Museum Architecture Walking Tour October 8th

Tuesday, October 8

11am – 12:30 pm

Free for Members; Free for Architecture Sarasota Members;
$20 Not-Yet Museum Members (includes Museum Admission)

Meet in the Marcy & Michael Klein Plaza

Explore the iconic architecture around the Sarasota Art Museum campus in this walking tour led by Architecture Sarasota’s President Marty Hylton. Learn more about the rich history of Sarasota through the structures, architects, styles, and significance of several buildings, including the 1926 Elliott Collegiate Neo-Gothic former Sarasota Senior High School and the 1957 Paul Rudolph support building for the “New” Sarasota High School. The tour will end with a walkthrough of the Modern Masterpiece Uncovered: Galloway’s Furniture Showroom by Victor Lundy exhibition.

Victor Lundy (American, born 1923). Galloway’s Furniture Store, 1959. Courtesy of Sarasota Architectural Foundation.

Not-Yet a Museum Member?

Museum Membership allows you to engage with a global world of art and culture, explore a range of relevant and topical issues and ideas, and enjoy a variety of cutting-edge art experiences from film to paintings to performance.

 

Museum Membership also includes discounts in the Museum Shop and Museum Bistro, early access to tickets and special members-only events, and 10% discount on all The Studios at SAM classes.

About Marty Hylton

Morris (Marty) Hylton III_Headshot

Currently the President of Architecture Sarasota, Morris [Marty] Hylton III has nearly thirty years experience documenting, conserving, and advocating for cultural heritage. Trained as an architect and historic preservationist, he specializes in closely collaborating with community
stakeholders to develop multifaceted strategies and programs to preserve and manage resources. Marty’s research and professional work have focused on the distinct stewardship challenges of 20th-century heritage, particularly modernist sites and buildings of the post-World War II era, and the preparation and recovery of historic sites and communities impacted by natural disasters and coastal hazards.

From 2002 to 2007, Marty served as Strategic Initiatives Manager for the World Monuments Fund – an international non-profit with a mission of saving endangered heritage globally. While at WMF, he oversaw recovery efforts along the Mississippi Gulf Coast and New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina and helped create the Modernism at Risk program. For 14 years, Marty served as Director of Historic Preservation at the University of Florida where he launched the Envision Heritage program dedicated to harnessing digital technologies for documenting historic buildings and communities. More recently, he was the U.S. National Park Service’s inaugural Historic Architect for Climate Change where he helped create the Climate, Science, and Disaster Response Program.

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