Dallas Architect Cliff Welch's Modern, Musical Masterpiece


Architect Cliff Welch designed this house based on a jazz tune from 1966

(Listen to a free sample of the tune, here.)


Text by Rebecca Sherman
Special Thanks to Photographer Mark McWilliams for use of his work

Simply Lyrical... The inspirations for this White Rock Lake area home designed by Dallas architect Cliff Welch are hip, jazzy, and totally unexpected, much like the house itself. Welch’s clients, a couple in their 40s with school age children, initially provided an exhaustive checklist for the design. The list stipulated the usual must-haves, such as square footage and the number of rooms. But it also contained a dozen or so cultural, stylistic, and musical inspirations from the 50s and 60s that they wanted Welch to keep in mind as he worked.

These mid-20th century touchstones included the Alfa Romeo Duetto (the car driven by Dustin Hoffman in the 1967 movie The Graduate); vintage military wristwatches; Hitchock’s 1959 stylish thriller North by Northwest; Blue Note jazz album covers from the 50s and 60s; and jazz pianist Jack Wilson’s dreamy 1966 tune, Harbor Freeway 5 PM.




Low stepped entry hall, designed by architect Cliff Welch

“I was incredibly excited with the inspirations on the list,” remembers Cliff Welch, who was contacted by the clients in 2003 after they were unsuccessful in finding a suitable mid-century modern house to buy and renovate. The clients had researched some of the best modern architecture in the country by the time they hired Welch.





Room designed by architect Cliff Welch. Burnt oranges and woodsy tones are evocative of colors taken from classic jazz album covers. The terrazzo stone floors harken back to houses from the mid-20th century; contemporary Ipe wood ceilings, a dark manganese ironspot brick fireplace, and steel beams keep things current


“It seems like the most successful modern houses, new or old, were ones where there was a strong relationship between the architect and owners,” says the homeowner, an avid collector of jazz recordings, including hundreds of original vinyl albums from the 50s and 60s.“My wife and I approached our relationship with Cliff in full disclosure mode, including everything that we were interested in and how we wanted to live,” he says.




Dining area designed by architect Cliff Welch. Exposed steel beams extend through glass windows and make the ceiling appear to float. Knoll dining table and chairs.


The homeowners weren’t interested in living in a sterile white box. "The object was to capture the romantic mood of the West Coast jazz scene and lifestyle,” says the husband, who had a preference for the woodsy, warm designs found in many mid-20th century California houses.



Bulthaup's B3 kitchen design and Fireslate countertops; Custom sapele wood cabinets by Lauren Marlow of Purcell Cabinets.


Welch culled through the list of his clients' list of design inspirations looking for one in particular to focus on. “They were all clean-lined, interesting and well-designed,” he says. “I was familiar with everything on the list, but when he handed me the CD of Harbor Freeway, that was something new and fresh. I’d never heard it before.”



The kitchen is Bulthaup's B3 line

The 7-minute, atmospheric melody, Harbor Freeway 5 PM., features Jack Wilson on piano and Roy Ayres on vibraphone. It soon had Cliff Welch hooked. “I played it over and over again,” he says. “There’s a richness to it, the way it starts out simple and builds in the middle, then softens towards the end.”

Almost immediately, Welch realized that Harbor Freeway had the potential to be more than inspiration. It could also become the house’s parti, an architectural term describing the unifying idea behind a building’s entire design.

(Listen to a free Amazon sample of Harbor Freeway 5 PM.)


Room designed by architect Cliff Welch. Custom cabinets by Purcell Cabinetry.


“I was after the feel of the song mostly, which is intangible,” says Welch, who played Harbor Freeway in the background for two and a half months as he sketched the house’s design. To his clients’ amazement, Welch also successfully borrowed musical elements of the song, dissecting its structure, rhythm, and notes.

“It was a challenge, but essentially we took the ordering system of the music and used it for the ordering system of the house.” Welch, who had never played a musical instrument, taught himself how to play the first few bars of Harbor Freeway on the piano.


