portrait by
Malvina Hoffman on the facade of the building The Frick Fine Arts Building sits on the site of the former
Schenley Park Casino, Pittsburgh's first multi-purpose arena with an indoor ice skating rink, sat on the location of the building before burning down in December 1896. The building itself is a gift of
Helen Clay Frick (1888–1984), daughter of the Pittsburgh industrialist and art patron
Henry Clay Frick (1849–1919). She established the
Fine Arts Department at the University of Pittsburgh in 1926 and continued to fund it through the 1950s, when she first made a commitment to create a separate structure to house it. Land for the project was donated to the university by the City of Pittsburgh. In early negotiations with the University of Pittsburgh, Miss Frick asked that successors to the
New York architects
Carrère and Hastings design the new facility after the Italian
palazzo its firm had built in
Manhattan for her father some fifty years earlier. Eventually, however, both parties agreed to Burton Kenneth Johnstone Associates as the architects. Its design is modeled after
Pope Julius III's (1487–1555)
Villa Giulia in
Rome, Italy. The building is constructed of white limestone and marble with a terracotta tile roof around a central courtyard. An octagonal cupola, which caps the central rotunda, rises 45 feet above the ground. The building houses the University of Pittsburgh's Department of History of Art and Architecture and Department of Studio Arts, and contains classrooms, an open cloister, an art gallery, a 200-seat auditorium, as well as a research library. Construction began in 1962 and the building was opened in May 1965. By the late 1960s Miss Frick, unhappy that the university did not conform to her restrictions on management of both the department and the new building, severed her ties with the University of Pittsburgh. She responded by creating a new venture,
The Frick Art Museum, on the property of her ancestral home, Clayton, a few miles east in Pittsburgh's
Point Breeze neighborhood. That museum operates today as a part of the
Frick Art & Historical Center complex. ==Building use and features==