Between Earth and Heaven-The Architecture of John Lautner
The Architecture of John Lautner
Hammer Museum
Los Angeles, California

Photo: Julius Shulman
Julius Shulman Photography Archive
Research Library at the Getty Research Institute.
John Lautner

Photo: Joshua White

Photo: Joshua White
At the Beyer Residence the concrete structure straddles a rocky point on the Malibu shore, following the form of the rock pools, waves, or clouds to shape space, bringing a fixed and sheltering room into conversation with mobile, ever-changing vistas of sea and cloud.

Photo: Joshua White

Photo: Joshua White
For this residence, on a rocky spur above Palm Springs, Lautner excavated the lot eight feet under the boulders and sand “to make a design built into the rock and desert” using the geology as part of the structure.

Photo: Joshua White

Photo: Joshua White

Drawing © The John Lautner Foundation
The John Lautner Archive, Research Library, The Getty Research Institute.
Study: graphite, red pencil on paper.
A snowdrift in winter and a grass mound in summer, simply a concrete roof in the form of a small segment of a sphere.

Photo © The John Lautner Foundation

Drawing © The John Lautner Foundation
The John Lautner Archive, Research Library, The Getty Research Institute.
Construction drawing; section and elevation, graphite, blue pencil on paper.
Lautner chose to build in timber for this modest two-bedroom house on the south side of the Hollywood Hills.
The separation of the house from the hill is achieved by resting the wooden frame on a concrete foundation at street level and on two anchor beams that slope into the hillside, allowing him to eliminate all retaining walls and leave a vertical clear space inside.

Photo: Joshua White

Photo: Joshua White

Drawing © The John Lautner Foundation
The John Lautner Archive, Research Library, The Getty Research Institute.
Study: graphite on tracing paper.
This weekend house was designed for listening to music played against the alpine landscape. The gigantic boulder on the narrow steep lot presented a massive challenge.

Photo: Joshua White

Photo: Joshua White
Lautners most ambitious attempt at demonstrating a repeatable standardized dwelling system was both heralded and scorned by the international press as a space-age form.
Chemosphere was not only a reasonable solution to working on a 45-degree slope, it was also an eminently workable economic model for the efficient living capsule of the future.

Photo: Joshua White

Photo: Joshua White

Drawing © The John Lautner Foundation
The John Lautner Archive, Research Library, The Getty Research Institute.
Construction drawing; section and elevation, graphite on arch vellum.
This villa is essentially a small portion of an inverted cone, anchored against the cliff.
Its main space, floating out towards the diaphanous light and vague horizon of the Pacific, is an open deck.
Bordered by a swimming channel and spilling out at its ocean side to a freely molded edge, the floor takes an increasingly irregular form as it stretches out towards the sea.
A vast flying canopy curves upwards to draw the breezes, shield the tropical sun, and meet the sky.

Photo: John Lautner © J. Paul Getty Trust

Photo: Joshua White

Photo: Joshua White

Photo: arcspace
Read arcspace feature
The Architecture of John Lautner
By Nicholas Olsberg, Jean-Louis Cohen, Frank Escher.
Publisher: Rizzoli

حسن ستاری ساربانقلی