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Clay Lancaster (30 March 1917 – 25 December 2000), was an authority on American architecture, an orientalist, and an influential advocate of historical preservation. According to '' The New York Times'', Lancaster's 1961 study of the architecture of Brooklyn Heights "proved to be one of the earliest and loudest shots in the historic preservation struggle in New York City.”


Writings


Architecture and art history

Lancaster's best-known books of architectural and art history are ''Architectural Follies in America'' (1960), ''Ante Bellum Houses of the Bluegrass'' (1961), ''Old Brooklyn Heights: New York's First Suburb'' (1961), ''The Japanese Influence in America'' (1963), ''Prospect Park Handbook'' (1967), ''The Architecture of Historic Nantucket'' (1972), ''New York Interiors at the Turn of the Century'' (1976), ''Nantucket in the Nineteenth Century'' (1979), ''The American Bungalow'' (1985), ''Antebellum Architecture of Kentucky'' (1991), ''The Arts and Crafts of the Animals'' (1993), ''The Breadth and Depth of East and West'' (1995), and ''Pleasant Hill: Shaker Canaan in Kentucky'' (2000). A collection of his photographs appears in James D. Birchfield, ''Clay Lancaster's Kentucky: Architectural Photographs of a Preservation Pioneer'' (2007).


Children’s books

Lancaster also wrote and illustrated books for children. ''The Periwinkle Steamboat'' (1961) was later redesigned and re-published as ''The Flight of the Periwinkle'' (1987). ''Michiko, or Mrs. Belmont's Brownstone on Brooklyn Heights'' was published in 1965. ''The Toy Room'' appeared in 1988, ''Figi'' in 1989, and ''The Runaway Prince'' in 1991. Lancaster's style received high praise. Alan Priest, former curator of Far Eastern Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art noted in his introduction to ''The Japanese Influence in America'' that "the prose is most agreeable to read and the subject matter so interesting that one is led to read almost as if it were a historical novel." The poet Marianne Moore, introducing Lancaster's ''Prospect Park Handbook'' (1967), writes: "his pages are art."


Biography

Lancaster was born in
Lexington, Kentucky Lexington is a city in Kentucky, United States that is the county seat of Fayette County, Kentucky, Fayette County. By population, it is the List of cities in Kentucky, second-largest city in Kentucky and List of United States cities by popul ...
, and studied at the University of Kentucky. He spent half of 1936 at the
Art Students League of New York The Art Students League of New York is an art school at 215 West 57th Street in Manhattan, New York City, New York. The League has historically been known for its broad appeal to both amateurs and professional artists. Although artists may stu ...
. Returning to Lexington, he served as stage designer for the university's Guignol Theatre and was also elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He took his A.B. in Art in 1938. In 1943, Lancaster moved to New York and, as a graduate student there, worked in Columbia University's
Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library The Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library is a library located in Avery Hall on the Morningside Heights campus of Columbia University in the New York City. It is the largest architecture library in the world. Serving Columbia's Graduate Schoo ...
with Talbot Hamlin, biographer of Benjamin Henry Latrobe. At Columbia, Lancaster received the appointment of Ware Librarian. In the fifties he lectured at
Cooper Union The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art (Cooper Union) is a private college at Cooper Square in New York City. Peter Cooper founded the institution in 1859 after learning about the government-supported École Polytechnique in ...
, Columbia, and the Traphagen art school in New York. In 1968 he originated a course, "Asian Art and its Influence on Europe and America," that was given at New York University. In 1954 and 1955, during the first of two John Simon Guggenheim Fellowships, he carried out the research that underlay ''The Japanese Influence in America'' (1963); a second Guggenheim, in 1963 and 1964, supported research on the architecture of Kentucky. In 1966, Parks Commissioner Thomas Hoving appointed Lancaster curator of Brooklyn's Prospect Park, Frederick Law Olmsted's landscape masterpiece, an assignment which led to his preparation of ''The Prospect Park Handbook'' (1967). In 1971, Clay Lancaster moved from Brooklyn to
Nantucket Nantucket () is an island about south from Cape Cod. Together with the small islands of Tuckernuck and Muskeget, it constitutes the Town and County of Nantucket, a combined county/town government that is part of the U.S. state of Massachuse ...
. Here he restored an 1829 saltbox dwelling and wrote studies of historic Nantucket, of Victorian architecture, and of train terminals and stations. Lancaster returned to live in Kentucky in 1978, purchasin
Warwick
a Federal-era residence on the Kentucky River. Here he spent the first winter making mantels for fireplaces in an addition, shelves for the library, and cabinets for the kitchen. During the following spring he gave a course on Kentucky architecture at Transylvania University, and it became a seminar in the College of Architecture at the University of Kentucky in the fall. In 1980 he presented a class on "Asian Art and Its Influence on Europe and America" at Transylvania. In 1983, as Morgan Professor at the University of Louisville, he repeated the Kentucky architecture course and conducted a seminar on "Asian Influences on Western Architecture." During this period he wrote and illustrated ''The American Bungalow, 1880–1930''. Also he produced a study on the ''World Parliament of Religions'' (1987), which was held at the Chicago Columbian Exposition of 1893; the book was published in England in May 1987.


