GCB Kunstlexikon
FRANK GEHRY
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KUNSTWERKE | BAUWERKE FRANK GEHRY
A Tribute to Frank Gehry | The Getty | Architect Frank Gehry is the third recipient of the Getty Medal, which recognizes living individuals from all over the world for their leadership in the fields in which the Getty works. Gehry has designed iconic buildings in North America, Europe and Asia, including the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain; the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, California; the Jay Pritzker Pavilion and BP Bridge in Chicago, Illinois; Eight Spruce Street Residential Tower in New York City; and Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris, France | YouTube
VIDEO | FILM FRANK GEHRY
Creating Feeling with Frank Gehry | NOWNESS | It is impossible to miss the curving and sinuous structure located in Paris’s 16th arrondissement, which has the bearing of a ship built of glass. This building is the Fondation Louis Vuitton; the museum and cultural centre designed by modern architecture’s greatest transformer of shapes, Frank Gehry—the Pritzker prize-winning designer whose buildings have earned him the status of a household name. In this heartfelt portrait of both the architect and the building he has created, filmmaker Emile Rafael lets the man and one of his most unique structures speak for themselves. Mounted by arching glass sails, the building—whose initial concept was that of a fish—is depicted from its smallest details to its shimmering external envelope. Seeming to sail on the lawns of the Bois de Boulogne, the Fondation is revealed as a building in motion, continually slipping and flowing like the creature on which it is based. It draws parallels with Gehry’s other great monuments to culture; the Bilbao Museum, the Guggenheim, and the Walt Disney Concert Hall, where exciting shapes elevate the works of art they host and contain. Speaking about his meditative portrait of the great shape-shifter of modern architecture, Rafael explains: „Gehry’s presence and energy was enough to fill the entire building. We spoke at great length about his love for art in all its guises, including how architecture is often overlooked as an art form in itself. With the film, my job was to try and capture what we had spoken about visually—to film the building with the same poetry and sense of movement and expression that Gehry had described and so aspired to in designing it.“ | YouTube
How I Got Started | Frank Gehry I Fortune Magazine | The legendary architect talks about his beginnings in ceramics, his love for music, and his next project | YouTube
Looking back at Frank Gehry’s building-bending feats | PBS NewsHours
Frank Gehry, the most famous architect today, has brought art and flair to monumental designs around the world. Now he’s being honored in his longtime hometown with a retrospective exhibit at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art | Jeffrey Brown reports | YouTube
Frank Gehry Interview | Jump Into the Unknown | Louisiana Channel |
Frank Gehry | born 1929 | is recognized as one of the most important architects of our time, and his spectacular buildings – including the iconic Guggenheim Museum Bilbao and Walt Disney Concert Hall – have won him worldwide renown. Watch the Canadian-American architect talk about his life, architecture and the world today in this in-depth video recorded at his studio in Los Angeles. When a teacher enrolled the young Gehry in a night-class at architecture school, it became the beginning of a long career: “It was all by chance.” At that time, American architects – including Frank Lloyd Wright – were inspired by Japanese architecture, and Gehry feels that this early influence has stayed with him ever since, not least when he built the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles: “You’d think Disney Hall was a Japanese temple.” “That’s what an architect should do – be able to have an emotional response to their work that lasts through the centuries.” If you want to be an architect, Gehry argues, first of all, you’ve got to learn the craft, but also “your personal spirit has to evolve into the language that you create.” Everyone will ultimately produce something different, personal and completely unique – like a signature – and it’s important to be brave enough to “take the chance to jump off into the unknown.” Architecture is about feelings, and the best architects, or artists, are themselves and no one else. In continuation of this, Gehry believes that architecture is about the singularity of the building as well as being part of the surroundings, and he finds it aggravating that all buildings in cities nowadays look the same: “Downtown Los Angeles now looks like Downtown Seoul, Korea.” Frank Gehry (b. 1929) is a Canadian-born American architect, who is known for his trademark sculptural style. Although critical opinion is sometimes divided over his radical, whimsical