Archive for the ‘Architect’ Category

Space and light and order. Those are the things that men need just as much as they need bread or a place to sleep.

April 8, 2009

Le Corbusier

Le Corbusier Chapel, Ronchamp, France 1956

byname of Charles-Édouard Jeanneret(born October 6, 1887, La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland—died August 27, 1965, Cap Martin, France) internationally influential Swiss architect and city planner, whose designs combine the functionalism of the modern movement with a bold, sculptural expressionism. He belonged to the first generation of the so-called International school of architecture and was their most able propagandist in his numerous writings. In his architecture he joined the functionalist aspirations of his generation with a strong sense of expressionism. He was the first architect to make a studied use of rough-cast concrete, a technique that satisfied his taste for asceticism and for sculptural forms.


http://www.biography.com/search/article.do?id=9376609

Art is never finished, only abandoned.

March 26, 2009

Leonardo da Vinci

Lady with an Ermine 1489-1490

Leonardo da Vinci was a Florentine artist, one of the great masters of the High Renaissance, who was also celebrated as a painter, sculptor, architect, engineer, and scientist. His profound love of knowledge and research was the keynote of both his artistic and scientific endeavors. His innovations in the field of painting influenced the course of Italian art for more than a century after his death, and his scientific studies—particularly in the fields of anatomy, optics, and hydraulics—anticipated many of the developments of modern science.


http://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/bio/l/leonardo/biograph.html

I know the price of success: dedication, hard work and an unremitting devotion to the things you want to see happen..

March 16, 2009

Frank Lloyd Wright

Guggenehim Interior 1956-59

Frank Lloyd Wright (born Frank Lincoln Wright, June 8, 1867 – April 9, 1959) was an American architect, interior designer, writer and educator, who designed more than 1,000 projects, which resulted in more than 500 completed works.

Wright promoted organic architecture (exemplified by Fallingwater), was a leader of the Prairie School movement of architecture (exemplified by the Robie House and the Westcott House), and developed the concept of the Usonian home (exemplified by the Rosenbaum House). His work includes original and innovative examples of many different building types, including offices, churches, schools, hotels, and museums. Wright also often designed many of the interior elements of his buildings, such as the furniture and stained glass.

Wright authored 20 books and many articles, and was a popular lecturer in the United States and in Europe. His colorful personal life often made headlines, most notably for the 1914 fire and murders at his Taliesin studio.

Already well-known during his lifetime, Wright was recognized in 1991 by the American Institute of Architects as “the greatest American architect of all time”.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Lloyd_Wright

I prefer drawing to talking. Drawing is faster, and leaves less room for lies.

February 27, 2009

Le Corbusier

Charles-Édouard Jeanneret-Gris, who chose to be known as Le Corbusier (October 6, 1887 – August 27, 1965), was a Swiss-French architect, designer, urbanist, writer and also painter, who is famous for being one of the pioneers of what now is called Modern architecture or the International Style. He was born in Switzerland and became a French citizen in his 30s.

He was a pioneer in studies of modern high design and was dedicated to providing better living conditions for the residents of crowded cities. His career spanned five decades, with his buildings constructed throughout central Europe, India, Russia, and one each in North and South America. He was also an urban planner, painter, sculptor, writer, and modern furniture designer.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Corbusier

You’ve got to bumble forward into the unknown.

