Planters

 Posted by on August 17, 2018
Aug 172018
 

San Francisco Superior Court
850 Bryant Street

Raymond Sells, Planters
These two planters sit outside of the front entry of the San Francisco Superior Court, they are by Raymond Sells.

Raymond Sells was born in San Francisco in 1931.  He studied at the University of California, Santa Barbara and San Francisco State University receiving a BA in 1959 and an MA in 1968.

He taught at Skyline College he died in 1983.

Raymond Sells

*Raymond Sells Planters

Flower Boxes at the Bohemian Club

 Posted by on August 7, 2013
Aug 072013
 

624 Taylor Street
Nob Hill

Planter Boxes at the Bohemian Club

These planter boxes were commissioned by the architect, Lewis Hobart, for the Bohemian Club in 1933.  They were sculpted by Haig Patigian.

Haig Patigian has been in this site may times, you can read all about him and his works here.

Haig Patigian Planters at the  Bohemian Club

Lewis Parsons Hobart was born in St. Louis, Missouri on January 14, 1873. After graduating from preparatory schools in the East, he attended U.C. Berkeley for a year. While there he was influenced by Bernard Maybeck (as were many other young students, such as Julia Morgan and Arthur Brown, Jr.), participating in drawing classes that Maybeck taught in his home. Hobart left Berkeley to study architecture for two years at the American Academy in Rome and followed that by three years of further architectural training at theÉcole des Beaux-Arts in Paris from 1901 to 1903.

Back in the United States, Hobart first worked in New York for two years, and then returned to the Bay Area in 1906, to participate in the rebuilding of the City after the earthquake and fire. He obtained his State Architectural license in October 1906 (number B429). He opened his own office in the A. Page Brown-designed Crocker Building (600 Market at Post). His classical training and knowledge of steel-frame construction stood him in good stead and he obtained commissions for several downtown office buildings from the Crocker Estate and other property owners. Surviving buildings of his from 1908 include the Postal Telegraph Building at 22 Battery, the Jewelers Building at 150 Post, the Commercial Building at 825-33 Market, and the White Investment Co. Building at 280 Battery.

Hobart is best known in San Francisco for his work implementing the design of Grace Episcopal Cathedral on Nob Hill. In 1903 Hobart had married socialite Mabel Reed Deming, a cousin of William H. Crocker who donated the site for the Cathedral. Inspired by 13th-century French Gothic architecture, the plans were drawn and the cornerstone laid in 1910.

In 1932 Hobart became the first President of the San Francisco Arts Commission, and later was appointed to the Board of Architects for the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition held on Treasure Island, for which he also designed the Court of Flowers and the Court of Reflections. He died on October 19, 1954 and his funeral was held at Grace Cathedral. (excerpted from the San Francisco Encyclopedia)

Bohemian Club

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