structures, Gehry’s work made architecture popular in a way not seen in the U.S. since Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959). A number of Gehry’s buildings have become world-renowned attractions and have been cited as being among the most important works of contemporary architecture in the 2010 World Architecture Survey, which later led Vanity Fair to label him as “the most important architect of our age.” Among his best-known buildings are Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao (which fellow architect Philip Johnson once dubbed “the greatest building of our time”), Weisman Art Museum in Minneapolis, Neuer Zollhof in Dusseldorf, Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, Museum of Pop Culture in Seattle, Dancing House in Prague, Biomuseo in Panama City, and Cinémathèque Francaise in Paris. Furthermore, his private residence in Santa Monica is the award-winning ‘Gehry House’. Gehry is the recipient of multiple prestigious awards including the Pritzker Architecture Prize (1989), the Praemium Imperiale (1992), National Medal of Arts (1998), AIA Gold Medal (1999), Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award for Lifetime Achievement (2000), Prince of Asturias Award (2014), J. Paul Getty Medal (2015) and the Presidential Medal of Freedom (2016) | Frank Gehry was interviewed by Marc-Christoph Wagner at his studio in Santa Monica, Los Angeles in November 2018 | Camera Rasmus Quistgaard | Produced by Marc-Christoph Wagner | Edited by Roxanne Bagheshirin Lærkesen | Cover photo Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles by Frank Gehry | Copyright Louisiana Channel | Louisiana Museum of Modern Art | 2019 | Supported by Dreyers Fond | YouTube
Artist in Conversation | Frank Gehry | Los Angeles County Museum of Art | https://www.lacma.org/ | The Frank Gehry exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art presents a comprehensive examination of the architect’s extraordinary body of work from the early 1960s—he established his firm in Los Angeles in 1962—to the present, featuring over 200 drawings, many of which have never been seen publicly, and 65 models that illuminate the evolution of Gehry’s thinking. In this video, Gehry talks about his path as an architect, the people who influenced him, and concepts he resonates with | YouTube
Frank Gehry | Full Interview | On Ethics, Architecture and much more | The Ethics Incubator | The world renowned Architect Frank Gehry has been called “the greatest architect we have today” by the acclaimed architect Philip Johnson. His career has spanned more than five decades designing architectural masterpieces in over six countries on three continents. Mr. Gehry’s work includes the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, California, and the Louis Vuitton Foundation’s new center in the Bois de Boulogne outside of Paris, France. Mr. Gehry founded his architecture firm in 1962. More recently, he established Gehry Partners, LLP in 2001. He personally designs every project at the firm. He has won numerous international awards, including the coveted Pritzker Prize in 1989, the RIBA (Royal Institute of British Architects) Award in 2000, and the Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service in 2004. He was the first architect ever to receive the Harvard Arts Medal in 2016. In 2016, President Barack Obama honored Frank Gehry with the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his career achievements. Mr. Gehry has also taught at Yale University. Mr. Gehry explores the role of the architect in creating aesthetic, functional and socially present designs that respect their context, remain artistically and societally important over time, and inspire the highest ethical standards. Mr. Gehry shares his experiences in navigating some of today’s most challenging cultural, political, and social environments. He offers perspective on his own guiding moral principles and running an ethical business—and what really matters in life. He invites us to understand how his designs remain at the cutting edge of creativity, technology, and intellectual rigor | YouTube
Frank Gehry on Cones, Domes and Messiness | The New York Times |
The architect Frank Gehry talks about his asymmetrical design for the planned 450,000-square-foot Guggenheim Abu Dhabi and his inspiration for the museum’s huge, cooling cones | Produced by Channon Hodge | YouTube
BIOGRAFIE FRANK GEHRY
GEBURTSJAHR | GEBURTSORT | TODESJAHR | STERBEORT
AUSBILDUNG FRANK GEHRY
LEHRTÄTIGKEIT FRANK GEHRY
MITGLIEDSCHAFTEN FRANK GEHRY
AUSZEICHNUNGEN FRANK GEHRY
SAMMLUNGEN FRANK GEHRY
AUSSTELLUNGEN FRANK GEHRY
EINZELAUSSTELLUNGEN
GRUPPENAUSSTELLUNGEN
PROJEKTE | SYMPOSIEN
WERKBESCHREIBUNG FRANK GEHRY
SCHWERPUNKTE | MEDIEN
STIL
THEMEN | MOTIVE | WERKE
DEFINITION | BESCHREIBUNG | MERKMALE
STICHWORTE FRANK GEHRY
ZITATE FRANK GEHRY
TEXT | BIBLIOGRAPHIE FRANK GEHRY
LINKS FRANK GEHRY
HOMEPAGE FRANK GEHRY
FRANK GEHRY
Beitrag in Bearbeitung!