January 28, 2009

Frank Gehry

Dancing House Prague

Frank O. Gehry is one of the greatest living architects. Born in Toronto in 1930, Gehry studied at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles until 1954 before going on in 1955 to study architecture at the Harvard Graduate School of Design in Cambridge, MA. Frank O. Gehry worked as an architect and urban planner in several architecture practices before opening his own, Frank O. Gehry & Associates, in Los Angeles in 1962. Ten years later, in 1972, Frank O. Gehry began to attract attention with his “Easy Edges” line in furniture. Comprising fourteen pieces made of layered, rough-textured corrugated cardboard, it was conceived as a low-cost line. “Easy Edges” was an immediate hit but Frank O. Gehry stopped production of it after only three months because he was afraid, if he became associated with furniture design, he would no longer be taken seriously as an architect. However, worldwide acclaim in architecture soon came to Frank O. Gehry for his Deconstructivist buildings, including the Mid-Atlantic Toyota office building in Glen Burnie (1978), Loyola Law School (1981-1984), and the California Aerospace Museum (1983/84). Other important buildings in Europe by Frank O. Gehry are the Vitra Design Museum in Weil am Rhein (1989), the spectacular Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao (1997), and the Neue Zollhof in Düsseldorf (2000). Frank O. Gehry’s buildings mark a transitional state somewhere between Postmodernism and Deconstructivism. In 1983/84 Frank O. Gehry collaborated with the artist Claes Oldenburg on an architecture project for the Venice Biennale. By the 1980s Frank O. Gehry no longer had any qualms about furniture design. He linked up with his early corrugated cardboard furniture. The Frank O. Gehry “Experimental Edges” (1980 for Vitra) seat furniture was produced in a limited edition. These pieces should be viewed more as art than as functional seating solutions. In 1992 Vitra also reissued four models from the early “Easy Edges” series. In 1992 Frank O. Gehry designed the “Powerplay” chair series for Knoll International. Made of interwoven strips of bentwood, these pieces were shown in an exhibition mounted by the Museum of Modern Art in New York even before they were launched commercially.


http://www.kettererkunst.com/bio/frank-o-gehry-1930.shtml

I know the price of success: dedication, hard work and an unremitting devotion to the things you want to see happen..

January 19, 2009

Frank Lloyd Wright

Fallingwater

Frank Lloyd Wright (born Frank Lincoln Wright, June 8, 1867 – April 9, 1959) was an American architect, interior designer, writer and educator, who designed more than 1,000 projects, which resulted in more than 500 completed works.

Wright promoted organic architecture (exemplified by Fallingwater), was a leader of the Prairie School movement of architecture (exemplified by the Robie House and the Westcott House), and developed the concept of the Usonian home (exemplified by the Rosenbaum House). His work includes original and innovative examples of many different building types, including offices, churches, schools, hotels, and museums. Wright also often designed many of the interior elements of his buildings, such as the furniture and stained glass.

Wright authored 20 books and many articles, and was a popular lecturer in the United States and in Europe. His colorful personal life often made headlines, most notably for the 1914 fire and murders at his Taliesin studio.

Already well-known during his lifetime, Wright was recognized in 1991 by the American Institute of Architects as “the greatest American architect of all time”.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Lloyd_Wright

Reason and skepticism must yield to a horizon of discovery. Doctrines cannot be trusted in this laboratory. Intuition is our muse. The creative spirit must be followed with happy abandon.

November 23, 2008

Steven Holl

Steven Holl (born December 9, 1947, Bremerton, Washington) is an American academic architect and watercolorist best known for the 1998 Kiasma Contemporary Art Museum in Helsinki, Finland and the controversial 2003 Simmons Hall at MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.. In June 2007 the much celebrated Bloch Building addition to the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri opened to the public.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Holl

Appreciate the moment.

November 17, 2008

Happy Birthday Isamu Noguchi

Isamu Noguchi (pronounced as: sämoo nogooch)
was a sculptor, designer, architect, and craftsman.
he believed that through sculpture and architecture,
one could better understand the struggle with nature.

isamu noguchi was born in los angeles in 1904
to an irish-american teacher and editor,
and a japanese poet.
isamu noguchi was raised in japan until, at 13,
he was sent to the us to study.
after winning one of the first guggenheim fellowships
in 1927, noguchi travelled to paris where he worked
for six months as a studio assistant to the sculptor,
constantin brancusi.

returning to new york in 1932, he made his name as
a sculptor and portrait artist, as well as winning
commissions for memorials, monuments and
industrial designs.
with his long-time friend, the visionary engineer
buckminster fuller, he constructed models,
planned outdoor projects, and investigated the ways
in which people live and thrive in their environments.

his inventive work embraced alsosettings for the
martha graham dance company.

he is best known for his abstract sculptures designed
as adjuncts to architecture.
an example of his environmental work is his massive
red cube designed for the marine midland bank
building, new york city.

as a landscape architect, noguchi created a large
number of playgrounds, parks and gardens.
in the 1950s, he designed gardens for keio university
in tokyo, lever house in new york and unesco’s
headquarters in paris.
his 1960s projects include a sculpture garden for the
national museum in jerusalem and gardens surrounding
the connecticut general life insurance building designed
by skidmore, owings and merrill.
his entrance for the new museum of modern art,
tokyo, was completed in 1969.