Built-ins like this one eliminate the need for much furniture.
The sculpture is by local artist Veronica Montero.


Low steps connect rooms and levels throughout the house designed by architect Cliff Welch, and were inspired by mid-20th century home designs. The varying levels are also evocative of the bouncy, improvisational feelings inherent in jazz tunes, says Welch.



Bedroom designed by architect Cliff Welch. Custom sapele wood bed and night stands were made by Lauren Marlow of Purcell Cabinetry.


The design phase of the house was finished in a year, and they broke ground in 2005, explains Cliff Welch, who was given a new Blue Note jazz CD by the clients each time they met.

The bouncy rhythms inherent in jazz music not only influenced the way Welch laid out the rhythm of the house, but the mix of materials (terrazzo, Ipe wood, dark manganese ironspot brick, glass and steel) and the mix of colors (burnt oranges, grays, and greens), colors which were pulled directly from mid-century Blue Note album covers. “There’s a playfulness in jazz. It slows down and gets quiet, then pops up and goes wild. Jazz takes chances. You can feel that as you move through the house, with all the different layers and levels and the mix of multiple colors and palettes.”



A classic Eames-style chair is the only piece of furniture needed in this small music room, where the homeowners listen to their extensive collection of jazz, rock and pop recordings, which includes 1,000 classic vinyl records and about 2,500 CDs. Room designed by architect Cliff Welch


True to Harbor Freeway, the house starts out deceptively quiet, then builds. From the street, it appears to be a modest, one-story structure. But the spacious 4,700 square foot home opens up in back, following the slope of the 1/3 acre lot’s wooded terrain, with cantilevered rooms and a second story built below. Inside, low ceilinged hallways open onto big, higher ceilinged rooms with large windows. There are stepped levels throughout. “The house unfolds gradually. Nothing’s too obvious,” says Welch.


A glass balcony overlooking the pool. All landscaping, including then pool area, was designed by Kelly James


The homeowners have young children and wanted the house to be an easy, fun place for them to live in. "One of the things we discussed with Cliff in the design meetings is that we wanted a house you could get lost in. One that's good for hide and seek with lots of nooks and crannies. Houses that fit that criteria are always really cool," says the homeowner. "The kids think it's a really adventurous house."

A glass walkway connects one area of the house with another. Design by architect Cliff Welch.



Side angle of the house designed by architect Cliff Welch



Rear exterior of the house designed by architect Cliff Welch

The family moved into their new house in 2008. “The floor plan simply has great flow, as does [the song] Harbor Freeway,” says the homeowner, who notes that dinner party guests have commented on the house’s “intangible coolness” which they attribute not only to the layout, but the materials, design, and of course, the jazz music playing in the background. “We definitely nailed it.”



Listen to a free sample of Jack Wilson's tune that inspired
architect Cliff Welch's design for this house.

A version of my story also appears in the March 2011 issue of Modern Luxury magazine, here.

Dallas Architect Russell Buchanan's Furniture and Sculpture


(Portrait by Allison V. Smith)


Text by Rebecca Sherman
Special thanks to Allison V. Smith for photography


Architect by day, craftsman by night . . . Russell Buchanan has been building a portfolio of cutting edge furniture and art for decades. One of Dallas's go-to modernist architects for a quarter of a century, Russell Buchanan has plenty of accolades, including the much-lauded redo of a mid-century modern masterpiece by Edward Durrell Stone that earned a National Trust for Historic Preservation award and landed in the pages of Architectural Digest.



Architect Russell Buchanan's sketchbook
(Photo by Allison V. Smith)



He may be best known for his architecture, but lately it's his unexpected ideas for furniture and art that have people talking. A serious off-hours furniture designer since grad school in the mid '80s, the fruits of his avocation have resulted in new recognition, including a one-man gallery show last fall, and the current DMA exhibit Formed/Unformed: Design from 1960 to the Present, which runs through January 2012.



