Harriet Pattison Biography

Born on October 29, 1928, Harriet Pattison was the youngest of William Lawrence and Bonnie Abbott Pattisonās seven children. She attended Chicagoās progressive Francis Parker School and graduated from the University of Chicagoās College with a B.A. in 1951. She hoped to study set design at Yale Universityās School of Drama, but was enrolled in the actors' program. While at Yale, Pattison elected to take Josef Albersā color theory course, learning lessons which she described as lifelong. She then worked in film, attended a landscape painting program at Chicagoās Art Institute, and spent two terms in graduate studies in philosophy at the University of Edinburgh in 1954.
Settling in Philadelphia to study piano with Edith Braun, Pattison befriended architect Robert Venturi, who introduced her to Louis Kahn in 1958. Kahn became a pivotal force in Pattisonās life both personally and professionally: in 1962, Pattison bore Kahnās only son, Nathaniel. It was during this period that Pattison realized that her talents and arts background were suited to landscape architecture. Later commenting on her choice of profession, Pattison wrote: āWhen I see how Nature welcomes the gardens and landscapes I have begun, and how they enhance peopleās lives, I rejoice in following a distinguished tradition of artists who unite human and natural forces in harmony.ā

Pattison began a year-and-a-half-long apprenticeship in the Vermont office of Dan Kiley in 1963. Kileyās work, a strain of Modernism heavily influenced by his appreciation for landscapes of 17th-century French master Andre Le NĆ“tre, laid the foundation for Pattisonās own oeuvre. Beginning formal studies in the field, Pattison matriculated to a three-year program in landscape architecture studying under Ian McHarg at the University of Pennsylvaniaās School of Fine Arts. Prior to her graduation there in 1967 with an M.L.A., she was exposed to and influenced by the writings of J.B. Jackson and the teachings of visiting critic Roberto Burle Marx, distinguished faculty Sir Peter Shepheard and botanist John Fogg.
Pattisonās first position was in the office of landscape architect George Patton, where she stayed until 1970. From the outset, Pattison was given major design responsibilities in the firmās various projects, from playgrounds to estate design. Pattison also collaborated with Kahn on a number of projects, including the grounds for the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas. Pattisonās love of nature nurtured Kahnās own interest in landscape and setting, and she considered herself a ācompanion for his thoughts.ā The culmination of their collaborative work was the design for the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial in Four Freedoms Park, on the southern tip of Roosevelt Island in New Yorkās East River. First awarded in 1973, the project design underwent a number of iterations in the year before Kahnās sudden death. The final design paired allĆ©es of trees and a 100-foot-wide granite stairway reminiscent of that at Versailles with a wide lawn which tapers to a large, bronze bust of Roosevelt. Lying just beyond is an open-air, three-sided, āroomā with 12-foot-high, granite walls that frame a wide āwindowā onto expansive views of the river and the city skyline. Kahnās design for the memorial, shelved for three decades, was resuscitated and built as a park which opened in 2012. Pattisonās close involvement with the architect on all aspects of the memorial design can be seen through the sketches and drawings for the project, many bearing the mark of both their hands.

Following Kahnās death, Pattison opened her own landscape architectural office while continuing to collaborate with George Patton on occasional projects. Her work ranged from intimate garden designs to large-scale, institutional commissions, including the master plan for the Hershey Food Corporationās Pennsylvania headquarters.
Having worked with masters of architectural and landscape design in a period when the minimalism of modernity was tempered with an appreciation for historical context, Pattisonās own work reflects this sensitivity. An appreciation for history and historic preservation is revealed in her writings, including her essay, Maine Landscapes: Design and Planning, in which Pattison explores the pioneering work of Beatrix Farrand. As a woman working in a male-dominated profession, Farrand, alongside Gertrude Jekyll, figured as role-models for Pattison. Like them, Pattisonās extant works, numerous in the Mid-Atlantic area, ensure that her subtle hand has been engraved on our collective landscape. In 2016 she was inducted as a Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects. In October 2020, during the height of Covid, Harriet published, Our Days Are Like Full Years: A Memoir with Letters from Louis Kahn.
Pattison died on October 2, 2023 at the age of 94.
Bibliography
Ashraf, Kazi Khaleed. āTaking Place: Landscape in the Architecture of Louis Kahn.ā Journal of
Architectural Education, 61: 2 (2007) 48-58.
Brownlee, David B. and David G. De Long, Louis I. Kahn: In the Realm of Architecture NY:
Rizzoli, 1991.
Edge, Kay F. āHarriet Pattison, ASLA.ā In International Archive of Women in Architecture
Newsletter, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, No. 18 (Fall 2006) 1-2.
Hughes, Samuel. āConstructing a New Kahn.ā The Pennsylvania Gazette (March/April 2013)
36-49.