Awards and honors

Lancaster received a Certificate of Merit from the Municipal Art Society of New York City in 1962 for his book ''Old Brooklyn Heights.'' In 1966 he was given a citation from the president of the Borough of Brooklyn for his work on the Prospect Park Centennial Committee. In 1975 he was elected to the Hall of Distinguished Alumni at the University of Kentucky. The Alabama Historical Commission presented him in 1975 with its Award of Merit for Preservation of Alabama's Heritage for his study of
Greek Revival architecture The Greek Revival was an architectural movement which began in the middle of the 18th century but which particularly flourished in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, predominantly in northern Europe and the United States and Canada, but ...
in Alabama, published by the Alabama chapter of the American Institute of Architects in 1966 (and again by the Commission in 1977). In 1979, for ''Vestiges of the Venerable City'', he received the Lexington-Fayette County Historic Commission Preservation Award and, in the same year, the Kentucky Heritage Commission's Preservation Professional Award. In 1986, the
Blue Grass Trust for Historic Preservation Blue is one of the three primary colours in the RYB colour model (traditional colour theory), as well as in the RGB (additive) colour model. It lies between violet and cyan on the spectrum of visible light. The eye perceives blue when obse ...
presented him its
John Wesley Hunt John Wesley Hunt (1773–1849) was a prominent businessman and early civic leader in Lexington, Kentucky. He was one of the first millionaires west of the Allegheny Mountains. Hunt enslaved as many as 77 people, many of them children, including fa ...
Award.


Warwick

In addition to the original Moses Jones hall and parlor dwelling, on the grounds of Warwick, Lancaster built several architectural follies of his own design—an eighteenth-century tea pavilion, a guest-house replicating the first-century A.D. Tower of the Winds, and an
Arts and Crafts A handicraft, sometimes more precisely expressed as artisanal handicraft or handmade, is any of a wide variety of types of work where useful and decorative objects are made completely by one’s hand or by using only simple, non-automated re ...
style art gallery. He also assembled an extensive acreage nearby to serve as a nature preserve, called Shantalaya ("abode of peace"). Also, in his final years, Lancaster established a charitable organization
The Warwick Foundation
to promote and extend his many interests. The foundation sponsors tours, lectures, scholarships, exhibitions, conferences, and maintains the Warwick compound as a museum. Lancaster died on Christmas Day in 2000. The following spring, his ashes were scattered in the ravine next to his Warwick residence.


Notes


References

*Bettye Lee Mastin, "Clay Lancaster's Home on Brooklyn Heights," ''Lexington Herald-Leader'', 26 April 1970. *Bettye Lee Mastin, "Kentuckian Returns to Country Calm," ''Lexington Herald-Leader'', 28 June 1982. *James D. Birchfield, ''A Bibliography of Clay Lancaster'' (1992). *Douglas Martin

''The New York Times'', 9 February 2001. *Douglas Brenner,

" ''New York Times Magazine'', Design Section, 12 October 2003. *Diane Heilenman, "Clay Lancaster: Preservationist Set Tone for Movement With Kentucky Roots That Stretched Far," ''Louisville Courier-Journal'', 4 April 2004. *Roger W. Moss, "Clay Lancaster," ''Athenaeum Profiles: A Not-for-Profit Education'' New Castle, Del: Oak Knoll Press, 2014. *Charles Thompson, "Lost Glories," ''Kentucky Humanities'', October 2004. *Harriet Fowler, "By Design: Warwick Embodies Clay Lancaster's Aesthetic Values," ''Keeneland'', Winter/Holiday 2005. *"Photographic Memory: Clay Lancaster Exhibit Headlines Island's Annual Historic Preservation Week," ''The Inquirer and Mirror'', Nantucket, 5 May 2005. *Leslie Johnson, "Clay Lancaster: Edification, Exotica, Domestication, Residuum," ''Pitch: Kentucky Arts & Culture'', No. 4, Winter 2007. *James D. Birchfield, ''Clay Lancaster's Kentucky: Architectural Photographs of a Preservation Pioneer'' (2007).
About the Foundation
" ''The Warwick Foundation'', accessed 10 July 2014. *Martha Birchfield, "The Children's Books of Clay Lancaster," ''Kentucky Libraries'', Spring 2016. *Eblen, To
"Warwick: Historic Kentucky Home Meets a Scholar's Imagination."
log''The Bluegrass and Beyond'', 18 January 2014.


External links


Digitized images of Clay Lancaster Slide Collection, 1939–1992
housed at the University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center
The Warwick Foundation

"Clay Lancaster," New York Preservation Archive Project.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lancaster, Clay 1917 births 2000 deaths American architectural historians Writers from Lexington, Kentucky University of Kentucky alumni Columbia University librarians 20th-century American historians 20th-century American male writers American male non-fiction writers Cooper Union faculty