Saturday, December 4, 2021

Artist of the Day, December 4, 20121: Victor A. Lundy, an American architect and soldier (#1435)

Victor Lundy the soldier:

"August 25th 1944, there's a sketch which says 'overseas at last,' and since then, I realized we were part of a very significant occasion.... this is real."

A visual diary with 158 pencil sketches brings to life the wartime experience of noted architect Victor A. Lundy, who served in the U.S. 26th Infantry Division during World War II. In 1942, Lundy was 19, studying to be an architect in New York City. Excited about rebuilding Europe post-war, he and other college men enlisted in the Army Special Training Program (ASTP). But, by 1944, with D-Day planned, the Army needed reinforcements, and Lundy and his company were thrown into the infantry. Lundy couldn't believe it and recalled during an oral history interview that during lectures, he "never listened, I was busy sketching." But soon, "I sort of took to it. ... war experience just hypnotizes young men.

Lundy applied his drawing skills to what was around him--training at Fort Jackson, South Carolina; forced marches; men at rest; the PX and tents; New York harbor; aboard ship in the Atlantic crossing; Cherbourg harbor; and French villages. Many vivid portraits of fellow soldiers and frontline danger also fill the pages. The sketches cover May to November 1944 when Lundy was wounded, with some gaps where notebooks were lost.

The eight surviving sketchbooks are spiral bound and 3 x 5 inches --small enough to fit in a breast pocket. Lundy used black Hardtmuth leads (a drawing pencil) and sketched quickly. "For me, drawing is sort of synonymous with thinking."

Victor Lundy the architect:

Victor Alfred Lundy (1923) was an American architect. After serving in the U.S. Army during World War II, he completed a degree in architecture at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design. Winning the prestigious Rotch Travelling Scholarship allowed him to travel abroad. In 1954, Lundy opened an architectural firm in Sarasota, Florida, An exemplar of modernist architecture, he was one of the leaders of the Sarasota School of Architecture. His Warm Mineral Springs Motel, outside Warm Mineral Springs, Florida, is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.  In 1967, the American Institute of Architects named him a Fellow--one of its highest honors. Lundy moved to Houston, Texas, in the 1970s. Among the notable buildings designed by this master artist-architect are churches with soaring roof lines, the Sarasota Chamber of Commerce, the U.S. Tax Court, and the U.S. Embassy in Sri Lanka.

Lundy is donating his architectural archive to the Library of Congress, including these World War II sketchbooks presented in 2009. He was honored by the Smithsonian on his 90th birthday in 2013. A film on his life and work, entitled "Victor Lundy: Sculptor of Space" was premiered by the GSA on February 25, 2014.


© 2021. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, World War Two sketches by Victor Lundy. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only


 

 

Mr. Victor Lundy

September 22, 1944: House near Crasville

November 1, 1944: One of the 4-men German patrol who didn't get back

November 1, 1944: "Pat" (Sgt. Patenaude) zeroing in with the 60 mm mortars
in front of the 3rd platoon

October 31, 1944: "Kentucky," Finey Towery

September 13, 1944: Air Raid over Germany

September 21, 1944: Part of the Atlantic Wall, Quinéville 6 men
from L Co. hurt here, 6 killed

September 19, 1944: Café where the 2 French girls
bought us 4 bottles of cider, Quinéville

September 12, 1944: Commune de Lestre

September 9, 1944: French farmer, St. Martin d'Audeville

September 8, 1944: Our first camp in Normandy at St. Martin d'Audeville

September 7, 1944: Loading onto L.C.T.s

August 29, 1944: Wiley

August 28, 1944: Night watch

August 28, 1944: Leon Berube, "Joe the Gunga"

August 28, 1944: Finey Towery

August 27, 1944: Sunset - first night out

August 27, 1944: Barges

August 26, 1944: Soldiers on deck of ship

August 26, 1944: Ship and tugboat

August 26, 1944,  On deck at night

August 25, 1944,  Troop train

August 25, 1944:  Overdeas at last

July 5, 1944:  Attack on a fortified position

June 19, 1944:  Planning a platoon attack Sgt. Jaffe

June 13, 1944: Crap game

June 10, 1944: Waiting to move Night sketch

June 8, 1944: 10 minute break

June 6, 1944: Bill Shepard

June 6, 1944: "Shep," D-day

June 1, 1944: Home sweet home

June 1, 1944, Helmet liner

June 1, 1944: Before pay day Shooting craps for cigarettes.

May 12, 1944: Minute break

May 18, 1944: Sgt. Kane

May 16, 1944: Bombs

May 14, 1944: Sunday

May 14, 1944: Company street

May 12, 1944: First aid



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