Tuxedo Stool, by architect Russell Buchanan


(s)two Table(s) designed by architect Russell Buchanan



(s)tool, designed by architect Russell Buchanan


Architect Russell Buchanan has more than 100 pieces in various stages of design and completion. His award-winning 1992-designed Spring Table shares space with furniture by Verner Panton, Frank Gehry, Robert Venturi and others at the DMA show.

Ball Transfer Table designed by architect Russell Buchanan






Orbit Table, designed by architect Russell Buchanan



Architect Richard Buchanan's interest in furniture was sparked while attending grad school at the Architectural Association of London, where he met industrial designer, architect and artist Ron Arad.

"He was using raw materials like wire and concrete to make furniture, nothing polished or finished. He made me realize that as an architect I could design and build my own furniture," says Buchanan, who constructed his first piece, a bench based on the classic Red Blue Chair by Gerrit Rietveld, out of his duplex near SMU, as a young talent working for HKS Architects. Dozens of other furniture ideas soon filled his sketchbook.




Mishon Chair designed by architect Russell Buchanan



Grasshopper Screen designed by architect Russell Buchanan


"At that point in my career, I was working for someone else, creating their designs. Furniture was a way to design something myself and have it realized," says the 50-year-old architect, who launched his own firm in 1992 and married his wife Karen that same year.





Sculpture by architect Russell Buchanan
(Photo by Allison V. Smith)


As a sculptor, Buchanan often works in edgy mediums, such as air-filled packaging cushions encased in layers of marble emulsion, which were exhibited last November in a one-man show at Gallerie Urbane Dallas.






Sculpture created from modeling paste and plastic
packaging bags, by architect Russell Buchanan




In 1994, Russell Norton Buchanan, Inc., was formed as the furniture arm of Buchanan Architecture. You can buy one of his existing designs or commission something new.

Early on, the architect caught the eye of contemporary Dallas art collector Deedie Rose, who bought his Spring Table and has since commissioned him to design other pieces, including dozens of pieces of furniture to fill the guest house of her Ellis County ranch.


Electrical, works on paper by architect Russell Buchanan



Russell Buchanan strives to invent wholly original designs, using industrial materials not often employed in furniture. One of his newest pieces is a rectangular metal coffee table covered on five sides in ball transfer units, a type of conveyor system similar to what's used to move products on conveyor belts.

"What I'm most interested in is designing pieces that don't yet exist," he reveals. The glass-topped Spring Table's base is made from a semi-circle of hot rolled steel, which is steadied with steel guide wires and turnbuckles. A yellow wheel made from MDF allows the table to be mobile.

Archival digital ink (giclee) on paper
iPhone photographs of television monitor, by architect Russell Buchanan
Images digitally manipulated in Photoshop.





Architect Russell Buchanan, sketching
(Photo by Allison V. Smith)

Says Buchanan: "Architects have all gone to producing drawings on computer. We don't build models by hand anymore. Making furniture and sculpture helps fill the void."

To see more of Russell Buchanan's furniture and art, and for information on purchasing, go to Buchanan Architecture.


This story also appears on page 74 of the March 2011 edition of Modern Luxury.

ID Collection: One of Dallas' Top Design and Furniture Showrooms


At ID Collection: Osborne & Little Fabrics and Wallpapers

ID Collection is one of my newest blog sponsors and I'm excited to have them!

Founded in 2001 by partners James Williamson, Bonnie Martin, and Joseph Demoruelle, ID Collection is a multi-line design and furniture showroom in Dallas that carries it all, from hundreds of fabric lines, to classic furniture designs, reproductions, and contemporary pieces.


At ID Collection: Osborne & Little's newest fabrics

Early on, the partners divided up their duties. Says Williamson: "Bonnie handles the contract and hospitality, Joe's good at managing, and I do the residential, the merchandizing, and the marketing." Williamson has always been the face of ID Collection, at least to those of us in the design media, and his dry wit and irreverent sense of humor are legendary.



