List of works by Bruce Goff
Chronological list of houses, commercial buildings and other works by Bruce Goff.
1910s-1940s
- 1917: Percy and Evaline Elliott House, 312 E. 19th Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1918: Quaker Avenue House, 1401 S. Quaker Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1919: Carson Avenue House, 1639 S. Carson Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1919: Oil Operator House, 1728 S. Madison Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1919: South Yorktown Avenue House, 1732 S. Yorktown Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1921: East Nineteenth Street House, 320 E. 19th Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1922: G. Way House, Northeast corner of E. 31st Street and S. Peoria Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma (The house was significantly altered in 1983, leaving little of the original design intact)[1]
- 1923: Adah Robinson Studio, 1119 S. Owasso Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1926: Boston Avenue Methodist Church, 1301 South Boston Ave., Tulsa, Oklahoma (with Adah Robinson, officially credited to Rush, Endacott and Rush), NRHP-listed
- 1925: South Madison Avenue House, 1712 S. Madison Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1925: Consolidated Cut Stone Office Building, 1323 East 5th Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1925: Hansen House, 2262 S. Troost Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1926: Day Building, 512 S. Boston Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1927: Tulsa Club, 115 E. Fifth St., Tulsa, Oklahoma
- 1927: Page Warehouse, 1301 South Elgin Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma (Demolished in 1977)[1]
- 1928: Guaranty Laundry, 2036 E. 11th Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1928: Christ the King Church (interior furniture, altars, and mosaics), 1530 S. Rockford Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1929: Riverside Studio, 1381 Riverside Dr., Tulsa, Oklahoma, International Style, NRHP-listed
- 1929: Midwest Equitable Meter Company Warehouse, 3200 Charles Page Boulevard, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1930: Tulsa Convention Hall (Brady Hall) Alterations, 105 West Brady Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1930: Latham House, 221 E. 21st Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
- 1938: Turzak House, Chicago, Illinois
- 1939: Cole House, Park Ridge, Illinois
- 1940: Colmorgan House, Glenview, Illinois
- 1940: Unseth House, Park Ridge, Illinois
- 1947: Bachman House, Chicago, Illinois
- 1941: Bartman House (also known as Triaero), Fern Creek, Kentucky
- 1947: Ruth VanSickle Ford House, Aurora, Illinois
- 1947: Ledbetter House, 701 W. Brooks, Norman, Oklahoma, NRHP-listed
- 1948: Hopewell Baptist Church, 5801 NW 178th St., Edmond, Oklahoma, NRHP-listed
- 1949: Julius Cox House, 1300 N. Cimarron Avenue, Boise City, Oklahoma[1]
1950s-1960s
- 1950: Bavinger House, 730 60th Avenue NE, Norman, Oklahoma, NRHP-listed (severely damaged in 2011, demolished in 2016)
- 1950: Lewis Wetzler Subdivision, Timberdell Road,[2] Norman, Oklahoma[1]
- 1950: John Keys House, 911 W Timberdell Road, Norman, Oklahoma[1]
- 1951: Magyness House, 909 W Timberdell Road, Norman, Oklahoma[1]
- 1952: Roger Corsaw House, 1210 Woodland Drive, Norman, Oklahoma[1]
- 1954: Garvey House, Urbana, Illinois
- 1955: John Frank House, 1300 Luker Lane, Sapulpa, Oklahoma, NRHP-listed
- 1956: Joe D. Price House and Studio (also known as Shin'enKan), Starview Farm,[3] Bartlesville, Oklahoma (destroyed by arson in 1996)
- 1957: C. A. Comer House, 1316 N. Creek, Dewey, Oklahoma[1]
- 1957: J.O. and Mary Motsenbocker House, 2416 SE Circle Drive, Bartlesville, Oklahoma[1]
- 1957: The Round House, 7507 Baxtershire, Dallas, Texas (Designed by Goff in 1957 but built by Parker without Goff after dispute in 1961.)
