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Julian Abele was born in [[Philadelphia]] into a prominent family. His maternal grandfather was Robert Jones, who in the late 18th century founded the city's [http://www.lombardcentral.org/ Lombard Street Central Presbyterian Church]. He was also related to [[Absalom Jones]], who established the [[African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas]] in 1794, the first black church in Philadelphia.<ref name=smithsonian /> His nephew, Julian Abele Cook, worked as the Building Coordinator for [[Howard University]], and Abele's son, Julian Francis Abele, Jr. was an architectural engineer.
Julian Abele was born in [[Philadelphia]] into a prominent family. His maternal grandfather was Robert Jones, who in the late 18th century founded the city's [http://www.lombardcentral.org/ Lombard Street Central Presbyterian Church]. He was also related to [[Absalom Jones]], who established the [[African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas]] in 1794, the first black church in Philadelphia.<ref name=smithsonian /> His nephew, Julian Abele Cook, worked as the Building Coordinator for [[Howard University]], and Abele's son, Julian Francis Abele, Jr. was an architectural engineer.


Abele's temperament and his life defy easy characterization. He was a dedicated francophile, and his wife was French. A devotee of the [[Philadelphia Orchestra]] as well as of the [[University of Pennsylvania]] football team, he was reserved and always immaculately dressed. One friend noted that even on vacations at the beach he always wore his suit to the boardwalk.
Abele was a dedicated francophile, and his wife was French. A devotee of the [[Philadelphia Orchestra]] as well as of the [[University of Pennsylvania]] football team, he was reserved and always immaculately dressed. One friend noted that even on vacations at the beach he always wore his suit to the boardwalk.


Abele worked in many media: watercolor, lithography, etching and pencil,, while also working wood, iron, gold and silver.. He designed and constructed all his own furniture;; even doing the [[petit point]] himself.. While he knew many historic styles, he seemed to love [[Louis XIV Style|Louis XIV French]] most of all..
Abele worked in many media: watercolor, lithography, etching and pencil, wood, iron, gold and silver. He designed and constructed all of his own furniture, even doing the [[petit point]] himself. While he knew many historic styles, he seemed to love [[Louis XIV Style|Louis XIV French]] most of all.


==Education==
==Education==

Revision as of 22:29, 3 March 2018

Julian F. Abele
Julian Abele (photo Duke University Archives)
Born
Julian Francis Abele[1]

April 30, 1881
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA
DiedApril 23, 1950(1950-04-23) (aged 68)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA
NationalityUSA
Alma materCheyney University (1896)
Pennsylvania Museum School of Industrial Art (PMSIA) (1898)
University of Pennsylvania, Department of Architecture (B.A., Architecture, 1902)[1]
Occupationarchitect
Notable workDuke University Campus
Duke University Chapel
Cameron Indoor Stadium
Allen Administrative Building (completed after his death)
SpouseMarguerite Bulle (m.1925)[1]
ChildrenJulian Abele, Jr. (architect)
Marguerite Marie Abele
Nadia Boulanger Abele[1][2]
Parent(s)Charles Abele
Mary Adelaide Jones Abele[1]
RelativesAbsalom Jones (Episcopalian minister)
Julian Abele Cook Jr. (judge)[3]
Julian Abele Cook (architect)[3][2]

Julian Francis Abele (April 30, 1881 – April 23, 1950) was a prominent African-American architect, and chief designer in the offices of Horace Trumbauer. He contributed to the design of more than 400 buildings, including the Widener Memorial Library at Harvard University (1912–15), Parkway Central Library (1917–27), and the Philadelphia Museum of Art (1914–28).[4] He was the primary designer of the west campus of Duke University (1924–54).[5] Abele's contributions to the Trumbauer firm were great, but the only building for which he claimed authorship during Trumbauer's lifetime was the Duke University Chapel; after Trumbauer's death, he was more open in claiming credit for his work, which included the original architectural drawings for Cameron Indoor Stadium.[6]

Background

Julian Abele was born in Philadelphia into a prominent family. His maternal grandfather was Robert Jones, who in the late 18th century founded the city's Lombard Street Central Presbyterian Church. He was also related to Absalom Jones, who established the African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas in 1794, the first black church in Philadelphia.[6] His nephew, Julian Abele Cook, worked as the Building Coordinator for Howard University, and Abele's son, Julian Francis Abele, Jr. was an architectural engineer.

