

Before designing the Eiteljorg Museum, architect
Jonathan Hess traveled the Southwest with museum founder Harrison
Eiteljorg. The pair studied the area’s land, architecture
and people. Broad, flat mesas; deep, craggy canyons and ancient
pueblo structures are what make the Southwest uniquely beautiful.
These features served as an inspiration to the Eiteljorg Museum’s
creators.
The Eiteljorg Museum’s main entrance has become an
Indianapolis icon, with its Southwestern-influenced portico
and front path that stretches past the Richard and Billie Lou
Wood Deer Fountain and The Greeter, a monumental sculpture
by artist George Carlson.
The 118,000-square-foot, honey-colored museum is set within
a large, round base inspired by the circular symbols and spaces
of Indian pueblo communities. Much of the Eiteljorg’s
exterior consists of nearly 12,000 pieces of hand-sorted Minnesota
dolomite, a stone with color and texture that creates the feel
of a Southwestern Pueblo. Plum-colored German sandstone serves
as the building’s base and appears again inside on the
floor of the museum’s Grand Hall and other areas.
Inside
the Eiteljorg Museum, warm earth tones, stone and rich mahogany
trim continue the Southwestern motif that began with the first
piece of Minnesota dolomite. The expansive Grand Hall features
the light-filled Michael and Juanita Eagle Commons. The Gathering
Place—a smaller version of the Grand Hall—is located
on the canal level and is linked to the Hall by a winding staircase.
In the center of the staircase is the famed Indianapolis Totem
Pole. Most of the museum’s galleries are floored with
stained oak.
With the June 2005 addition of the Mel and Joan Perelman
Wing, which doubled the size of the institution’s public
space, came the opportunity to add more unique architectural
features to its already award-winning design. Johnathan Hess
seamlessly integrated new spaces with the old.
The
new north end of the museum, which faces the Indianapolis Central
Canal, features the Christel DeHaan Family Terrace. This elegant
garden showcases monumental sculpture by Allan Houser, Truman
Lowe and Douglas Hyde; indigenous Indiana plants and trees;
and the Randy Deer & Wayne Zink Symbols of our Universe,
an architectural feature that interprets the Native American
relationship with the four cardinal directions. Providing a
view of the DeHaan Family Terrace and the Canal is the outdoor
terrace of the Sky City Café, the museum’s new
restaurant.
A wood-and-zinc canopy near the canal entrance echoes the
design of the museum’s main entryway, developing a sense
of structural continuity. The canopy’s whimsical, wavy
zinc siding is an unexpected departure from the museum’s
exterior.