- 1957: Donald Pollock House, 2400 NW 59th St., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, NRHP-listed
- 1957: Miller Brothers Service Station, Lynn Road,[4] Pawhuska, Oklahoma[1]
- 1958: Durst House, Houston, Texas
- 1958: L.A. Freeman House, 6565 Park Circle Drive, Joplin, Missouri[1]
- 1958: Gutman House, Gulfport, Mississippi (destroyed by fire)
- 1958: Harold Jones House, 3411 SE Wildwood Court, Bartlesville, Oklahoma[1]
- 1958: Robert White House, 1525 SW Whiteway Court, Bartlesville, Oklahoma[1]
- 1959: Russell Collins House, 3400 SE Wildwood Court, Bartlesville, Oklahoma[1]
- 1959: Richard Bennett House, 2841 Silver Lake Road, Bartlesville, Oklahoma[1]
- 1959: J.R. Akright House Alterations, 2412 SE Circle Drive, Bartlesville, Oklahoma[1]
- 1959: Redeemer Lutheran Church Education Building, 3700 SE Woodland Road, Bartlesville, Oklahoma[1]
- 1960: Gryder House, Ocean Springs, Mississippi
- 1961: Jame Fitchette House, 1900 SE Saturn Court, Bartlesville, Oklahoma[1]
- 1961: John Quincy Adams House, 108 Fairmont Road, Vinita, Oklahoma[1]
- 1962: Woodland Hills Entrance Feature, Woodland Hills Boulevard,[5] Roland, Oklahoma[1]
- 1962: The First Celestine Barby House, 114 Avenue N, Beaver, Oklahoma[1]
- 1963: Play Tower, Sooner Park,[6] Bartlesville, Oklahoma
- 1964: William Dace House, 409 Avenue R, Beaver, Oklahoma[1]
- 1965: Duncan House, Cobden, Illinois
- 1965: Hyde House, Prairie Village, Kansas
- 1965: Nicol House, Kansas City, Missouri
- 1965: Searing House, Prairie Village, Kansas
- 1966: Jacquart House, Sublette, Kansas
- 1968: Mitchell House, Dodge City, Kansas
1970s-1980s
- 1970: Glen Harder House, Mountain Lake, Minnesota (destroyed by fire)
- 1972: Hollywood House, 18165/18171 Meandering Way, Flint, Texas
- 1974: Plunkett House, 17148 Fountain Circle, Flint, Texas[7]
- 1974: Barby House, Tucson, Arizona
- 1975: Liberty Federal Savings Bank Mosaic Mural, 232 South Main, Stillwater, Oklahoma (Goff only did the mural; the building's architect is Tom Rodgers)[1]
- 1978: Pavilion for Japanese Art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California
- 1979: Struckus House, Woodland Hills, California (One of Goff's last completed designs before his death; Bart Prince supervised its completion.[8][9])
- 1980: Jacob Harder House, Mountain Lake, Minnesota
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am Friends of Kebyar, Vol. 22.1, Issue No. 71, "Bruce Goff Oklahoma Guide". 2005-2006.
- ^ 35°11′49″N 97°27′09″W / 35.197079°N 97.452371°W
- ^ 36°42′32″N 95°56′41″W / 36.708915°N 95.944622°W
- ^ 36°40′49″N 96°19′46″W / 36.680365°N 96.329542°W
- ^ 35°24′19″N 94°30′03″W / 35.405308°N 94.500718°W
- ^ 36°45′07″N 95°54′53″W / 36.752078°N 95.914767°W
- ^ Muriel Emanuel, "Contemporary Architects" [1], 1980, p. 292
- ^ Leon Whiteson, "'E.T.' House Last Symbol of Architect's Gonzo Flair", Los Angeles Times, June 30, 1988.
- ^ Sam Grawe, "A Well Rounded House", Dwell, September 2004, pp. 78-80.
External links
- Bruce Goff Castle BandB The Duncan House, built in 1968, now operated as a bed and breakfast.
- Cimarron Heritage Center, formerly the Cox House, was designed by Goff.
- Art Institute of Chicago Bruce Goff Collection
- Goff in the desert (official site), Heinz Emigholz' film documenting 62 of Goff's buildings