Park, New York City (granite medallions and bronze plaques; completed 1996).[18]
- Windsong; Shimmo Beach, Nantucket, MA (new house; completed 1996).
- George F. Baker Jr. House, 75 E 93rd St, New York City (roof replacement and window restoration; completed 1997).[19]
- Edgewater, Barrytown, NY (Garden Pavilion and Pool House; completed 1997).[20]
- Maisonette duplex, 960 Fifth Avenue, New York City (interior architecture; completed 1999).[21]
- Longview; 27 Gin Lane, Southampton, NY (new garden facade, new wing with indoor pool, and interior architecture throughout; completed 2000).[22]
- Mead Point; Indian Field Road, Greenwich, CT (new house; completed 2001).[23]
- River House Apartment (apartment alterations; completed 2003).[24]
- Stone Cottage; Toylsome Place, Southampton, NY (new house and interior architecture; completed 2004).
- 720 Park Avenue, New York City (apartment alterations; completed 2006).[25]
- Cosmopolitan Club, New York City (alterations to the entrance hall, ballroom, and garden penthouse, from 1998 to 2007).
- New Sommariva; East Hampton, NY (new house; completed 2009).
- Hollyhock; Southampton, NY (new residence, guest house, garden pavilion, and arbor; completed 2017).[15][16]
- Triplex penthouse; The San Remo, New York City (alterations completed 2017).[26]
Bibliography
Publications (as contributor)
- Carl A. Pearson (author); Michael Dwyer (illustrator). "Up in Central Park on the Shore of Harlem Meer," Architectural Record (March 1990).
- Mark Alden Branch (author); Michael Dwyer (illustrator). "Flirting with Folly in Central Park," Progressive Architecture (August 1991): 23.
- Michael Dwyer (contributing illustrator). "A View of the Dana Discovery Center, Central Park, New York," Architecture in Perspective No. 8 (American Society of Architectural Illustrators, 1994): 10.
- Michael Dwyer (author). "Buildings in Public Parks," Clem Labine's Traditional Building (March/April 1995): 26, 28, 30; ISSN 0898-0284.
- Michael Dwyer (contributing illustrator). "New Master Plan - Trinity School," Architecture in Perspective No. 11 (American Society of Architectural Illustrators, 1996): 83.
- Michael Dwyer (author). "Building with Stone," Clem Labine's Traditional Building (March/April 1996): 25–26; ISSN 0898-0284.
- Michael Dwyer (author). "The Arts and Crafts in Architecture Today," Classicist No. 3 (1996–97): 90–96; ISBN 1-56000-936-5.
- Michael Dwyer (editor) with a preface by Mark Rockefeller. Great Houses of the Hudson River (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, in association with Historic Hudson Valley, 2001).
- Michael Dwyer (author) with a foreword by Mario Buatta. Carolands (Redwood City, CA: San Mateo County Historical Association, 2006).
Publications (as subject)
- Clem Labine. "A Townhouse in the Corinthian Order," Clem Labine's Traditional Building (September/October 1991): 48, 49; ISSN 0898-0284.
- Lee Goff. "Manhattan Townhouse," Stone Built (New York: Monacelli, 1997): 40. ISBN 9781885254696.
- Richard H. Jenrette. Adventures with Old Houses (Charleston: Wyrick, 2000): 8, 105, 161. ISBN 0-941711-46-3.
- Elizabeth Pochoda (author), Pieter Estersohn (photographer). "The Long View," House & Garden (August 2001): 76-82.
- Editors of The Classicist, with an introduction by Robert A.M. Stern. A Decade of Art & Architecture 1992–2002 (New York: Institute of Classical Architecture, 2002).
- Dan Shaw. "Top Tier Design Team Breathes Elegance into a Southampton Estate," Architectural Digest (July 2018).
- Bunny Williams. "Hollyhock," Love Affairs with Houses (New York: Abrams, 2019):13-35. ISBN 9781419734649.
Relatives
Dwyer's cousin, Maj. Gen. Robert J. Dwyer was the Adjutant General of Nevada from 1983 to 1986.
See also
- Francis F. Palmer House (75 East 93rd Street, New York City)
- George F. Baker Jr. House (69 East 93rd Street, New York City)
- Edgewater (Barrytown, New York)
References
- ^ Miller, Clay (March 12, 1992). "St. Thomas Choir School" (PDF). Progressive Architecture. Retrieved September 14, 2020.
- ^ Joseph Giovannini (September 17, 1987). "Young Voices Soar at the New St. Thomas Choir School". The New York Times. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
- ^ Paul Goldberger (June 29, 1990). "Four projects honored for design". The New York Times. Retrieved September 17, 2023.
- ^ a b Stern, Robert A.M. (2006). New York 2000. New York: The Monacelli Press. p. 788. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
- ^ Branch, Mark Alden (August 1991). "Flirting with Folly in Central Park" (PDF). Progressive Architecture. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
- ^ Arcidi, Philip (December 1993). "Learning by the Rules" (PDF). Progressive Architecture. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
- ^ a b c Brown, Patricia Leigh (February 9, 1995). "Architecture's young old fogies". The New York Times. Retrieved March 25, 2022.
- ^ Stern, Robert A.M. (2006). New York 2000. New York: The Monacelli Press. p. 932. Retrieved July 18, 2022. The house is at 14 East 81st Street.
- ^ Martin, Douglas (October 5, 1996). "Eleanor Roosevelt Honored in Hometown Today". The New York Times. Retrieved September 22, 2023.
- ^ Jean Parker Phifer, Public Art New York (New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Co., 2009).
- ^ Adventures with Old Houses. Charleston, SC: Wyrick & Co. 2000. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
- ^ George F. Baker IV was born in 1939 and died in 2005.
- ^ Adventures with Old Houses. Charleston, SC: Wyrick & Co. 2000. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
- ^ Richard H. Jenrette, Adventures with Old Houses (Charleston, SC: Wyrick & Co., 2000). ISBN 0-941711-46-3.
- ^ a b c Dan Shaw."Top Tier Design Team Breathes Elegance into a Southampton Estate," Architectural Digest (July 2018).
- ^ a b c Williams, Bunny (April 2019). Love Affairs with Houses. New York: Abrams. p. 13. ISBN 9781419734649. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
- ^ Editors of The Classicist, with an introduction by Robert A.M. Stern, A Decade of Art & Architecture 1992–2002 (New York: Institute of Classical Architecture, 2002).
- ^ Phifer, Jean (2009). Public Art New York. New York: W.W. Norton. p. 148. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
- ^ Records of the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission.
- ^ Richard H. Jenrette, Adventures with Old Houses (Charleston, SC: Wyrick, 2000).
- ^ NYC Department of Buildings, Letter of Completion #101756823, March 3, 1999.
- ^ Elizabeth Pochoda. "Taking the Long View." House & Garden (August 2001).
- ^ Laura Beach, "Sojourn on the Sound." Antiques & Fine Art (Summer 2006).
- ^ NYC Department of Buildings, Letter of Completion #103296210, September 25, 2003.
- ^ NYC Department of Buildings, Letter of Completion #104423722, October 25, 2006.
- ^ Kathryn Brenzel, "Inside the World of Luxury Renovations," The Real Deal (February 16, 2016).
External links
- Living people
- 1954 births
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