Siah Armajani, Louis Kahn Lecture Room (1982)

Louis Kahn Lecture Room (1982)
Siah Armajani (1939–)

Samuel S. Fleisher Art Memorial (interior), 709 Catharine Street
Painted wood, wood inlay, plaster, glass
Height 10' 3"; width 16' 2"; depth 23' 9"

Initiated by the Fairmount Park Art Association

Owned by the Samuel S. Fleisher Art Memorial

Photo: Rick Echelmeyer


For his contribution to the Fairmount Park Art Association's Form and Function project, Siah Armajani wanted to create a work for a school. The result was a room dedicated to Louis Kahn that serves as a lecture room and meeting place as well as a gallery for displaying reproductions of Kahn's architectural drawings.

Armajani, an Iranian who emigrated to the United States in 1960, is a principal theorist of contemporary public art. His work has been described as democratic because it brings art into the service of daily life. His bridges, rooms, and garden structures are deceptively simple, meticulously crafted, and often inscribed with passages from his favorite writers, including Emerson, Melville, and Whitman.

The Louis Kahn Lecture Room is designed to accommodate about 35 people. Wooden pew-like benches extend at an angle from the walls. In the middle of the room, Armajani left enough open space to allow a "meditative quality." The durable hardwoods are painted in grayish rose, bright yellow, and Pennsylvania Dutch blue. At the entrance a glass transom has one of Kahn's designs etched in it, and display surfaces on the walls offer changing examples of his work. Mounted on the cornice are quotations from Kahn, one of which reads: "Schools began with a man under a tree who did not know he was a teacher, sharing his realization with a few others who did not know they were students." A inlaid wooden rectangle in the floor bears a verse by Whitman that begins: "When the materials are prepared and ready, the architects shall appear." The room's simple elegance suggests a Quaker meetinghouse or a country church. In fact, Armajani intended to evoke the feeling of the adjacent Sanctuary, which was originally built as a church.

The Samuel S. Fleisher Art Memorial is the nation's first tuition-free art school. Fleisher, with support from the city's Office of Housing and Community Development, funded the building renovation and lighting; the Fairmount Park Art Association sponsored the room's design and installation.

For access to the Louis Kahn Lecture Room, call (215) 922-3456.

Adapted from Public Art in Philadelphia by Penny Balkin Bach (Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1992).

Directions by Car: From Center City Philadelphia, take 6th Street south to Catharine Street. Turn right onto Catharine Street. The Fleisher Art Memorial is on the right side, between 7th and 8th Streets.

 
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