KUNSTWERKE | BAUWERKE FRANK GEHRY
A Tribute to Frank Gehry | The Getty | Architect Frank Gehry is the third recipient of the Getty Medal, which recognizes living individuals from all over the world for their leadership in the fields in which the Getty works. Gehry has designed iconic buildings in North America, Europe and Asia, including the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain; the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, California; the Jay Pritzker Pavilion and BP Bridge in Chicago, Illinois; Eight Spruce Street Residential Tower in New York City; and Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris, France | YouTube
VIDEO | FILM FRANK GEHRY
Creating Feeling with Frank Gehry | NOWNESS | It is impossible to miss the curving and sinuous structure located in Paris’s 16th arrondissement, which has the bearing of a ship built of glass. This building is the Fondation Louis Vuitton; the museum and cultural centre designed by modern architecture’s greatest transformer of shapes, Frank Gehry—the Pritzker prize-winning designer whose buildings have earned him the status of a household name. In this heartfelt portrait of both the architect and the building he has created, filmmaker Emile Rafael lets the man and one of his most unique structures speak for themselves. Mounted by arching glass sails, the building—whose initial concept was that of a fish—is depicted from its smallest details to its shimmering external envelope. Seeming to sail on the lawns of the Bois de Boulogne, the Fondation is revealed as a building in motion, continually slipping and flowing like the creature on which it is based. It draws parallels with Gehry’s other great monuments to culture; the Bilbao Museum, the Guggenheim, and the Walt Disney Concert Hall, where exciting shapes elevate the works of art they host and contain. Speaking about his meditative portrait of the great shape-shifter of modern architecture, Rafael explains: „Gehry’s presence and energy was enough to fill the entire building. We spoke at great length about his love for art in all its guises, including how architecture is often overlooked as an art form in itself. With the film, my job was to try and capture what we had spoken about visually—to film the building with the same poetry and sense of movement and expression that Gehry had described and so aspired to in designing it.“ | YouTube
How I Got Started | Frank Gehry I Fortune Magazine | The legendary architect talks about his beginnings in ceramics, his love for music, and his next project | YouTube
Looking back at Frank Gehry’s building-bending feats | PBS NewsHours
Frank Gehry, the most famous architect today, has brought art and flair to monumental designs around the world. Now he’s being honored in his longtime hometown with a retrospective exhibit at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art | Jeffrey Brown reports | YouTube
Frank Gehry Interview | Jump Into the Unknown | Louisiana Channel |
Frank Gehry | born 1929 | is recognized as one of the most important architects of our time, and his spectacular buildings – including the iconic Guggenheim Museum Bilbao and Walt Disney Concert Hall – have won him worldwide renown. Watch the Canadian-American architect talk about his life, architecture and the world today in this in-depth video recorded at his studio in Los Angeles. When a teacher enrolled the young Gehry in a night-class at architecture school, it became the beginning of a long career: “It was all by chance.” At that time, American architects – including Frank Lloyd Wright – were inspired by Japanese architecture, and Gehry feels that this early influence has stayed with him ever since, not least when he built the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles: “You’d think Disney Hall was a Japanese temple.” “That’s what an architect should do – be able to have an emotional response to their work that lasts through the centuries.” If you want to be an architect, Gehry argues, first of all, you’ve got to learn the craft, but also “your personal spirit has to evolve into the language that you create.” Everyone will ultimately produce something different, personal and completely unique – like a signature – and it’s important to be brave enough to “take the chance to jump off into the unknown.” Architecture is about feelings, and the best architects, or artists, are themselves and no one else. In continuation of this, Gehry believes that architecture is about the singularity of the building as well as being part of the surroundings, and he finds it aggravating that all buildings in cities nowadays look the same: “Downtown Los Angeles now looks like Downtown Seoul, Korea.” Frank Gehry (b. 1929) is a Canadian-born American architect, who is known for his trademark sculptural style. Although critical opinion is sometimes divided over his radical, whimsical structures, Gehry’s work made architecture