Chicago resurrects its master craftsman

Arts

A detail of Edgar Miller's art glass window design at the Glasner Studio (industrial glass, stained glass, metal cuts, lead, iron oxide; 1929)
Photo: Daniela Colucci

With their striking wealth of detail—stained-glass windows with frolicking animals, wood incised with geometric patterns, classical bas-reliefs, brick studded with tile—Edgar Millers riotously decorated artists studios in Chicago have earned comparisons with landmarks such as Simon Rodias Watts Towers in south Los Angeles or Antoni Gaudís Sagrada Familia church in Barcelona. Yet Miller (1899-1993) has been largely overlooked in US architectural history. A likely reason is the designer and master craftsmans refusal to be confined to one style: his work shows influences ranging from ancient, Medieval and Renaissance art to the indigenous, Expressionist, Modernist and Art Deco movements.

Now, however, architects, home design enthusiasts and non-profit organisations in Chicago are embracing Millers work, which includes murals, sculptures and wallpaper as well as large-scale projects such as his hand-crafted Frank Fisher Apartments complex. This autumn, the Terra Foundation for American Art is underwriting a series of lectures on Miller at the citys DePaul Art Museum. Organised by the non-profit Edgar Miller Legacy, which preserves and promotes the designers work, the lectures are part of Art Design Chicago, a year-long effort that celebrates the city as a crossroads of creativity.

The National Public Housing Museum, which is converting the former Jane Addams Homes housing project into its new home, is raising money to refurbish the large-scale sandstone Animal Court sculptures, now pockmarked, that Miller designed for the project in 1938. “Theyve deteriorated over the years,” says Lisa Lee, the museums director.

The Edgar Miller Legacy is offering sold-out monthly tours of the R.W. Glasner Studio, which Miller created between 1928 and 1932 in collaboration with the artist and developer Sol Kogen and then remodelled in 1946. Their partnership in the 1920s and 1930s resulted in the creation of Carl Street Studios and the Kogen-Miller Studios, of which the Glasner Studio is a part. (The Glasner was restored from 2003 to 2007.)

Efforts are also under way to recruit craftsmen with the expertise to preserve Millers fantastical assemblages of wood, metal, glass, brick, tile and plaster.

The Glasner Studio (1928-32) includes glass window designs, concrete bas-reliefs and wood carvings by Miller
Alexander Vertikoff

Kogen and Miller visited demolition sites, departing with tiles and other detritus that Miller could incorporate in his spaces. When the Worlds Fair in Chicago ended in 1934, says Zac Bleicher, the executive director of the Edgar Miller Legacy, Miller and Kogen scooped up brick, metal, industrial glass and even the marble dividers between urinals and then stashed them in their workshop.

Some have cast Miller as a counterpoint to 20th-century Modernism and an anomaly in Chicagos architectural legacy. But to Bleicher, Miller fits solidly into the citys vernacular architectural tradition. “Its not really stuff you see in the Loop or in the major skyscrapers or buildings of Chicago,” he says. “Its what you see as you walk down a neighbourhood street and notice a building thats really kind of funky and artistic—definitely in Old Town or Lincoln Park” (neighbourhoods that came to be populated by artists).

“In a way, its a fusion of Arts and Crafts style with Modernism,” he says. “And that only occurred in the 1920s and 1930s.” Subsequent generations of home architects, renovators and “artistic-reuse people” have drawn inspiration from Millers designs and use of scavenged materials, Bleicher says.

Bob Horn, the artisan who led the meticulous restoration of the Glasner Studio, once said that the most difficult aspect of restoring Millers homes “is that its like learning to copy someones handwriting”, Bleicher recalls. Often, a piece of carved wood “would be so rotted out that a partial re-creation would be necessary, so this wasnt just about applying a new coat of paint or varnish”, he says. “Horn would also talk about having to remove your ego from the project and completely dedicate yourself to Edgars vision.”

Today, Miller stands as a “Renaissance man” who “inspires any creative person to go beyond where theyre currently at”, Bleicher says. “Its like, wow, this guy did all this stuff and maybe I should try to do a little more.”

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