during the 1980s, noguchi realized more public projects
and created his own museum in long island, new york,
where his large and varied collection of work is
exhibited today.
noguchi died in new york city in 1988.

the isamu noguchi foundation, inc. is dedicated to
maintaining and promoting the artistic legacy of
sculptor noguchi. the foundation operates the isamu
noguchi garden museum;
manages an extensive collection of noguchi sculpture,
models, furniture and drawings;
maintains records of the work of isamu noguchi
and an archive of correspondence, manuscripts and
photographs; organizes exhibitions of the work of
isamu noguchi; loans noguchi works to museums
and special exhibitions; monitors the condition of
noguchi’s works worldwide; encourages research and
publication on the life and work of isamu noguchi;
and manages the production and sale of noguchi’s
akari light sculptures.


http://www.designboom.com/portrait/noguchi/bio.html

Any work of architecture that has with it some discussion, some polemic, I think is good. It shows that people are interested, people are involved

October 12, 2008

Happy Birthday Richard Meier

Richard Meier was born in Newark, New Jersey in 1934. Richard Meier graduated from Cornell University in 1957 then worked with a series of architects, including Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill and Marcel Breuer. Richard Meier established his own practice in 1963.
His practice has included housing and private residences, museums, high-tech and medical facilities, commercial buildings and such major civic commissions as courthouses and city halls in the United States and Europe: Among his most well-known projects are the High Museum in Atlanta; the Frankfurt Museum for Decorative Arts In Germany; Canal+ Television Headquarters in Paris; the Hartford Seminary In Connecticut; the Atheneun in New Harmony, Indiana, and the Bronx Developmental Center in New York. All of these have received National Honor Awards from the American Institute of Architects (AIA).

In 1984, Mr. Richard Meier was awarded the Pritzker Architecture Prize, considered the field’s highest honor and often equated with the Nobel Prize. In the same year, Mr. Richard Meier was selected architect for the prestigious commission to design the new $1 billion Getty Center in Los Angeles, California.

Richard Meier has maintained a specific and unalterable attitude toward the design of buildings from the moment Richard Meier first entered architecture. Although his later projects show a definite refinement from his earlier projects, Richard Meier clearly authored both based on the same design concepts. With admirable consistency and dedication, Richard Meier has ignored the fashion trends of modern architecture and maintained his own design philosophy. Richard Meier has created a series of striking, but related designs. Richard Meier usually designs white Neo-Corbusian forms with enameled panels and glass. These structure usually play with the linear relationships of ramps and handrails. Although all have a similar look, Richard Meier manages to generate endless variations on his singular theme.

Richard Meier, the main figure in the “New York Five”, which by the second half of the 1960′s, included some of the leaders of the Post-Modern movement – Peter Eisenman, John Hejduk, Michael Graves and Charles Gwathmey, creates designs with a unified theme based on neo-modern beliefs in purist architecture. Richard Meier ‘s white sculptural pieces have created a new vocabulary of design for the 1980s.

The three of the most significant concepts of Richard Meier ‘s work are Light, Color and Place. His architecture shows how plain geometry, layered definition of spaces and effects of light and shade, allow Richard Meier to create clear and comprehensible spaces. The main issue Richard Meier is focusing on as an architect, is what Richard Meier termed placeness: “What is it that makes a space a place.” According to Richard Meier there are ten factors that connect a building to its environment, one or more of which must be present for a space to be a place: factors which cause the Mode of Being; those which emphasize the presence of the building as an independent object; factors which emphasize the presence of the building in its given environment; those which encourage fantasy and play; factors which encourage ecstatic exuberance; factors which preserve a sense of mystery and adventure; ingredients which connect us to reality; those which link the building to its past; facilitate spontaneous exchanges; and affirm people’s identity.

On the grounds of such theoretical definitons, it is interesting to see how space is transformed in Richard Meier ‘s architecture, from a rational play of forms into transcendental, quintessential forms framed by and interlaced in landscape. Especially in view of such declarations as: “Places are goals or foci where we experience the meaningful events of our existence, but there are also points of departure from which we orient ourselves and take possession of the environment. A place is something that evokes a notion of permanence and stability in us.”