popular in a way not seen in the U.S. since Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959). A number of Gehry’s buildings have become world-renowned attractions and have been cited as being among the most important works of contemporary architecture in the 2010 World Architecture Survey, which later led Vanity Fair to label him as “the most important architect of our age.” Among his best-known buildings are Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao (which fellow architect Philip Johnson once dubbed “the greatest building of our time”), Weisman Art Museum in Minneapolis, Neuer Zollhof in Dusseldorf, Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, Museum of Pop Culture in Seattle, Dancing House in Prague, Biomuseo in Panama City, and Cinémathèque Francaise in Paris. Furthermore, his private residence in Santa Monica is the award-winning ‘Gehry House’. Gehry is the recipient of multiple prestigious awards including the Pritzker Architecture Prize (1989), the Praemium Imperiale (1992), National Medal of Arts (1998), AIA Gold Medal (1999), Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award for Lifetime Achievement (2000), Prince of Asturias Award (2014), J. Paul Getty Medal (2015) and the Presidential Medal of Freedom (2016) | Frank Gehry was interviewed by Marc-Christoph Wagner at his studio in Santa Monica, Los Angeles in November 2018 | Camera Rasmus Quistgaard | Produced by Marc-Christoph Wagner | Edited by Roxanne Bagheshirin Lærkesen | Cover photo Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles by Frank Gehry | Copyright Louisiana Channel | Louisiana Museum of Modern Art | 2019 | Supported by Dreyers Fond | YouTube
Artist in Conversation | Frank Gehry | Los Angeles County Museum of Art | https://www.lacma.org/ | The Frank Gehry exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art presents a comprehensive examination of the architect’s extraordinary body of work from the early 1960s—he established his firm in Los Angeles in 1962—to the present, featuring over 200 drawings, many of which have never been seen publicly, and 65 models that illuminate the evolution of Gehry’s thinking. In this video, Gehry talks about his path as an architect, the people who influenced him, and concepts he resonates with | YouTube
Frank Gehry | Full Interview | On Ethics, Architecture and much more | The Ethics Incubator | The world renowned Architect Frank Gehry has been called “the greatest architect we have today” by the acclaimed architect Philip Johnson. His career has spanned more than five decades designing architectural masterpieces in over six countries on three continents. Mr. Gehry’s work includes the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, California, and the Louis Vuitton Foundation’s new center in the Bois de Boulogne outside of Paris, France. Mr. Gehry founded his architecture firm in 1962. More recently, he established Gehry Partners, LLP in 2001. He personally designs every project at the firm. He has won numerous international awards, including the coveted Pritzker Prize in 1989, the RIBA (Royal Institute of British Architects) Award in 2000, and the Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service in 2004. He was the first architect ever to receive the Harvard Arts Medal in 2016. In 2016, President Barack Obama honored Frank Gehry with the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his career achievements. Mr. Gehry has also taught at Yale University. Mr. Gehry explores the role of the architect in creating aesthetic, functional and socially present designs that respect their context, remain artistically and societally important over time, and inspire the highest ethical standards. Mr. Gehry shares his experiences in navigating some of today’s most challenging cultural, political, and social environments. He offers perspective on his own guiding moral principles and running an ethical business—and what really matters in life. He invites us to understand how his designs remain at the cutting edge of creativity, technology, and intellectual rigor | YouTube
Frank Gehry on Cones, Domes and Messiness | The New York Times |
The architect Frank Gehry talks about his asymmetrical design for the planned 450,000-square-foot Guggenheim Abu Dhabi and his inspiration for the museum’s huge, cooling cones | Produced by Channon Hodge | YouTube
BIOGRAFIE FRANK GEHRY
GEBURTSJAHR | GEBURTSORT | TODESJAHR | STERBEORT
AUSBILDUNG FRANK GEHRY
LEHRTÄTIGKEIT FRANK GEHRY
MITGLIEDSCHAFTEN FRANK GEHRY
AUSZEICHNUNGEN FRANK GEHRY
SAMMLUNGEN FRANK GEHRY
AUSSTELLUNGEN FRANK GEHRY
EINZELAUSSTELLUNGEN
GRUPPENAUSSTELLUNGEN
PROJEKTE | SYMPOSIEN
WERKBESCHREIBUNG FRANK GEHRY
SCHWERPUNKTE | MEDIEN
STIL
THEMEN | MOTIVE | WERKE
DEFINITION | BESCHREIBUNG | MERKMALE
STICHWORTE FRANK GEHRY
ZITATE FRANK GEHRY
TEXT | BIBLIOGRAPHIE FRANK GEHRY
LINKS FRANK GEHRY
HOMEPAGE FRANK GEHRY
FRANK GEHRY
Beitrag in Bearbeitung!
