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Date of birth:
December
2, 1921
Profession:
Architect
Educator
Student
1939-40
1940-41
1941 Summer Work Camp
1941-42
1942 Summer Work Camp (paid
worker)
1942-43 fall quarter
Selected
Architectural Projects
by
Claude Stoller
This biography was funded
by a grant from the Graham Foundation for a study of architecture at Black
Mountain College.
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Claude Stoller was born and reared in the Bronx, New York where he
attended public schools. He enrolled at City College of New York for a
semester while searching for a school with a strong visual arts
curriculum. Although he had heard of Black Mountain College from his
brother Ezra Stoller, an architectural photographer, it was at the 1938
Bauhaus exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York that Black
Mountain caught his attention. Although both Moholy-Nagy’s New Bauhaus
and Black Mountain College were represented, of the two, Black Mountain
appealed because of its sliding tuition scale. He applied to Black
Mountain and Cooper Union in New York and was accepted at both. A
dinner interview by the ever-charming Xanti Schawinsky, a former Bauhaus
student who had taught at Black Mountain, at a restaurant overlooking the
Hudson River was the deciding factor.
At Black Mountain Stoller took a general
curriculum with a focus on
art and architecture. He took Josef Albers’s basic courses in design,
color and drawing. He also took architectural courses with Lawrence Kocher,
Howard Dearstyne, and Lou Bernard Voight. The architectural program at the
time included architectural drafting and courses in Introductory
Architecture, Contemporary Architecture, Introductory Design and
Structural Design. For the class in Small House Design, the students
designed small low-cost houses based on a four foot module.
Stoller and another student, Charles Forberg, were put in charge of the
construction of the Jalowetz House, a small house designed by Lawrence
Kocher for the Jalowetz family: Heinrich Jalowetz, who taught music, his
wife Johanna, and their daughter Lisa. This involved meetings with Charles
Godfrey, a local contractor who was directing the construction of several
buildings, to plan each day’s work and the responsibility of directing
other students assigned to the project.
At Black Mountain Stoller also explored his interest in photography.
Students had set up a darkroom in the basement of Lee Hall, and although
there was no photography teacher, Albers critiqued the work of the student
photographers.
Stoller left Black Mountain after the 1942 fall quarter when he was
drafted into the United States Army. He had applied for the Enlisted
Reserve in hopes of finishing college but was rejected because he was deaf
in one ear. During World War II he first was in the 14th Coast
Artillery on Puget Sound. He then attended army engineering school after
which he was sent overseas with the 13th Armored Division in France and
Germany.
In February 1946, Stoller entered Harvard Graduate School of Design
where he was accepted with advanced standing despite the fact he had not
graduated from Black Mountain. He recalled that at first he was envious of
the more advanced drafting skills of those who had come through
professional undergraduate programs. He soon realized, however, that his
courses with Josef Albers, an excellent physics course with Peter Bergmann,
and his practical construction experience at Black Mountain compensated by
far for any deficiency in technical skills which he soon mastered.
After graduation in 1949 (M. Arch.), Stoller studied for a year at the
University of Florence in Italy. He and his wife Nan Oldenburg Stoller
(now Nan Black), a
Black Mountain student and a graduate of Radcliffe, were joined by Lucian
and Jane Slater Marquis, both Black Mountain students. On his return
Stoller worked for architectural firms in the Boston area. In 1955 he
moved his family to St. Louis, Missouri, where he taught at Washington
University. While there, he was registered as an architect in both
Missouri and Iowa.
After two years the Stollers moved to the San Francisco area. In 1956,
he formed a partnership, Marquis & Stoller Architects, with
another young architect, Robert B. Marquis, the brother of Lucian
Marquis. The firm, with its office on Beach Street, focused on the general
practice of architecture and planning including residential, housing,
institutional, and governmental projects. Stoller’s use of natural
materials in combination reflects both his studies with Albers and his
admiration for the architect Marcel Breuer.
In 1978 Stoller formed Stoller/Partners (later Stoller Knoerr
Architects) in Berkeley. Projects included single homes, multiple
dwellings, religious buildings, and institutional and commercial
structures. Social issues such as housing and energy-efficient designs
were a primary concern for Stoller as was historic preservation.
Marquis & Stoller, Stoller/Partners and Stoller Knoerr have
received many awards. In 1963-64 Stoller was visiting architect at the
National Design Institute in Ahmedabad, India. In 1968 he was elected to
the College of Fellows of the American Institute of Architects, and in
1991 he was awarded the Berkeley Citation by the University of California.
Stoller served on city and county planning commissions, on an advisory
panel for the federal General Services Administration and on several other
public and professional committees. He was licensed to practice in several
states and certified by the National Council of Architectural Registration
Boards.
In 1957 William Wurster invited Stoller to join the faculty in the
Department of Architecture at the University of California. He was acting
chairman in 1965-66 and Chair of Graduate Studies from the early 1980s
until he retired Professor Emeritus in 1991.
As a teacher Stoller always bore in mind Josef Albers’s emphasis on
"seeing." He considered the development of a sensitive visual
perception to be essential to the education of the architect. A second
influence of Stoller’s Black Mountain experience was the value of direct
"hands on" experience. To the extent possible within a
conventional architectural curriculum, Stoller used real sites and exposed
his students to the manufacturing process of materials through visits to
factories. In both St. Louis and Berkeley, Buckminster Fuller was invited
to speak to Stoller’s students who built experimental structures.
For one design class at Berkeley Stoller started the Wurster West
Workshop, a studio in San Francisco where students could gain practical
experience in planning, construction, and client relationships by working
in poor neighborhoods. The major project for the workshop was the design
in a redevelopment area of a square with both commercial space and
housing. The square was designed in cooperation with the San Francisco
Redevelopment Agency. The plan used both old buildings to be moved from
other locations along with new buildings designed by the students.
Although the square was never constructed, the project generated an
ongoing discussion of urban design and redevelopment issues. Wurster West
Workshop was continued by graduate students who renamed it ARKIS.
In 1965 Stoller started a program called Continuing Education in
Environmental Design in collaboration with the University of California
Extension. Several courses were instituted for architecture, planning,
landscape architecture and design professionals. In 1966-67, as the
internship component of the program, Stoller founded the pioneering San
Francisco Community Design Center, a response both to student concerns
about inequities in housing and community concerns about redevelopment
plans. The Center, located on Haight Street in San Francisco, was started
with a Research and Development grant from the University. The Center
became a prototype for other Community Design Centers which brought the
skills of architectural interns to poor neighborhoods where buildings
needed remodeling or new construction was possible and where interns
worked with "real" clients. In addition to architects, the
program drew on the expertise of other disciplines including psychology,
economics, law, and engineering. The program provided the type of
practical experience Stoller had valued at Black Mountain. This was an
extension of his teaching in which he selected specific sites which
students visited.
Stoller has retired from active practice except for consulting. His
last partner, his son-in-law Mark Knoerr, continues practice in San
Francisco.
Stoller lives with his second wife Rosemary Raymond Stoller, also a
Black Mountain student, in Berkeley and Maine where he continues his
lifelong interest in photography. They inhabit a Julia Morgan House which
they restored as well as an old house and barn on the Maine seacoast which
they have been remodeling for many years.
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