Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry
Buildings
Frank Owen Gehry, CC (born Frank Owen Goldberg; February 28, 1929)[1] is
a Canadian-American Pritzker Prize-winning architect based in Los Angeles.
His buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions. His
works are cited as being among the most important works of contemporary
architecture in the 2010 World Architecture Survey, which ledVanity Fair to label him
as "the most important architect of our age". [2]
Gehry's best-known works include the titanium-covered Guggenheim
Museum in Bilbao, Spain; MIT Ray and Maria Stata Center in Cambridge,
Massachusetts; Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown Los Angeles;Experience
Contents
[hide]
1 Personal life
2 Architectural style
o 2.1 Criticism
o 2.2 Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial
4 Software development
5 Works
7 Honorary doctorates
8 See also
9 Notes
10 References
11 Further reading
12 External links
Personal life[edit]
Gehry was born Frank Owen Goldberg[1] on February 28, 1929, in Toronto, Ontario to
parents, Irwin and Thelma (ne Thelma Caplan) Goldberg. [4] His parents were Polish
Jews.[5] A creative child, he was encouraged by his grandmother, Mrs. Caplan, with
whom he would build little cities out of scraps of wood. [6] With these scraps from her
husband's hardware store, she entertained him for hours, building imaginary houses
and futuristic cities on the living room floor.[4] His use of corrugated steel, chain link
fencing, unpainted plywood and other utilitarian or "everyday" materials was partly
inspired by spending Saturday mornings at his grandfather's hardware store. He would
spend time drawing with his father and his mother introduced him to the world of art.
"So the creative genes were there", Gehry says. "But my mother thought I was a
dreamer, I wasn't gonna amount to anything. It was my father who thought I was just
reticent to do things. He would push me." [7]
He was given the Hebrew name "Ephraim" by his grandfather but only used it at
his bar mitzvah.[1]
In 1947 Gehry moved to California, got a job driving a delivery truck, and studied
at Los Angeles City College, eventually to graduate from the University of Southern
California's School of Architecture. According to Gehry: I was a truck driver in L.A.,
going to City College, and I tried radio announcing, which I wasn't very good at. I
tried chemical engineering, which I wasn't very good at and didn't like, and then I
remembered. You know, somehow I just started racking my brain about, "What do I
like?" Where was I? What made me excited? And I remembered art, that I loved going
to museums and I loved looking at paintings, loved listening to music. Those things
came from my mother, who took me to concerts and museums. I remembered
Grandma and the blocks, and just on a hunch, I tried some architecture classes. [8] In
1952 he married Anita Snyder, and in 1956 he changed his name to Frank O. Gehry at
her suggestion, in part because of the anti-semitism he had experienced as a child and
as an undergraduate at USC. Gehry graduated at the top of his class with a Bachelor of
Architecture degree from USC in 1954. Afterwards, he spent time away from the field
of architecture in numerous other jobs, including service in the United States Army. In
the fall of 1956, he moved his family to Cambridge, where he studied city planning at
the Harvard Graduate School of Design. He left before completing the program,
disheartened and underwhelmed. Gehry's left-wing ideas about socially responsible
architecture were under-realized, and the final straw occurred when he sat in on a
discussion of one professor's "secret project in progress" - a palace that he was
designing for right-wing Cuban Dictator Fulgencio Batista (1901-1973). [4] In 1966 he
and Snyder divorced. In 1975 he married Panamanian Berta Isabel Aguilera, his
current wife. He has two daughters from his first marriage, and two sons from his
second marriage.
Having grown up in Canada, Gehry is a huge fan of ice hockey. He began a hockey
league in his office, FOG (which stands for Frank Owen Gehry), though he no longer
plays with them.[citation needed] In 2004, he designed the trophy for the World Cup of
Hockey.[citation needed] Gehry holds dual citizenship in Canada and the United States. He
lives in Santa Monica, California, and continues to practice out of Los Angeles.
Architectural style[edit]
The tower at 8 Spruce Street in lower Manhattan which was completed in February
2011 has a stainless steel and glass exterior and is 76 stories high.
Much of Gehry's work falls within the style of Deconstructivism, which is often
referred to as post-structuralist in nature for its ability to go beyond current modalities
of structural definition. In architecture, its application tends to depart
from modernism in its inherent criticism of culturally inherited givens such as societal
goals and functional necessity. Because of this, unlike early modernist structures,
Deconstructivist structures are not required to reflect specific social or universal ideas,
such as speed or universality of form, and they do not reflect a belief that form
follows function. Gehry's own Santa Monica residence is a commonly cited example
of deconstructivist architecture, as it was so drastically divorced from its original
context, and in such a manner as to subvert its original spatial intention.
[13]
Gehry is very much inspired by fish. Not only do they appear in his buildings, he
created a line of jewelry, household items, and sculptures based on this motif. "It was
by accident I got into the fish image", claimed Gehry. One thing that sparked his
interest in fish was the fact that his colleagues are recreating Greek temples. He said,
"Three hundred million years before man was fish....if you gotta go back, and you're
insecure about going forward...go back three hundred million years ago. Why are you
stopping at the Greeks? So I started drawing fish in my sketchbook, and then I started
to realize that there was something in it." [27]
Standing Glass Fish is just one of many works featuring fish which Gehry has created.
