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Cannon Chapel at Emory University

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Cannon Chapel at Emory University

Credit

Germanpostwarmodern via Tumblr

Site overview

Cannon Chapel, named for William R. Cannon, who was dean of Candler School of Theology and later a bishop of the United Methodist Church, was designed by internationally acclaimed architect Paul Rudolph, son of one of Candler School of Theology's first graduates. The chapel is a complex structure, offering radically different views from different directions. Composed largely of a series of elongated vaults of different heights, the chapel offers a start, and some say unsettling, contract to the stately-but-staid buildings that line the nearby Quadrangle. And yet, the structure does not appear out of place. Its poured concrete exterior -- giant gray slabs with geometric patterns in subtle stripes and vees -- blends well with the gray marble buildings beside it. The chapel is topped with a traditional red tile roof, blending in further with neighboring buildings. Soaring above it is a gray concrete arch with a cross, the only permanent Christian symbol on or in the building. (Adapted from Emory Magazine, October 1981)

How to Visit

Private university building

Location

515 South Kilgo Circle NE
Atlanta, GA, 30307

Country

US
More visitation information

Case Study House No. 21

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Credit:

Germanpostwarmodern via Tumblr

Designer(s)

Paul Rudolph

Architect

Paul M. Rudolph (1918-1997) was born a minister’s son in Elkton, Kentucky.

Inspired by architecture at an early age, Rudolph studied architecture as an undergraduate at Alabama Polytechnic (now Auburn University), and after a brief period in the Navy during WWII, he successfully completed graduate studies at Harvard under Bauhaus founder Walter Gropius.

Rudolph was a pioneering architect in Sarasota, Florida, a major figure of the ‘Sarasota School of Architecture,' which gained international attention for innovative solutions to the modern American home.

He was Dean of the Yale School of Architecture from 1958-1965, during which his best known work, the Yale Art & Architecture Building, was completed and became both a Modernist icon and a topic of controversy.

After his tenure at Yale, Rudolph continued during the next 30 years to create some of Modernism's most unique and powerful architecture.

Despite the wane in Rudolph’s popularity during the dominance of Post-Modernism in the late 70’s and 80’s, his work and legacy has had a profound impact on the architecture of our era.

Rudolph, who is today considered one of America’s great Late Modernist architects, was an inspirational mentor to those whom he taught. His former students include some of architecture’s most internationally respected architects such as Norman Foster, Richard Rogers, and Robert A.M. Stern, among many others.

Nationality

American

Other designers

Paul Rudolph

Related News

Celebrating the 50th anniversary of Paul Rudolph's First Church in Boston

new england, Paul Rudolph

April 20, 2022

Related chapter

Georgia

Commission

30 August 1979

Completion

30 September 1981

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