American architect
Carl Abbott
is a Fellow of the
American Institute of Architects
and the youngest member of the original
Sarasota School of Architecture
.
After receiving his bachelor's degree from the
University of Florida
, Abbott earned his master's degree at
Yale University
under the renowned
Paul Rudolph (architect)
. After graduating from Yale, Abbott worked with
Richard Rogers
and
Norman Foster
at
TEAM 4
in London, then worked in the office of
I.M. Pei
in New York City before founding his own practice in
Sarasota
, Florida, in 1966.
[1]
In his own practice, Abbott's first design was the Weld Beach House in Boca Grande. This design established his exploration of geometry and sculptural forms within a clear concept responding directly to the site. This project began Abbott's wide recognition in Floridian and National Architectural Press.
[2]
Abbott's award-winning body of projects include the Casa del Cielo, Lido Bayfront House, Putterman Residence, Artist's Family Compound, Caribbean Hilltop Residence, Saint Thomas More Catholic Church, among many others. Abbott has the highest number of Test of Time Awards given in the Florida / Caribbean Region for “Designs of Enduring Significance”.
[3]
In addition to his active architectural practice, Abbott is also a speaker on the architecture of past civilizations, most notably the
Maya
, where he has worked extensively to document and uncover the significant spatial mastery of the ancient culture.
[4]
In the book IN/FORMED by THE LAND, architecture critic
Michael Sorkin
wrote of Carl Abbott's work, “Project after project delivers on the modernist ideal of eliding inside and out creating the illusion of the natural flowing untrammeled through the constructed…a sequence of shifts both tactile and tectonic that create a richly compact journey in which spaces move to arrive at moments of expansiveness and relaxation both.”
Yale classmate
Richard Rogers
said of Abbott's work, “His buildings are sensitive to context, express a spare poetry without ever becoming austere, and have a unique beauty…the result is buildings that are works of art.”
[5]
Abbott was the focus of the Sarasota Architectural Foundation's 2020 SarasotaMOD Weekend.
[6]
-
Putterman Residence (1986)
-
Caribbean Hilltop House (2008)
-
St Thomas Moore Church (1986)
-
Weld Beach House (1966)
-
Lido Bayfront Residence (1984, demolished 2010)
-
Gregg Beach House (1982, demolished 2018)
References
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External links
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