The Atheneum (1975-1979) is a Tourist and Information Center situated on the banks of the Wabash River on the outskirts of the historic city of New Harmony. Setting the three-story building diagonally to the river, gives the project a dynamic dimension asa departure point for the tour path. Fragments of the city framed in the windows of the exhibit space prepare the visitor for a general view seen from the roof gallery. Here, “sense of place” is achieved through a series of visual, physical or psychological experiences which gradually establish a relationship to the past, represented by the historic city. Porcelain panels, clear glass, constant play of wall thickness, the breadth of vistas, the height of the columns and openings which interconnect with one another, all create dynamic facades that change according to the interior and exterior experience of the building.

Hartford Seminary of Theology (1978-1981) in Connecticut is a relatively small building (3,000 sqm.), which includes all the campus functions originally distributed in various buildings: the church, Congress Hall, library, bookshop, classrooms, and administration. A building of spirituality, the integral values and characteristics of space and light are radiated without any false pretensions. As a religious introversive institution that also serves the community, the building is based on a fine separation between public and private space. The filtered light, clean forms and expressionist textures successfully contribute to endow a rather sacred atmosphere without disturbing the virtue of openness.

His white is never white since it is subject to constant change through the forces of nature: the sky, the weather, the vegetation, the clouds and, of course – the light. This is clearly portrayed in The High Museum of Art in Atlanta (1980-1983) – a project that has become Richard Meier ‘s hallmark in many respects – a classical manifestation of his profound allegiance to whiteness. A combination of asymmetrical compositions of various types of planes and masses based on transparent straight and curvilinear walls, form the exterior of the building. Its entrance atrium at the corner of one of the four clusters presents a tribute and memorandum to the Guggenheim museum. Yet unlike the original, in this museum a majestic ramp only provides access between the various levels, while the atrium walls include windows to allow for a view of the city brinqinq in natural light.

Spatial clarity and visual diversity create a clear hierarchy of spaces, giving the building a “classical” expression, in spite of its asymmetrical appearance. The monastic whiteness of the interior space maintains the minimalist presence of architecture in relationship to the exhibits, while the natural light causes a constantly changing interior.

The Museum for the Decorative Arts in Frankfurt (1979-1985) is another manifestation of Richard Meier ‘s sense of historic order. Here, Richard Meier converts the plan of a 19th century Villa Melzer into a public complex, reinforcing the connection with the unique historical context. Composed of two tilted grids, the plan balances the deviations of the original building in relation to the river. The choice of Richard Meier ‘s light and white scheme corresponds to the open character of space. Yet, unlike the use of light in Classical or Renaissance architecture, in this building the spiritual illuminating scheme of a Baroque character is adopted. Here again, illumination is not just perceived as a visual occurrence, but rather as an emotional and even spiritual phenomenon. Light and color do not just draw out the structural and functional properties of the building, but also call out an aesthetic response, creating a unique atmosphere, which generates positive emotions. Thus, the continuous dialogue between the building, its environment and its essential functionalism, acquires a didactic meaning.

Situated on a hill above Santa Monica, Los Angeles, the Paul Getty Center (1984-1997) is the most comprehensive work of Richard Meier, yet nonetheless a proof of the final decline of Post-Modernism. However, some would say that this ostentatious project recalls the timeless beauty of sixteenth century Italian villas and gardens, perhaps that of Hadrian’s Villa at Tivoli. The campus consists of six principal buildings that are situated on two natural ridges incorporated into the site’s topography. The tilting of the plan (that has tumed into Richard Meier ‘s light motive) is based here on the relationship between the route of the freeway to San Diego and the topographic orientation of the site.

Richard Meier ‘s choice of materials in this complex is quite untypical. Although the structure is clear and decipherable, it is complex in plan and overly rich in texture. The play of volumes and proportions, manifested in the cascade of terraces and balconies, flow of ramps, galleries, arcades and staircases, weave the interplay of nature and architecture, yet reflects affinity to Classical architecture.

Thus, one may conclude that the Getty Center portrays three key points that characterize good architecture: interaction, consistency and unity. Architectural quality is experienced when “architecture can be used for a long span of time, when it ages beautifully, is original, comprehensible and simple to use”.


http://architect.architecture.sk/richard-meier-architect/richard-meier-architect.php

The role of art in society differs for every artist.

