GENERAL DESCRIPTION
A graduate of the architecture program at the University of Southern California and a student of city planning at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, Frank O. Gehry established his own architecture practice in Los Angeles in 1962. In 1969, he created his first designs for mass-produced furniture, the Easy Edges series (later revised as the more exclusive, limited production Experimental Edges series), which elevated a prosaic material — laminated cardboard — into a refined but ostensibly low-cost object. By the 1980s, Gehry's affinity for the inventive use of materials, already evident in his architectural work, resulted in the Bent Wood Furniture Collection for Knoll International. Chairs of "woven" strips of maple — inspired both from hockey sticks and wooden apple crates — marked his first foray into resilient furniture which interacted with the sitter and offered a reasonably lightweight, yet strong frame.
In early 2004, his year-long collaboration with Emeco resulted in the Superlight, a design which debuted at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan. In the same year, the Superlight received a Good Design Award from the Chicago Athenaeum and examples of the chair entered the collections of Corcoran Gallery and the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich.
Gehry is acclaimed for his designs for over 30 built structures including the Walt Disney Concert Hall, the Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao, and the Vitra Design Museum, all of which exhibit his highly expressive style and fervent engagement with new technology. Gehry has received numerous prestigious awards, including the Pritzker Prize for Architecture in 1989.
Excerpt from
Kevin W. Tucker, DMA unpublished material [2005.57], 2005.
NOTES
- DMA unpublished material: Kevin W. Tucker, The Margo B. Perot Curator of Decorative Arts and Deisgin, DMA Acquisition justification, (2005.57)
- This audio asset is a really long lecture that is divided into two UMOs in Piction
ASSOCIATED CONTENT CHUNKS (list applicable note links)
AUDIO ASSETS
Reinventing the Museum: The Art of Museum Architecture, a lecture in the DMA's Horchow Auditorium in 1999 featuring architect Frank Gehry. 13314036: UMO, 13313868: UMO
VIDEO ASSETS
IMAGE ASSETS
265936446: UMO. [Caption] Frank Gehry, recipient of the 2007 Henry C. Turner Prize at the National Building Museum, giving a presentation about how the work of Gehry Partners and Gehry Technologies has driven construction innovation. Source: Author National Building Museum; photo by Paul Morigi, Wikimedia Commons, accessed July 15, 2016.
WEB RESOURCES
Gehry Partners, LLP~Click here to see the work of Frank Gehry's architectural firm.
ARCHIVAL RESOURCES (digitized/non-digitized)
FUN FACTS
TEACHING IDEAS
RULES
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General Description
A graduate of the architecture program at the University of Southern California and a student of city planning at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, Frank O. Gehry established his own architecture practice in Los Angeles in 1962. In 1969, he created his first designs for mass-produced furniture, the Easy Edges series (later revised as the more exclusive, limited production Experimental Edges series), which elevated a prosaic material — laminated cardboard — into a refined but ostensibly low-cost object. By the 1980s, Gehry's affinity for the inventive use of materials, already evident in his architectural work, resulted in the Bent Wood Furniture Collection for Knoll International. Chairs of "woven" strips of maple — inspired both from hockey sticks and wooden apple crates — marked his first foray into resilient furniture which interacted with the sitter and offered a reasonably lightweight, yet strong frame.
In early 2004, his year-long collaboration with Emeco resulted in the Superlight, a design which debuted at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan. In the same year, the Superlight received a Good Design Award from the Chicago Athenaeum and examples of the chair entered the collections of Corcoran Gallery and the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich.
Gehry is acclaimed for his designs for over 30 built structures including the Walt Disney Concert Hall, the Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao, and the Vitra Design Museum, all of which exhibit his highly expressive style and fervent engagement with new technology. Gehry has received numerous prestigious awards, including the Pritzker Prize for Architecture in 1989.
Excerpt from
Kevin W. Tucker, DMA unpublished material [2005.57], 2005.
Fun Facts
Archival Resources
(digitized/non-digitized)
Web Resources
Gehry Partners, LLP~Click here to see the work of Frank Gehry's architectural firm.
Notes
- DMA unpublished material: Kevin W. Tucker, The Margo B. Perot Curator of Decorative Arts and Deisgin, DMA Acquisition justification, (2005.57)
- This audio asset is a really long lecture that is divided into two UMOs in Piction
rules
Apply To
Constituents
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Equals
989
source file
artists_and_designers-0063.xml.nores