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An Intact Art Moderne House By Harold T. Wolff, Ridge Historical Society Perhaps the best evidence that Beverly/Morgan Park's prosperity continued (with some hesitancy) through the depression is the wide sprinkling of Art Moderne houses throughout the neighborhood. Despite their relative simplicity they are both fragile and misunderstood, and it is hard to find intact examples. Their owners are prone to build huts with mansard roofs on their second-floor roof decks, replace the simple rounded canopies over their entrances with Georgian vestibules, and to make other incongruous additions which negate the essential streamlined design. Happily, there are survivors in the original state, among them the house at 10455 S. Bell Ave.
The massing of the Mathis House, although built up of cubic volumes, is rather complex, because there is a two-story room-size projection from the north front of the house, with a one-story front room in front of that. This makes room for a considerable roof deck on the front of the house at the second floor level, probably large enough to entertain on. The sole chimney rises alongside the two-story projecting mass and alongside the deck, which probably allows for a fireplace near the back of the projecting front room. The original steel casement windows of the house survive intact, and are placed on the corners, so that for most rooms the light source turns a corner. There is also a round window on the side of the entrance vestibule. This gives a nautical effect, which has been somewhat enhanced by painting some of the copings sea green. All of the balcony walls have an inward-sloping coping that is also seen at the roofline. The doorways to the outside, including the second-floor doorway to the roof deck, are of stainless steel with lots of glass. There are interesting vertical decorative strips centered on the projecting room of the first floor and on the wall behind the roof deck on the second floor. Although they appear to be composed of textured terracotta, they actually employ an idiosyncrasy of the yellow brick from which the house is built. These bricks normally have smooth sides and a rougher-textured bottom. By standing these bricks on end and turning them diagonally with the edge between side and bottom facing out, and then facing the grainy bottom sides all to the left in one row and all to the right in the next, the appearance of a sculptured terracotta moulding is achieved. The Mathis House is a striking survivor of the early modernist age, owing nothing to preceding historical styles and asserting itself through its simplicity rather than through ostentatious ornamentation. It speaks of a time of shedding old conventions in favor of gracious uncluttered living. It is a landmark of America's coming into the modern age. |