Architects

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Art nouveau inspired works

Antonio Gaudi y Cornet

Casa Mila and Casa Batllo Apartments

Antonio Gaudi y Cornet

Early 20th Century Barcelona

Antonio Gaudi y Cornet

Eusebi Guell was his patron

Antonio Gaudi y Cornet

Hyperbolic Paraboloids

Antonio Gaudi y Cornet and Eero Saarenin

Pazzi Chapel in the cloisters of Santa Croce

Fillippo Brunelleschi

Sculptor and goldsmith

Fillippo Brunelleschi

Spedale Degli Innocente

Fillippo Brunelleschi

40 Years working on Expiatory Church of the Holy Family, still incomplete

Antonio Gaudi y Cornet

Combined Greco-Roman ideas with Renaissance styles

Andrea Palladio

Dates: 1508-1580

Andrea Palladio

Influenced Inigo Jones and Thomas Jefferson

Andrea Palladio

Villas in or near Venice, including the Villa Rotunda and the Villa Barbaro

Andrea Palladio

Wrote "4 Books on Architecture" in 1570

Andrea Palladio

Lost the competition with Lorenzo Ghiberti in 1401 for the commission of the Bronze Doors of the Florence Baptistry

Fillippo Brunelleschi

Born in Finland, 1910

Eero Saarinen

Designed Dulles Int'l Airport in D.C.

Eero Saarinen

Designed buildings on the campuses of MIT and Yale

Eero Saarinen

Gateway Arch in St. Louis

Eero Saarinen

Kresge Auditorium at MIT

Eero Saarinen

Son of architect, Eliel

Eero Saarinen

TWA Terminal at Kennedy Airport in NYC

Eero Saarinen

Works characterized by elegant, sweeping forms

Eero Saarinen

Most famous works were designed from 1421-1430

Fillippo Brunelleschi

Extraordinary octagonally based dome of the Santa Maria del Fiore aka Florence Cathedral

Fillippo Brunelleschi

Friend of Donatello

Fillippo Brunelleschi

Old Sacristi at San Lorenzo

Fillippo Brunelleschi

Best known for large-scale compositions

Frank Gehry

Chairs named for hockey terms, e.g. Crosscheck and Power Play

Frank Gehry

Controversial Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain described as "The Artichoke"

Frank Gehry

Easy edges line furniture made of laminated cardboard

Frank Gehry

Eponymous collection of Furniture

Frank Gehry

Experience Music Project in Seattle

Frank Gehry

Kobe's Fishdance Restaurant, shaped like a giant fish

Frank Gehry

Often uses uncommon materials like plywood and limestone

Frank Gehry

Pritzker Prize winner in 1989

Frank Gehry

Soft, sculpture-looking "so-called" Fred and Ginger Buildings in Prague

Frank Gehry

Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles

Frank Gehry

"Prairie" style: horizontal orientation and low roofs

Frank Lloyd Wright

Guggenheim Museum in NYC

Frank Lloyd Wright

Imperial Hotel in Tokyo (survived earthquake in 1923.)

Frank Lloyd Wright

Johnson Wax Museum in Racine, Wisconsin

Frank Lloyd Wright

Kaufmann House (Falling Water) in Pennsylvania

Frank Lloyd Wright

Larkin Building in Buffalo, NY

Frank Lloyd Wright

Robie House at University of Chicago

Frank Lloyd Wright

Taliesin West, Arizona home and studio (original Taliesin was located in Wisconsin and burned down in 1914.)

Frank Lloyd Wright

Unity Temple in Oak Park

Frank Lloyd Wright

Wisconsin born in 1867, apprenticed under Louis Sullivan before opening his own firm in Chicago.

Frank Lloyd Wright

tried to harmonize inhabitants to dwelling with "organic architecture."

Frank Lloyd Wright

Born in China in 1917, emigrated to U.S. in 1935.

I.M. Pei

East Wing of National Gallery of Art in Washington, D. C.

I.M. Pei

Fragrant Hill Hotel in Beijing

I.M. Pei

Glass Pyramid at the Louvre in 1989

I.M. Pei

John Hancock Building in Boston, MA

I.M. Pei

Mi Ho Museum of Art in Shigah, Japan

I.M. Pei

Mile High Center in Denver, CO

I.M. Pei

National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, CO

I.M. Pei

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, OH 1995

I.M. Pei

best known for large-scale projects

I.M. Pei

"A house is a machine for living in."

La Corbusier

Charles-Edouard Jeanneret

La Corbusier

Cubist principles of division and space apparent in his floor plans.

La Corbusier

Imagined a "radiant city" completely built of skyscrapers as early as 1910.

La Corbusier

Influenced all following 20th century architects

La Corbusier

Largely failed in his urban renewal projects, particularly in Brasilia and Chandigarh, India.

La Corbusier

Towards a New Architecture, 1923

La Corbusier

Villa Savoye in Poissy, France

La Corbusier

"Form should follow functions."

Louis Sullivan

Associated with Chicago, but best known for 1891 Wainwright Building in St. Louis

Louis Sullivan

Babson, Bennett, and Bradley Houses

Louis Sullivan

He and partner Dankmar Adler produced over 100 buildings

Louis Sullivan

His writings helped break the profession from classical restraints

Louis Sullivan

Personal mentor to Frank Lloyd Wright

Louis Sullivan

Vocal champion of skyscrapers, though he never designed one.

Louis Sullivan

"less is more"

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

Barcelona Pavilion for 1929 International Exposition

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

Bauhaus director from 1930-1933, he shut it down before the Nazis had the opportunity.

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

Glass-covered, steel structures that influenced the design of office buildings in nearly every major U.S. city.

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

Lake Shore Drive Apartments in Chicago, IL

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

Leading architect of the International Style of skyscraper design.

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

New National Gallery in Berlin

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

Worked in Peter Behrens firm.

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe Walter Gropius

Seagram Building in NYC

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe with Philip Johnson

Born in London in 1632

Sir Christopher Wren

Charles II named him King Surveyor of Works in 1669

Sir Christopher Wren

Inscription near tomb in St. Paul's = "Reader, if you seek a monument, look around you."

Sir Christopher Wren

Involved in rebuilding more than 50 London churches from 1670-1723

Sir Christopher Wren

Oxford Astronomy Professor in 1666

Sir Christopher Wren

St. Paul's Cathedral

Sir Christopher Wren

Designed Fagus Factory in Alfeld, Germany

Walter Gropius

He modernized Harvard's architecture department as its head from 1938-1952.

Walter Gropius

His colleagues/faculty included Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky, and Josef Albers.

Walter Gropius

His designs emphasized functionalism. (Bauhaus) and the application of modern methods and materials; the synthesis of technology and art.

Walter Gropius

Pan American Building in NYC

Walter Gropius

founded the Bauhaus school in 1919 in Weimer, Germany and moved to Dessau in 1925.

Walter Gropius


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