Marion Mahony Griffin (néeMarion Lucy Mahony; February 14, 1871 – August 10, 1961) was an American architect and artist. She was one of the first licensed female architects in the world, and is considered an original member of the
Prairie School.[2] Her work in the United States developed and expanded the American Prairie School, and her work in India and Australia reflected Prairie School ideals of indigenous landscape and materials in the newly formed democracies. The scholar Debora Wood stated that Griffin "did the drawings people think of when they think of
Frank Lloyd Wright (one of her collaborating architects)."[3] According to architecture critic,
Reyner Banham, Griffin was "America’s (and perhaps the world’s) first woman architect who needed no apology in a world of men."[4]
She produced some of the finest architectural drawing in America and Australia, and was instrumental in envisioning the design plans for the capital city of Australia,
Canberra.[5][6][7][8]
Early life and education
Mahony was born in 1871 in Chicago, Illinois, to Jeremiah Mahony, a journalist, poet, and teacher from
Cork, Ireland, and Clara Hamilton, a schoolteacher.[9]
Her family moved to nearby
Winnetka in 1880 after the
Great Chicago Fire. In her memoir, Mahoney vividly describes her mother carrying her as an infant in a clothes basket, as they escape from the fire. Growing up in Winnetka, she became fascinated by the quickly disappearing landscape as suburban homes filled the area. She was influenced by her first cousin, architect
Dwight Perkins, and decided to further her education. She graduated from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) in 1894. She was the second woman to do so, after
Sophia Hayden, the designer of the Woman's building at the 1893 Chicago World's Columbian Exposition.[10] Though highly talented, she sometimes struggled with her place in both society and the field. She was unsure of her ability to complete the thesis required for her bachelor's degree, but her professor,
Constant-Désiré Despradelle, pushed her forward.[11]
After graduation, Mahony returned to Chicago, where she became the first woman to be licensed to practice architecture in Illinois. She worked in her cousin's architecture firm, which was located in
Steinway Hall at 64 E. Van Buren in downtown Chicago. The space was shared with many other architects, including Robert C. Spencer,
Myron Hunt, Webster Tomlinson,
Irving Pond and
Allen Bartlett Pond,
Adamo Boari, Birch Long and
Frank Lloyd Wright. In 1895, Mahony, the first employee hired by Frank Lloyd Wright, went to work designing buildings, furniture,
stained glass windows, and decorative panels.[12] Her beautiful watercolor renderings of buildings and landscapes became known as a staple of Wright's style, though she was never given credit by the famous architect. Over a century later she would be known as one of the greatest delineators of the architecture field, but during her life, her talent was seen as only an extension of the work done by male architects. She was associated with Wright's studio for almost fifteen years and was an important contributor to his reputation, particularly for the influential Wasmuth Portfolio, for which Mahony created more than half of the numerous renderings. [citation needed] Architectural writer
Reyner Banham called her the "greatest architectural delineator of her generation."[13] Her rendering of the
K. C. DeRhodes House in
South Bend, Indiana, was praised by Wright upon its completion and by many critics.[14]
Wright understated the contributions of others of the
Prairie School, Mahony included. A clear understanding of Marion Mahony's contribution to the architecture of the Oak Park Studio comes from Wright's son, John Lloyd Wright, who says that
William Drummond,
Francis Barry Byrne,
Walter Burley Griffin,
Albert Chase McArthur,
Marion Mahony,
Isabel Roberts and
George Willis were the draftsmen—the five men and two women who each made valuable contributions to Prairie-style architecture for which Wright became famous.[15] During this time Mahony designed the Gerald Mahony Residence (1907) in
Elkhart, Indiana for her brother and sister-in-law.[16]
When Wright eloped to Europe with
Mamah Borthwick Cheney in 1909, he offered the Studio's work to Mahony but she declined. After Wright had gone,
Hermann V. von Holst, who had taken on Wright's commissions, hired Mahony with the stipulation that she would have control of the design.[17] In this capacity, Mahony was the architect for a number of commissions Wright had abandoned. Two examples were the first (unbuilt) design for
Henry Ford's
Dearborn mansion,
Fair Lane and the Amberg House[18] in
Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Work with Walter Burley Griffin
Mahony recommended
Walter Burley Griffin to von Holst to develop landscaping for the area surrounding the three houses commissioned from Wright in
Decatur, Illinois. Griffin was a fellow architect, a fellow ex-employee of Wright, and a leading member of the
Prairie School of architecture. Mahony and Griffin worked on the Decatur project before their marriage; afterward, Mahony worked in Griffin's practice. A Walter Burley Griffin/Marion Mahony designed development that is home to an outstanding collection of Prairie School dwellings,
Rock Crest – Rock Glen in
Mason City, Iowa, is seen as their most dramatic American design development of the decade. It is the largest collection of Prairie Style homes surrounding a natural setting.
Mahony and Griffin married in 1911, a partnership that lasted 26 years. Mahony's
watercolor perspectives of Griffins' design for
Canberra, the new Australian capital, were instrumental in securing first prize in the international competition for the plan of the city. In 1914 the couple moved to Australia to oversee the building of Canberra. Mahony managed the Sydney office and was responsible for the design of their private commissions.[19] In Australia, Mahony and Griffin was introduced to
Anthroposophy and the ideas of
Rudolf Steiner which they embraced enthusiastically, and in
Sydney they joined the Anthroposophy Society.[6] In Australia, they pioneered the Knitlock construction method, inexactly emulated by Wright in his California
textile block houses of the 1920s.
