Louis Sullivan: The Struggle for American Architecture

NEW DOCS

This tribute to architect Louis Sullivan tells a sweeping story with a wealth of visual detail. The rise and fall of Sullivan’s career originates with the 1871 Chicago fire, which made the city a blank slate for ambitious architects. In the late 1800s, Sullivan, who had made his way west after a rigorous École des Beaux-Arts education, created an authentically American architecture at a time when most buildings aspired only to knock off European styles. His commitment to originality led him first to the pinnacle of success with notable early skyscrapers and later to a swift decline due to changing customer tastes and an economic depression. Though his late-career “jewel box” banks were a triumph, Sullivan died penniless. Sullivan’s extraordinary ornamental designs set him apart as an artist. According to Frank Lloyd Wright, who was Sullivan’s chief draftsman for seven years, Sullivan “could draw as beautifully as he could think.”  NK

Director

Mark Richard Smith

Producer

Mark Richard Smith

Editors

Kipp Norman, KC Norman, Jacob Vaughan

Cinematographer

Pete Biagi

Release Year

2010

Festival Year

2010

Country

United States

Run Time

97 minutes

Premiere

World Premiere