
Paul Williams (1894-1980)
FREE TO THE PUBLIC!!!!!
The
Exhibition will be held at the Helen Topping Architectural & Fine
Arts Library,
Monday – Thursday,
9:00 a.m. – 10:00 p.m.;
Friday & Saturday, 9:00 a.m. – 5:00
p.m.; and
Sunday 1:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m.
Exception: Spring
Recess, March 13-21, 2004 hours
Monday – Friday 9:00 a.m. – 5:00
p.m.
Check
back often for more information!!!
Photographs,
documents, correspondences, drawings and renderings are among
the items highlighting the life’s
work of one of the nation’s most famous African American
architects, the late Paul R. Williams.
Paul
Revere Williams (1894-1980) was one of Southern California’s
foremost architects, producing a remarkable number of buildings
during a career that spanned nearly 60 years.
Williams’ list of celebrity clients was a virtual Who’s
Who of Hollywood’s golden age. Frank Sinatra, Lucille Ball,
Lon Chaney, Anthony Quinn, Barbara Stanwyck and Zsa Zsa Gabor all
owned houses designed by Williams.
In addition
to the nearly 2,000 homes that Williams designed, he also had
a hand in shaping some of L.A.’s most recognizable
structures, including the Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles International
Airport and the L.A. County Courthouse.
He and his
firm also re-designed the public rooms and bungalows of the famed
Ambassador Hotel and created the United Nations Building in Paris,
as well as Beverly Hills’ original Saks Fifth Avenue
department store and the MCA building (later the headquarters of
Litton Industries).
During his career, Williams was awarded an American Institute
of Architects (AIA) Award of Merit (1939, for his MCA building),
the Omega Phi Psi Man of the Year Award (1951) and the Spingarn
Medal (1953). Honorary doctorates were conferred upon him by Howard
and Lincoln universities and the Tuskegee Institute.
In 1923, Williams joined the Southern California chapter of the
AIA, becoming the first African American member of the national
organization. He later became the first African American elected
to the AIA College of Fellows.
Despite his success and accolades, Williams still felt the presence
of racial prejudice.
In a July 1937
article in American magazine, he acknowledged his feelings about
racially-restricted housing that was prevalent in Los Angeles
at the time. Referring to a client’s country
house in "one of the most beautiful residential districts
in the world," he wrote: "Sometimes I have dreamed of
living there. I could afford such a home. But this evening, leaving
my office, I returned to my small, inexpensive home in an unrestricted,
comparatively undesirable section of Los Angeles … because … I
am a Negro."
Contact Information:
Website: http://alumni.usc.edu/baa
Email: obap@usc.edu
Information Line: 213.740-8342
This program is
brought to you in partnership with the Networker
Now.
Lura Ball '79,
Director, USC Office of Black Alumni Programs
Joyce Sumbi '60, USC BAA History Chair