KUNSTWERKE | BAUWERKE FRANK GEHRY
A Tribute to Frank Gehry | The Getty | Architect Frank Gehry is the third recipient of the Getty Medal, which recognizes living individuals from all over the world for their leadership in the fields in which the Getty works. Gehry has designed iconic buildings in North America, Europe and Asia, including the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain; the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, California; the Jay Pritzker Pavilion and BP Bridge in Chicago, Illinois; Eight Spruce Street Residential Tower in New York City; and Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris, France | YouTube
VIDEO | FILM FRANK GEHRY
Creating Feeling with Frank Gehry | NOWNESS | It is impossible to miss the curving and sinuous structure located in Paris’s 16th arrondissement, which has the bearing of a ship built of glass. This building is the Fondation Louis Vuitton; the museum and cultural centre designed by modern architecture’s greatest transformer of shapes, Frank Gehry—the Pritzker prize-winning designer whose buildings have earned him the status of a household name. In this heartfelt portrait of both the architect and the building he has created, filmmaker Emile Rafael lets the man and one of his most unique structures speak for themselves. Mounted by arching glass sails, the building—whose initial concept was that of a fish—is depicted from its smallest details to its shimmering external envelope. Seeming to sail on the lawns of the Bois de Boulogne, the Fondation is revealed as a building in motion, continually slipping and flowing like the creature on which it is based. It draws parallels with Gehry’s other great monuments to culture; the Bilbao Museum, the Guggenheim, and the Walt Disney Concert Hall, where exciting shapes elevate the works of art they host and contain. Speaking about his meditative portrait of the great shape-shifter of modern architecture, Rafael explains: „Gehry’s presence and energy was enough to fill the entire building. We spoke at great length about his love for art in all its guises, including how architecture is often overlooked as an art form in itself. With the film, my job was to try and capture what we had spoken about visually—to film the building with the same poetry and sense of movement and expression that Gehry had described and so aspired to in designing it.“ | YouTube
How I Got Started | Frank Gehry I Fortune Magazine | The legendary architect talks about his beginnings in ceramics, his love for music, and his next project | YouTube
Looking back at Frank Gehry’s building-bending feats | PBS NewsHours
Frank Gehry, the most famous architect today, has brought art and flair to monumental designs around the world. Now he’s being honored in his longtime hometown with a retrospective exhibit at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art | Jeffrey Brown reports | YouTube
Frank Gehry Interview | Jump Into the Unknown | Louisiana Channel |
Frank Gehry | born 1929 | is recognized as one of the most important architects of our time, and his spectacular buildings – including the iconic Guggenheim Museum Bilbao and Walt Disney Concert Hall – have won him worldwide renown. Watch the Canadian-American architect talk about his life, architecture and the world today in this in-depth video recorded at his studio in Los Angeles. When a teacher enrolled the young Gehry in a night-class at architecture school, it became the beginning of a long career: “It was all by chance.” At that time, American architects – including Frank Lloyd Wright – were inspired by Japanese architecture, and Gehry feels that this early influence has stayed with him ever since, not least when he built the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles: “You’d think Disney Hall was a Japanese temple.” “That’s what an architect should do – be able to have an emotional response to their work that lasts through the centuries.” If you want to be an architect, Gehry argues, first of all, you’ve got to learn the craft, but also “your personal spirit has to evolve into the language that you create.” Everyone will ultimately produce something different, personal and completely unique – like a signature – and it’s important to be brave enough to “take the chance to jump off into the unknown.” Architecture is about feelings, and the best architects, or artists, are themselves and no one else. In continuation of this, Gehry believes that architecture is about the singularity of the building as well as being part of the surroundings, and he finds it aggravating that all buildings in cities nowadays look the same: “Downtown Los Angeles now looks like Downtown Seoul, Korea.” Frank Gehry (b. 1929) is a Canadian-born American architect, who is known for his trademark sculptural style. Although critical opinion is sometimes divided over his radical, whimsical structures, Gehry’s