The gigantic fish is made of glass plates and silicone, with the internal supporting
structure of wood and steel clearly visible. It soars above a reflecting pool in a glass
building built especially for it, in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden. Another huge
Gehry fish sculpture, built in 1992, is located in front of the Port Olmpic,
in Barcelona, Spain, and another one dominates a public garden in front of the
Fishdance Restaurant in Kobe, Japan.
In addition to architecture, Gehry has made a line of furniture, jewelry for Tiffany &
Co., various household items, sculptures, and even a glass bottle for Wyborowa
Vodka. His first line of furniture, produced from 1969 to 1973, was called "Easy
Edges", constructed out of cardboard. Another line of furniture released in the spring
of 1992 is "Bentwood Furniture". Each piece is named after a different hockey term.
He was first introduced to making furniture in 1954 while serving in the U.S. Army,
where he designed furniture for the enlisted soldiers. Gehry claims that making
furniture is his "quick fix".[28]
Software development[edit]
Gehry's firm was responsible for innovation in architectural software. [29] His firm spun
off another firm called Gehry Technologies which developed Digital Project.
Works[edit]
Main article: List of works by Frank Gehry
Honorary doctorates[edit]
nk O. Gehry, in full Frank Owen Gehry, original name Ephraim Owen Goldberg (born February 28,
1929, Toronto, Ontario, Canada), Canadian American architect and designer whose original,
sculptural, often audacious work won him worldwide renown.
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Gehrys family immigrated to Los Angeles in 1947. He studied architecture at the University of
SouthernCalifornia (194951; 1954) and city planning at Harvard University (195657). After working
for several architectural firms, he established his own company, Frank O. Gehry & Associates, in
1962 and established its successor, Gehry Partners, in 2002.
Reacting, like many of his contemporaries, against the cold and often formulaic Modernist buildings
that had begun to dot many cityscapes, Gehry began to experiment with unusual expressive devices
and to search for a personal vocabulary. In his early work he built unique, quirky structures that
emphasized human scale and contextual integrity. His early experiments are perhaps best embodied
by the renovations he made to his own home (1978, 199194) in Santa Monica, California. Gehry
essentially stripped the two-story home down to its frame and then built a chain-link and corrugatedsteel frame around it, complete with asymmetrical protrusions of steel rod and glass. Gehry made
the traditional bungalowand the architectural norms it embodiedappear to have exploded wide
open. He continued those design experiments in two popular lines of corrugated cardboard furniture,
Easy Edges (196973) and Experimental Edges (197982). Gehrys ability to undermine the
viewers expectations of traditional materials and forms led him to be grouped with
the deconstructivistmovement in architecture, although his play upon architectural tradition also
caused him to be linked to postmodernism.
Treating each new commission as a sculptural object, a spatial container, a space with light and air,
Gehry was rewarded with commissions the world over throughout the 1980s and 90s. These works
possessed the deconstructed quality of his Santa Monica home but began to display a pristine
grandeur that suited his increasingly public projects. Notable structures from the period include the
Vitra Furniture Museum and Factory (1987) in Weil am Rhein, Germany; the American Center
(198894) in Paris; and the Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum (199093) at the University of
Minnesota inMinneapolis.
Gehrys reputation soared in the late 1990s. By that time Gehrys trademark style had become
buildings that resemble undulating free-form sculpture. This form arguably reached its zenith in
his Guggenheim Museum (199197) in Bilbao, Spain. In that structure Gehry combined curvaceous
titanium forms with interconnecting limestone masses to create a sculptural feat of engineering. He
further explored those concerns in the Experience Music Project (19952000) in Seattle.
Constructed of a fabricated steel frame wrapped in colourful sheet metal, the structure was,
according to Gehry, modeled on the shape of a guitarparticularly, a smashed electric guitar. As
with the Guggenheim structure, he employed cutting-edge computer technology to uncover the
engineering solutions that could bring his sculptural sketches to life. In his 2008 renovation of the Art
Museum of Ontario in his hometown, Gehry retained the original building (1918) but removed an
artistically unsuccessful entryway that had been added in the 1990s. Although the
updated museum shows many characteristic Gehry touches, one critic called it one of Mr. Gehrys
most gentle and self-possessed designs.
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Toronto(Ontario, Canada)
Gehry became known for his work on music venues. The Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles
was designed before the Bilbao museum but was completed in 2003, to great acclaim. The Jay
Pritzker Pavilion in Chicagos Millennium Park was completed in 2004. Gehry also built a performing
arts centre (19972003) for Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, and designed the
New World Center (completed 2011) for the New World Symphony orchestral academy in Miami
Beach, Florida. As the 21st century continued, Gehry continued to receive numerous large-scale
commissions.
Although critical opinion is sometimes divided over his radical structures, Gehrys work made
architecture popular and talked-about in a manner not seen in the United States since Frank Lloyd
Wright. Among Gehrys many awards are the Pritzker Architecture Prize (1989), the National Medal
of the Arts (1998), and the American Institute of Architects Gold Medal (1999).
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