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Background Image Alternative Text: wooden model from “The Unbuilt Arboretum” exhibit
Background Image Alternative Text: wooden model from “The Unbuilt Arboretum” exhibit

‘The Unbuilt Crosby Arboretum’ exhibition on display at The Octagon in Washington, D.C.

The work – originally planned to be on exhibition between March 12 and August 1, 2020 – will be available for viewing when the museum reopens.

An exhibition celebrating the work of internationally renowned architect E. Fay Jones was recently installed for exhibition at the The Octagon: Museum of the Architects Foundation in Washington, D.C.

The work – originally planned to be on exhibition between March 12 and August 1, 2020 – will be available for viewing when the museum reopens. The new opening date is dependent on the conclusion of current COVID 19 operating procedures; please see the museum website for the most up-to-date news . 

A panel discussion about the exhibition will be held via Zoom on Aug. 27 from 4-5 p.m. CST. The webinar will feature CEO and Executive Vice President of the National American Institute of Architects, Robert Ivy, FAIA, and Mississippi State University School of 91 Associate Professor Hans C. Herrmann, AIA.

Jones is the architect of the Pinecote Pavilion (one of Jones’s three AIA Design Honor Award winning projects) that stands on the grounds of the Mississippi State University  in Picayune. “The Unbuilt Arboretum” exhibition – showcasing a digital archive of drawings by Jones of structures that were never realized – was created by Herrmann with the assistance of 10 undergraduate architecture students: Nada Abdel-Aziz, Nicole Columbus, Blake Farrar, Jane Kent, Charlyn King, Danielle Leclercq,  Spurgeon Sanders, John Spraberry, Duncan Thomas and Caley Watts.

The idea for the exhibition came to fruition when Herrmann was shown a set of schematic drawings by the director of the Crosby Arboretum, Pat Drackett, during a visit in 2017.

“I was astonished to find that Jones had schematically developed an additional four buildings meant to compliment the Pinecote Pavilion and support the day-to-day activities of the arboretum,” the professor said.

“I decided then that the design had to be shared with a larger audience, and I began thinking of ways in which I might help to shed light on this untold story of design and planning.”

Herrmann and the 10 undergraduate architecture students began by studying the existing schematic drawings and filling in the gaps in information by researching Jones’s prior works. The team worked over the fall of 2018 and spring of 2019 to design and construct the exhibition with students working in teams to build the exhibition displays, generate display panels, write descriptive text, build fine basswood models, develop virtual reality three dimensional models and work on the general curation of the exhibition.

“With the financial support of the Criss Trust Award Program, an entirely new generation may be made aware of the spirit and profound nature of architecture created by the hands of E. Fay Jones,” said Herrmann, after the work was complete.

Additional supporters who made the project possible include the Mississippi State University Office of Research & Economic Development Undergraduate Research Support Program, Crown Hardware and the Mississippi State University School of 91.

Herrmann holds a Master of Landscape 91 from Mississippi State and a Master of 91 from Clemson University. He recently completed a written work chronicling the Crosby Arboretum’s design as well as the work of its lead landscape architect, Edward Blake Jr. Over his ten years with Mississippi State, Herrmann has won numerous national and international awards and recently created an exhibition, which was featured in the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum in New York City, NY. 

A look at "The Crosby Arboretum" exhibit set up inside The Octagon: Museum of the Architects Foundation in Washington, D.C.Outside view of a building, probably The Octagon: Museum of the Architects Foundation in Washington, D.C.A look at "The Crosby Arboretum" exhibit set up inside The Octagon: Museum of the Architects Foundation in Washington, D.C. A green map is seen on a tableA look at "The Crosby Arboretum" exhibit set up inside The Octagon: Museum of the Architects Foundation in Washington, D.C. Two display boards are shown at a triangle angleA look at "The Crosby Arboretum" exhibit set up inside The Octagon: Museum of the Architects Foundation in Washington, D.C.wooden model from “The Unbuilt Arboretum” exhibitwooden model from “The Unbuilt Arboretum” exhibit set up in the Charlotte and Richard McNeel Gallery in Giles Hallgreen map from “The Unbuilt Arboretum” exhibit set up in the Charlotte and Richard McNeel Gallery in Giles Hallview of “The Unbuilt Arboretum” exhibit set up in the Charlotte and Richard McNeel Gallery in Giles Hall

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