October 5, 2008

Happy Birthday Maya Lin

Maya Ying Lin was born on October 5, 1959, in Athens, Ohio, a manufacturing and agricultural town seventy-five miles southeast of Columbus. Athens is also the home of Ohio University, where Lin’s mother, Julia Chang Lin, a poet, was a literature professor. Her late father, Henry Huan Lin, was a ceramicist (a person with expertise in ceramics). The couple came to America from China in the 1940s, leaving behind a prominent family that had included a well-known lawyer and an architect. Lin’s family in America includes her mother and an older brother, Tan, who, is a poet like his mother.

During her childhood, Maya Lin found it easy to keep herself entertained, whether by reading or by building miniature towns. Maya loved to hike and bird watch as a child. She also enjoyed reading and working in her father’s ceramics studio. From an early age she excelled in mathematics, which led her toward a career in architecture. While in high school Lin took college level courses and worked at McDonalds. She considered herself a typical mid-westerner, in that she grew up with little sense of ethnic identity. She admits, however, to having been somewhat “nerdy,” since she never dated nor wore make-up and found it enjoyable to be constantly thinking and solving problems.
After graduating from high school, Lin enrolled at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, to study architecture. Her best-known work, the design for the Vietnam Veterans’ Memorial in Washington, D.C., grew out of a class project during her senior year. In 1981 her entry was chosen out of a field of 1,421 unlabelled submissions in a design competition that was open to all Americans, not just professional architects. Lin was just twenty-one years old at the time.

In keeping with the competition criteria of sensitivity to the nearby Lincoln Memorial and Washington Monument, the inclusion of the names of all the dead and missing of the war, and the avoidance of political statements about the war, Lin’s design was simple. She proposed two two-hundred-foot-long polished black granite walls, which dipped ten feet below grade to meet at an obtuse (greater than 90 degrees) angle of 130 degrees. The two arms were to point towards the Lincoln Memorial and Washington Monument, and they were to be inscribed with the names of the approximately fifty-eight thousand men and women killed or missing in Vietnam. These names were to be listed chronologically, according to the dates killed or reported missing, instead of alphabetically, so that they would read, in Lin’s words, “like an epic Greek poem.” The memorial was dedicated in November of 1982.

After the Vietnam Memorial project, Lin returned to Yale for a master’s degree. Her later projects included designs for a Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, stage set; a corporate logo; an outdoor gathering place at Juniata College in Huntington, Pennsylvania; a park near the Charlotte, North Carolina, coliseum; and a ceiling for the Long Island Railroad section of Pennsylvania Station. In addition, her lead and glass sculptures have been exhibited at New York’s Sidney Janis Gallery.

Maya Lin’s second nationally recognized project was the design of the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Alabama, commissioned by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Lin’s conception of the memorial grew out of her admiration of a line in Martin Luther King’s (1929–1968) “I have a dream” speech, which proclaims that the struggle for civil rights (the basic rights given to U.S. citizens of all races) will not be complete “until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.” Water, along with this key phrase from the King years, became her theme. King’s words stand out boldly on a convex (curved or bowed out), water-covered wall, which overlooks an inverted cone-shaped table with an off-center base. The surface of this table is inscribed with the names of forty people who died in the struggle for civil rights between 1955 and 1968, as well as with landmark events of the period. This element is also bathed in a film of moving water, which serves to involve the viewer sensually through sound, touch, and the sight of his or her reflection, while the words engage the intellect.

The two geometric elements of the Civil Rights Memorial are not completely without symbolic meaning. Lin has noted that the asymmetrical, or uneven, cone-shaped table looks different from every angle, a quality which implies equality without sameness—an appropriate view in a memorial to civil rights. Lin says this memorial will be her last, and notes that she began and ended the 1980s with memorial projects. She feels fortunate and satisfied to have had the opportunity.

In 1993 Lin created a sculptural landscape work called Groundswell at Ohio State University—a three level garden of crushed green glass. The glass used in the effort reveal Lin’s environmentalist nature. Lin remains an active sculptor and architect. In 1997 she began work on a twenty-thousand-square-foot recycling plant. Lin currently lives in Vermont. She stays out of the public eye as much as possible. Still, so much of her work is so public and so creative that publicity is hard to avoid. Maya Lin has published several books and is currently working on different architectural and sculptural projects.


http://www.notablebiographies.com/Ki-Lo/Lin-Maya.html


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