New Florals from Osborne & Little Fabric at ID Collection


He has worked in the design business for decades, but I didn't realize he started out as a toy salesman for Hasbro. Makes complete sense. "It was fun. I traveled three weeks out of the month, demonstrating toys in stores like Kmart," says Williamson, whose dad had a chain of 5 and dime stores in south Georgia where he grew up.



Black and White Fabrics from Designers Guild at ID Collection

Life in the deep south made a lasting impression on Williamson. "It grounds you, makes you not take yourself so seriously. I loved getting to know all the quirky personalities. Seems like all my neighbors were named Viola, Raweena, or some version of 'weena. We all lived in ranch houses that looked exactly the same, and it was like being in a John Waters movie when you'd drive down the street."




Gorgeous Colors from Designers Guild at ID Collection


Williamson's mother wanted him to be an anesthesiologist. Obviously, that didn't happen. Instead, he went to Georgia Southern and studied business and marketing, with an emphasis on advertising.

So where's that southern drawl you should have, I asked.

"We had a neighbor who used to be an off-Broadway actress who taught diction and acting classes, which we took to get rid of our accents," he says. "But it still comes out after too many glasses of wine."


Rebelot Light from Jane Hamley Wells at ID Collection


Some of ID Collection's more contemporary lines are fabrics from Designer's Guild, and furniture from Jane Hamley Wells. Williamson has seen Dallas go from being almost totally traditional in its preference for design to much more cleaner lines. "Years ago we were doing heavy chenilles, period rooms, and everything matchy-matchy. Now it's a whole mix of things, a more eclectic feel, especially among younger clients," he says.



Elena Chair from Jane Hamely Wells at ID Collection


"I love magazines and design books," says Williamson. "Every morning, I check all the blogs. Some of my favorites are All the Best, Decor Demon, and Style Beat. The Internet is so prolific, people can shop online whenever they want. I have to keep things in the showroom that are a higher level and of higher quality than what they can find online, so people will keep coming back. We keep things exclusive."



William Yeoward's New Furniture Line at ID Collection

In an earlier post, I wrote about William Yeoward's beautiful new furniture line, which was introduced in the U.S. in January and brought to Dallas by ID Collection. Yeoward's collection bridges that gap between classic and contemporary, with traditional references and cleaner lines. "People still need a bit of nostalgia," he says.



William Yeoward's New Furniture Line at ID Collection


"Dallas customers are very educated about design," says Williamson. "They travel a lot, and are always looking for what's new and hot. Dallas is still somewhat traditional, but we love color. I try to keep color in small doses in the showroom. Keep the big pieces in creams and grays, and mix and match accessories. The upstairs is full of color, though."

William Yeoward's New Furniture Line at ID Collection



Bed by Julia Gray at ID Collection

Some of ID Collection's more classic and traditional lines include Panache Designs, Charles Pollock Reproductions, George Smith, and Julia Gray.

"Last year was our 10-year anniversary," says Williamson. But what people don't realize is that it's actually a showroom that's been in continual business for 26 years, he notes. After the showroom Boyd Levinson shuttered, the new partners in ID Collection picked up all its lines and carried on, adding new ones along the way.

It's Williamson's job to keep things looking fresh. "I keep moving things around so you see them differently. I can have a chair in a vignette for six months, then move it and people will say, 'did you just get that chair in'? It drives me crazy, but I love it. Sometimes to get people to notice things you almost have to make them trip over it."



Alouette Entertainment Center from Panache Designs at ID Collection

"My defining moments"? asks Williamson in response to a question I asked about some of his more significant memories in the business. "When we paid off the investors. The fact that we have made it through the economic downturn. For my own life, it's waking up in the morning still having hair."



Alex

I asked Williamson to let me take a portrait of him for the story. "You know how I am about having my picture taken," he said. I told him to send me one of himself he liked, instead. I didn't hold out hope for getting one, and then this crazy shot of Alex, his SPCA kitty, arrived in my inbox. Love it. Says so much more about the guy than any portrait could.