Abele was a dedicated francophile, and his wife was French. A devotee of the Philadelphia Orchestra as well as of the University of Pennsylvania football team, he was reserved and always immaculately dressed. One friend noted that even on vacations at the beach he always wore his suit to the boardwalk.

Abele worked in many media: watercolor, lithography, etching and pencil, wood, iron, gold and silver. He designed and constructed all of his own furniture, even doing the petit point himself. While he knew many historic styles, he seemed to love Louis XIV French most of all.

Education

Presentation drawing (1918) for the Free Library of Philadelphia. Although unsigned, this appears to be drawn by Abele.

Abele attended the Quaker-run Institute for Colored Youth,[7] which later became Cheyney University, where he excelled in mathematics and was chosen to deliver the commencement address.[8] In 1898, he completed a two-year architectural drawing course at the Pennsylvania Museum School of Industrial Art (PMSIA).

He was the first black student admitted to the Department of Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania.[8] This achievement was all the more noteworthy for the restrictions blacks faced at the university, including not being able to live in dormitories or dine in the school's cafeteria.[citation needed] On projects assigned to pairs of students, he partnered with Louis Magaziner, the only Jewish student in the department, who also faced discrimination.[9] This was the beginning of a lifelong friendship between the two.

He won a 1901 student competition to design a Beaux Arts pedestrian gateway. His submission was in the form of an exedra – a curved bench flanked by piers, but with steps passing through its center. This became his first commission when it was built on the campus of Haverford College.[10] The Edward B. Conklin Memorial Gate stands at the Railroad Avenue entrance to the college.[11] He was widely respected among his peers, earning the nickname "Willing and Able",[6] and also won student awards for his designs for a post office and a museum of botany, and he was elected as the president of the university's Architectural Society.[12]

He became the University of Pennsylvania architecture department's first black graduate in 1902. He worked part-time for a local architect and attend evening classes at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Under the financial sponsorship of Philadelphia architect Horace Trumbauer, he traveled through France and Italy, an experience that was to influence his design work throughout his life.

École des Beaux-Arts

Between 1903 and his hiring by Horace Trumbauer in 1906, Abele traveled throughout Europe.[13] His descendants contend that he studied at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris during his stay.[14] But Sandra L. Tatman, co-author of The Biographical Dictionary of Philadelphia Architects, 1700-1930, could find no record of his having been enrolled at the École.[15] She allows that he may have been permitted to informally sit in on the school's atelier. She also notes that Abele listed travel to France, Italy, England, Germany, Switzerland, and Spain on his membership application to the American Institute of Architects (AIA), but not study at the École des Beaux-Arts.

Career

Immediately after his graduation from UPenn in 1902, Abele traveled west to Spokane, Washington, where he designed a house for his sister, Elizabeth Abele Cook, before returning east.[16] In 1906, Abele joined the Trumbauer firm as assistant to chief designer Frank Seeburger.[12] When Seeburger left the firm in 1909, Abele advanced to chief designer.[12] Abele's stature within the firm was no secret; he was the second-highest paid employee. He was an architect.

Art historian David B. Brownlee studied the 14-year effort to design and build the Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1914-28. He credits Trumbauer architect Howell Lewis Shay with the building's plan and massing, but notes that the final perspective drawings are in Abele's distinctive hand.[17] Design of the exterior terracing, including the front steps celebrated in the 1976 film Rocky, is credited to Abele.

Following Trumbauer's death in 1938, the firm continued until 1950 under the name "Office of Horace Trumbauer," co-headed by Abele and William O. Frank. Commissions were hard to come by during The Depression and World War II, but the firm completed Duke Indoor Stadium at Duke University in 1940, which was renamed Cameron Indoor Stadium in 1972, and later made additions to Duke's Library (1948) and designed Duke's Allen Administrative Building (1954).

