"Planning
is thinking beforehand how something is to be made or done, and mixing
imagination with the product – which in a broad sense makes all of us
planners. The only difference is that some people get a license to get paid
for thinking and the rest of us just contribute our good thoughts to our
fellow man." |
Paul
Revere Williams (1894-1980) was a celebrated architect and an African American
-- a combination that few of his contemporaries imagined possible. By proving
that it was possible, and doing so over a career spanning 50 years,
Williams earned a special place in the history of
Williams
was born February 18, 1894, in downtown
Williams
was the only African American in his elementary school class, and because he
was adept at drawing animals and buildings, a family friend who was a builder
suggested that he become an architect. Upon learning what an architect did,
Williams was enthralled. His guidance counselor at
Encouraged
by his family, Williams held firm, and upon graduation from high school
enrolled in an
At age
20, Williams won first prize in a city planning competition in
Upon
graduation he attended three arts schools before joining the offices of
residential architect Reginald D. Johnson, where he was given the assignment to
design a $150,000 home. "Before I embarked on my architectural career, I
had never been in a home that cost more than $10,000,"
he later wrote. "When my employer gave me the assignment for a $150,000
home, I was dumbfounded. I couldn’t imagine how you could spend so much on a
home. My employer sent me to look at some homes in
Williams
became a licensed architect in 1921; a year later, at age 28, he started his
own firm, aided by commissions from the new Flintridge development north of
In
1923, Williams joined the
Most
of Williams’ business came from well-to-do white clients building homes in
By the
end of the ‘20s, Williams had established a reputation as "a skilled and
sophisticated designer for the upper middle class and the wealthy," wrote
art historian David Gebhard in Paul R. Williams,
Architect: A Legacy of Style, a book by Karen E. Hudson, the
architect’s granddaughter and director of his archives. Gebhard also noted that, like most small architectural firms in the
In a
July 1937 article in American magazine titled "I Am a Negro",
Williams acknowledged his feelings about racially-restricted housing that was
prevalent in
In the
same article, he wrote: "Virtually everything pertaining to my
professional life during those early years was influenced by my need to offset
race prejudice, by my effort to force white people to consider me as an
individual rather than as a member of a race. Occasionally, I encountered
irreconcilables who simply refused to give me a hearing, but on the whole I
have been treated with an amazing fairness."
Sensitive
to clients who might feel uncomfortable sitting next to him, Williams perfected
the skill of drawing upside down. This enabled clients to review his designs
right-side-up as he sketched them from across the table.
Williams’
business thrived during the 1930s. His residences were admired for their
"play between the rational and picturesque," wrote historian Gebhard.
Traditional
architectural styles such as English Tudor, Regency, and
Commercial
clients also were attracted by his growing reputation. In 1939 Williams won an
AIA Award of Merit for his design of the elegant MCA building in
At the
opposite extreme, Williams co-designed the first federally-funded public
housing project in the country, Langston Terrace, in
During
World War II, Williams served as a Navy architect. Immediately after the war,
he wrote two books, The Small Home of Tomorrow and New Homes for
Today, as home ownership guides for young families. His own firm, however,
was engrossed in larger projects. In 1945, he designed a unit of
Over
time, his firm designed public schools, banks, auto dealerships, the Arrowhead
Springs Hotel (in association with Gordon Kaufmann), the W.&J.
Sloane department store, the Palm Springs Tennis Club and the Golden State
Mutual Life Insurance building. His firm also re-designed the public rooms and
bungalows of the Ambassador Hotel and the famed Polo Lounge of the Beverly
Hills Hotel. Celebrity clients came to include Frank Sinatra, Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Julie London, and
Anthony Quinn. Design commissions also came from
In the
1960s Williams was an associate architect in the design of new terminal
facilities at
Overall,
Williams designed some 3,000 projects during his career, which ended with
retirement in 1973. He died in
"Williams
enjoyed the advantages of a career that afford him a close association with
giants of industry, prominent politicians, and some of the most exciting people
in the blossoming entertainment industry," wrote Karen E. Hudson in the
preface to her book. "Still, nothing would deter him from addressing the
needs of the growing African-American community. He took genuine pride in being
able to influence the look and environment of his own community. From churches
to mortuaries, youth centers to financial institutions, Williams believed that
the visibility of his designs in the community where he lived and socialized
was immensely important."
____________________________________________________________________
Suggested
Paul R. Williams, Architect: A
Legacy of Style by Karen
E. Hudson, 1993, Rizzoli International Publications, Inc., N.Y.
"The Will and the Way:
Paul R. Williams, Architect, 1994, Karen E. Hudson, ed., Rizzoli International Publications,
Inc., N.Y. (a book for young people)
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Contributed by Albert Greenstein, 2000