Eaton's Department Store, Toronto, Canada, Perspective Study

Description

With its origins in early 19th-century Europe, the department store in North America evolved into a major feature of the urban landscape. A pioneer in many areas, the architect Daniel Burnham created new spaces for successful department stores such as Marshall Field and Company in Chicago and T. Eaton Company in Toronto. With these buildings Burnham borrowed from religious, civic, and domestic architectures to present complete and fantastic interior worlds, with restaurants and lounges, monumental public atria, entertainment venues, and model-home interiors—all of which could be visited in a single day.

Eaton's Department Store, Toronto, Canada, Perspective Study

D.H. Burnham & Co.

1912

Accession Number

154600

Medium

Graphite on tracing paper

Dimensions

121.5 × 83.5 cm (47 7/8 × 32 7/8 in.)

Classification

presentation drawing

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Purchased with funds provided by the Benefactors of Architecture Endowment Fund