Walter was asked to create a design for a library for the
University of Lucknow in India, and went to the college in September 1935, and soon gained several other commissions. Marion arrived in April 1936, and soon took charge of the office, where she oversaw the design of many buildings.[20] Less than a year later, in Feb 1937. Walter died of peritonitis following a cholecystectomy. Mahony then wound up the office, leaving many projects unbuilt, and returned to Australia. Mahony and Griffin spread the Prairie Style to two continents, far from its origins. She credited
Louis Sullivan as the impetus for the Prairie School philosophy. She thought Wright's habit of taking credit for the movement explained its early death in the United States.[21]
Death and legacy
Marion Mahony Griffin did not stay long in Australia after Walter's death. By then in her late 60s, she returned to the United States and afterward was largely retired from her architectural career. "The one time she addressed the Illinois Society of Architects, she made no mention of her work, instead lectured the crowd on
anthroposophy, a philosophy of spiritual knowledge developed by
Rudolf Steiner."[22]
She did however spend the next twenty years working on a massive volume of 1400 pages and 650 illustrations detailing her and Walter's working lives, which she titled "The Magic of America", which has yet to be formally published in book form. A manuscript deposited at the
Art Institute of Chicago in c1949 was digitized, and since 2007 has been available online.[23] In 2006 the
National Library of Australia acquired a large collection of the Griffins' work including drawings, photographs, silk paintings and
ephemera from the descendants of the Griffins’ Australian partner Eric Milton Nicholls.[24][25][26]
Marion Mahony Griffin died in 1961 aged 90, and is buried in
Graceland Cemetery.
In 2015,
the beach at Jarvis Avenue in
Rogers Park, Chicago was named in Mahony Griffin's honor. When she returned to the United States in 1939, after her husband's death, she lived near the beach. The Australian Consul-General,
Roger Price, attended the beach's dedication for the woman who was instrumental in the design the Australian capital.[27]
Among the few works attributed to Mahony that survive in the United States is a small mural in George B. Armstrong elementary school in Chicago attributed to Mahony, and several homes in
Decatur.
Aside from her architectural fame, she also explored poetry with themes related to the relationship between nature and architecture, the impact of the built environment on individuals, and her reflections on the role of women in the society of her time. Her poetry showcased her deep appreciation for art and her unique perspective on the world.
The
Australian Institute of Architects, NSW Chapter, honored her work with an annual award, the
Marion Mahony Griffin Prize, for a distinctive body of work by a female architect for architectural education, journalism, research, theory, a professional practice or built architectural work.[28]
Exhibitions
1998–99: The
Museum of Applied Arts & Sciences in Sydney held an exhibition entitled "Beyond Architecture: Marion Mahony and Walter Burley Griffin".[29]
2013: An exhibition to celebrate the centenary of Canberra, held in the National Library of Australia and called "The Dream of a Century: the Griffins in Australia’s Capital", exhibited her drawings for the entire year.[26][30]
2015: An exhibition of some of her work was held at the Block Museum of
Northwestern University, Illinois, USA.
2016–17: An exhibition was held at the Elmhurst History Museum, Illinois, USA.[31][32]
Birmingham, Elizabeth. "The Case of Marion Mahony Griffin and The Gendered Nature of Discourse in Architectural History." Women's Studies 35, no. 2 (March 2006): 87–123.
Brooks, H. Allen, Frank Lloyd Wright and the Prairie School, Braziller (in association with the Cooper-Hewitt Museum), New York 1984;
ISBN0-8076-1084-4
Brooks, H. Allen, The Prairie School, W.W. Norton, New York 2006;
ISBN0-393-73191-X
Brooks, H. Allen (editor), Prairie School Architecture: Studies from "The Western Architect", University of Toronto Press, Toronto & Buffalo 1975;
ISBN0-8020-2138-7
Brooks, H. Allen, The Prairie School: Frank Lloyd Wright and his Midwest Contemporaries, University of Toronto Press, Toronto 1972;
ISBN0-8020-5251-7
Hasbrouk, Wilbert R. 2012. "Influences on Frank Lloyd Wright,
Blanche Ostertag and Marion Mahony." Journal of Illinois History 15, no. 2: 70–88. America: History & Life
Korporaal, Glenda and Marion Mahony Griffin (2015) Making Magic: The Marion Mahony Griffin StoryISBN0-9924769-0-9
Kruty, Paul, "Griffin, Marion Lucy Mahony", American National Biography Online, February 2000.
Van Zanten, David (editor) Marion Mahony Reconsidered, University of Chicago Press, 2011;
ISBN978-0-226-85081-8
Waldheim, Charles, Katerina Rüedi, Katerina Ruedi Ray; Chicago Architecture: Histories, Revisions, Alternatives, University of Chicago Press, 2005;
ISBN0-226-87038-3,
ISBN978-0-226-87038-0
Wood, Debora (editor), Marion Mahony Griffin: Drawing the Form of Nature, Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art and
Northwestern University Press, Evanston, Illinois 2005;
ISBN0-8101-2357-6
Kruty, Paul., and Paul E. Sprague. Marion Mahony and Millikin Place: Creating a Prairie School Masterpiece With the Help of Frank Lloyd Wright, Herman Von Holst, and Walter Burley Griffin. St. Louis, Mo.: Walter Burley Griffin Society of America, 2007.
Watson, Anne (1998). Beyond Architecture: Marion Mahony and Walter Burley Griffin. Sydney, Australia: Powerhouse Publishing.
ISBN1-86317-068-5.
Kruty, Paul., and Paul E. Sprague. Marion Mahony and Millikin Place: Creating a Prairie School Masterpiece With the Help of Frank Lloyd Wright, Herman Von Holst, and Walter Burley Griffin. St. Louis, Mo.: Walter Burley Griffin Society of America, 2007.