Exhibition

  • The Artistic and Eclectic Will Martin: Selected Works, 1957–1985
    Architectural Heritage Center, Portland
    Nov 16, 2018 to Jul 27, 2019
  • GRANTEE
    Architectural Heritage Center
    GRANT YEAR
    2018

Will Martin, Study for an Underground Restaurant, concept rendering, 1973. Courtesy of Bosco-Milligan Foundation collection

This original, comprehensive exhibition on the Portland, Oregon, architect Will Martin, designer of some of the city’s best-known modernist work, captures the full range of Martin’s creative and at times irreverent work as an architect, artist, writer, and imaginative thinker. The exhibition demonstrates the vibrant fusion between art and architecture as it played out in Martin’s built and unbuilt work, from his earliest projects in the late 1950s to his untimely death in 1985. Drawing on the AHC’s holdings and loans, the exhibition presents the breadth of Martin’s experimental work, in the form of sketches and renderings, writings, paintings, and sculpture, to show how Martin’s wide-ranging interests, from botany to local history to humor, found expression in his work, most notably the iconic Pioneer Courthouse Square. The exhibition is a close look at an architect whose bold work can be reassessed thirty years after his last built project within the local and national context of modernist and post-modernist architecture.

Willard K. Martin (b. 1930 Missouri–d. 1985) was a prominent Portland and Oregon architect and artist. After receiving his bachelor’s of architecture degree from the University of Oregon in 1957, Martin came to Portland in 1960 to work for Wolff & Zimmer (today ZGF Architects) and then started his own practice in 1961. In 1966, he formed a partnership with David Soderstrom to create Martin & Soderstrom. In 1971, the firm became Martin, Soderstrom & Matteson and developed into one of Portland’s leading small design firms until its dissolution in 1984. Martin’s built works include modernist structures such as the Holladay Center for physically handicapped children, a state of Oregon historic site (1970) and numerous modernist private residences in Oregon; and more whimsical, playful works like the Organ Grinder Pizza restaurant, whose entrance resembles a giant Diaphone resonator (1973), the postmodernist Schneider Museum of Art at Southern Oregon State College (1986, completed posthumously), and his best-known work, Pioneer Courthouse Square in downtown Portland (1984). Martin completed the square, along with an interdisciplinary team he recruited that included a prominent Oregon sculptor and a writer about Northwest Indian basketry and Chinese gardening, after winning a national design competition in 1978 whose other entrants included Moshe Safdie, Laurie Olin, Peter Eisenman, Lawrence Halprin, and other prominent architects and designers. Martin’s bold, controversial design for Pioneer Courthouse Square was backed by a Progressive Architecture award in 1981. Martin passed away in 1985 in the crash of an airplane he was piloting over the Grand Canyon. In his obituary in the January 1986 issue of Progressive Architecture, it was noted that Martin “was one of the few local architectural voices raised in support of Michael Graves’s right to proceed, unhassled, with his design for the Portland Building.”

Val Ballestrem, Architectural Heritage Center education manager, has a master’s degree in history from Portland State University with an emphasis in public history and the history of the American West. He holds a post-master’s certificate in library and information science from San Jose State University. Ballestrem has worked as editorial coordinator for the online Oregon Encyclopedia and is the author of the publication Lost Portland (Arcadia Publishing, 2018). In 2017, he organized the AHC exhibition Parting Shots: Minor White’s Images of Portland, 1938–1942, which received an Excellence Award from the Oregon Heritage Commission.

Randy Gragg, exhibition advisor, is an architecture and art critic in Portland. He is a former architecture writer for The Oregonian and former editor-in-chief at Portland Monthly magazine. Gragg served as director of John Yeon Center for Architectural Studies from 2013–17 and oversaw the management and programming of three Yeon-designed properties, including the 1937 modernist Watzek house. In 2017, he curated Quest for Beauty: The Architecture, Landscapes, and Collections of John Yeon, a major retrospective of Yeon’s work at the Portland Art Museum. In 2009, Gragg cocurated the exhibition Pioneering the Square on the 25th anniversary of Pioneer Courthouse Square. Gragg was a cocurator in the Graham-funded project The City Dance of Lawrence and Anna Halprin in 2008, which choreographed modern dance to activate the Halprin-designed fountains, plazas, and pathways in Portland.

Stephanie Whitlock is the executive director of the Architectural Heritage Center in Portland, Oregon. Prior to this, she worked at the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts, in Chicago. She has worked in the architectural, arts, and cultural sectors throughout her career, including the Smart Museum of Art and the University of Chicago Press. In Portland, she is on the board of directors of the Halprin Landscape Conservancy, which protects, restores, and actives the Portland Open Space Sequence, a series of interactive fountains, plazas, and connecting pathways designed by Lawrence Halprin and Associates between 1963–70.

The Architectural Heritage Center (AHC) advances knowledge and appreciation of Portland’s history and architecture in order to preserve the significant places that make Portland unique. The AHC produces over 100 public programs a year, including talks and tours, and presents a rotating series of gallery exhibitions. The AHC was founded in 1987 as the Bosco-Milligan Foundation. Jerry Bosco and Ben Milligan were like the Richard Nickels of Portland, troubled by the demolition of Portland’s historic architecture in the 1960–80s. They salvaged remnants from buildings before they disappeared to safeguard them. Bosco and Milligan were artists, environmentalists, and early preservationists who formed the non-profit Bosco-Milligan Foundation before they passed away from AIDS in 1987. Today, we own and steward this collection of architectural artifacts that we present through exhibitions and other programs. The AHC is located in the 1883 West Block’s Building in Portland’s eastside industrial district. Over the decades the building has served as a general store, glass making studio, and even a biker bar in the 1970s, until it was renovated in 1995–2005 to become a public architecture center.