When Abele joined the American Institute of Architects in 1942, Philadelphia Museum of Art director Fiske Kimball called him "one of the most sensitive designers in America".[12] Smithsonian Magazine described him, in a career retrospective, as "probably the most accomplished [black architect] of his era."[6]

Despite being the primary designer of Duke University, Abele was refused accommodations at a Durham hotel during a visit to campus.[9] Although it was not until 1988 that a portrait of him was displayed at the University, the main quad at Duke University is now officially named Abele Quad with a dedication plaque prominently placed at the busiest spot on campus.[18]

Family

In 1925, at the age of 44, he married Marguerite Bulle, a French pianist 20 years his junior. They had three children: Julian Abele, Jr., Marguerite Marie Abele (died young), and Nadia Boulanger Abele. Marguerite left him in 1936, to become the common-law wife of opera singer Jozep Kowalewski, with whom she had three additional children.[6] Because Abele never took action to divorce his wife, the Kowalewski children shared in his estate.[2]

He died from a heart attack in 1950, in Philadelphia.[19]

Legacy

  • The Allen Administration Building at Duke University, which he designed, was completed after his death in 1950.
  • In 1988 Duke University honored Abele with his portrait that is displayed in the main lobby of the Allen Building. It was the first portrait of an African-American to be displayed on the campus.[19] To prominently acknowledge his contribution to Duke University's West Campus, the main quad at Duke is now officially named Abele Quad with a dedication plaque prominently placed at the busiest spot on campus.[18]
  • On August 17, 2012, construction began on Julian Abele Park, at 22nd & Carpenter Streets in Philadelphia.[20][21]
  • Architectural historian Dreck Spurlock Wilson is preparing the first biography of Abele.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "PENN BIOGRAPHIES: Julian Francis Abele (1881-1950)", University of Pennsylvania Archives
  2. ^ a b c Cf. Tifft 2005
  3. ^ a b Wilson, Dreck Spurlock, African-American Architects: A Biographical Dictionary, 1865-1945, Taylor & Francis, December 12, 2003. Cf. p. 144. Biographical entry for Julian Abele Cook (1904–1986), an architect. Judge Julian Abele Cook, Jr. is the son of Julian Abele Cook, the son of Julian Abele's sister Elizabeth Rebecca Abele Cook.
  4. ^ http://www.blackpast.org/aah/abele-julian-f-1881-1950
  5. ^ "Julian Abele, Architect". Library.duke.edu. May 26, 2010. Retrieved January 5, 2012.
  6. ^ a b c d e http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/out-of-the-shadows-85569503/
  7. ^ "75th Anniversary - Julian Abele". Libwww.freelibrary.org. Retrieved January 5, 2012.
  8. ^ a b Webster, Josephine Faulkner. "Julian Francis Abele (1881-1950)." In Wilson, Dreck Spurlock (ed.), African-American Architects: A Biographical Dictionary, 1865-1945, 2004, pp. 1–3. Taylor & Francis.
  9. ^ a b Henry Magaziner, son of Abele's U. of P. classmate and friend Louis Magaziner, in a 1989 interview. Quoted in Susan E. Tifft, "Out of the Shadows," Smithsonian Magazine, February 2005.
  10. ^ "Gate on Haverford College Campus Linked to Black Architectural Pioneer Julian Abele," Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, January 26, 2016.
  11. ^ Conklin Memorial Gate, from Google Earth.
  12. ^ a b c d http://www.curbed.com/2015/1/16/10001296/julian-abele-black-architect-of-duke-university
  13. ^ Gates, Henry Louis; Higginbotham, Evelyn Brooks (2004-04-29). African American Lives. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 9780195160246.
  14. ^ "75th Anniversary - Julian Abele". Libwww.freelibrary.org. Retrieved 2013-07-04.
  15. ^ Biography: Abele, Julian Francis (1881 – 1950), from Philadelphia Architects and Buildings.
  16. ^ https://www.philadelphiabuildings.org/pab/app/ar_display.cfm/21458
  17. ^ David B. Brownlee, Making a Modern Classic: The Architecture of the Philadelphia Museum of Art (Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1997), pp. 60–61, 72–73.
  18. ^ a b https://today.duke.edu/2016/03/abele
  19. ^ a b William E. King (2009). "North Carolina Architects & Builders: Abele, Julian Francis (1881-1950)". North Carolina State University Libraries.
  20. ^ Friends of Julian Abele Park Website
  21. ^ "Julian Abele Park Ribbon Cutting", March 24, 2009.
  22. ^ Kristin E. Holmes, "Haverford gate a portal to architect Abele's legend," The Philadelphia Inquirer, February 6, 2016.

Further reading