work made architecture popular in a way not seen in the U.S. since Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959). A number of Gehry’s buildings have become world-renowned attractions and have been cited as being among the most important works of contemporary architecture in the 2010 World Architecture Survey, which later led Vanity Fair to label him as “the most important architect of our age.” Among his best-known buildings are Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao (which fellow architect Philip Johnson once dubbed “the greatest building of our time”), Weisman Art Museum in Minneapolis, Neuer Zollhof in Dusseldorf, Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, Museum of Pop Culture in Seattle, Dancing House in Prague, Biomuseo in Panama City, and Cinémathèque Francaise in Paris. Furthermore, his private residence in Santa Monica is the award-winning ‘Gehry House’. Gehry is the recipient of multiple prestigious awards including the Pritzker Architecture Prize (1989), the Praemium Imperiale (1992), National Medal of Arts (1998), AIA Gold Medal (1999), Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award for Lifetime Achievement (2000), Prince of Asturias Award (2014), J. Paul Getty Medal (2015) and the Presidential Medal of Freedom (2016) | Frank Gehry was interviewed by Marc-Christoph Wagner at his studio in Santa Monica, Los Angeles in November 2018 | Camera Rasmus Quistgaard | Produced by Marc-Christoph Wagner | Edited by Roxanne Bagheshirin Lærkesen | Cover photo Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles by Frank Gehry | Copyright Louisiana Channel | Louisiana Museum of Modern Art | 2019 | Supported by Dreyers Fond | YouTube
Artist in Conversation | Frank Gehry | Los Angeles County Museum of Art | https://www.lacma.org/ | The Frank Gehry exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art presents a comprehensive examination of the architect’s extraordinary body of work from the early 1960s—he established his firm in Los Angeles in 1962—to the present, featuring over 200 drawings, many of which have never been seen publicly, and 65 models that illuminate the evolution of Gehry’s thinking. In this video, Gehry talks about his path as an architect, the people who influenced him, and concepts he resonates with | YouTube
Frank Gehry | Full Interview | On Ethics, Architecture and much more | The Ethics Incubator | The world renowned Architect Frank Gehry has been called “the greatest architect we have today” by the acclaimed architect Philip Johnson. His career has spanned more than five decades designing architectural masterpieces in over six countries on three continents. Mr. Gehry’s work includes the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, California, and the Louis Vuitton Foundation’s new center in the Bois de Boulogne outside of Paris, France. Mr. Gehry founded his architecture firm in 1962. More recently, he established Gehry Partners, LLP in 2001. He personally designs every project at the firm. He has won numerous international awards, including the coveted Pritzker Prize in 1989, the RIBA (Royal Institute of British Architects) Award in 2000, and the Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service in 2004. He was the first architect ever to receive the Harvard Arts Medal in 2016. In 2016, President Barack Obama honored Frank Gehry with the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his career achievements. Mr. Gehry has also taught at Yale University. Mr. Gehry explores the role of the architect in creating aesthetic, functional and socially present designs that respect their context, remain artistically and societally important over time, and inspire the highest ethical standards. Mr. Gehry shares his experiences in navigating some of today’s most challenging cultural, political, and social environments. He offers perspective on his own guiding moral principles and running an ethical business—and what really matters in life. He invites us to understand how his designs remain at the cutting edge of creativity, technology, and intellectual rigor | YouTube
Frank Gehry on Cones, Domes and Messiness | The New York Times |
The architect Frank Gehry talks about his asymmetrical design for the planned 450,000-square-foot Guggenheim Abu Dhabi and his inspiration for the museum’s huge, cooling cones | Produced by Channon Hodge | YouTube
BIOGRAFIE FRANK GEHRY
GEBURTSJAHR | GEBURTSORT | TODESJAHR | STERBEORT
AUSBILDUNG FRANK GEHRY
LEHRTÄTIGKEIT FRANK GEHRY
MITGLIEDSCHAFTEN FRANK GEHRY
AUSZEICHNUNGEN FRANK GEHRY
SAMMLUNGEN FRANK GEHRY
AUSSTELLUNGEN FRANK GEHRY
EINZELAUSSTELLUNGEN
GRUPPENAUSSTELLUNGEN
PROJEKTE | SYMPOSIEN
WERKBESCHREIBUNG FRANK GEHRY
SCHWERPUNKTE | MEDIEN
STIL
THEMEN | MOTIVE | WERKE
DEFINITION | BESCHREIBUNG | MERKMALE
STICHWORTE FRANK GEHRY
ZITATE FRANK GEHRY
TEXT | BIBLIOGRAPHIE FRANK GEHRY
LINKS FRANK GEHRY
HOMEPAGE FRANK GEHRY