35 Who Made a Difference: Frank Gehry
The architect's daring, outside-the-box buildings have revitalized urban spaces
- By Robert Duffy
- Smithsonian.com, November 01, 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Gehry's current projects include a science library for Princeton University, a hotel in the north of Spain and a residential and sports facility in England. He's also building a new house for himself in Venice. But this time, he says, "I did it differently." He gave his neighbors—including a convent next door—a heads up about his intentions. "The neighbors saw the model," he says, and "everyone seemed OK." Gehry's work, in fact, has weathered many storms—and not just from critics. His new, $30 million Ohr-O'Keefe Museum of Art—built to showcase the work of the eccentric, turn-of-the-century potter George Ohr—in the Gulf Coast town of Biloxi, Mississippi, was pounded by hurricane Katrina in early September. The five buildings in the complex were in various stages of completion at the time. One was demolished by a dislodged casino barge. Two others, nearly completed, sustained minimal damage. The remaining two were in early stages of construction and not affected, but a number of the stately live oak trees, around which the buildings were designed, were destroyed.
In 1989, former New York Times architecture critic Ada Louise Huxtable described Gehry as an "admirer of the quirky, the accidental and the absurd....an obsessive perfectionist engaged in a ceaseless and demanding investigation of ways to unite expressive form and utilitarian function." Gehry has also been described as an outsider, an outlaw. Most men and women who operate on the edge or beyond are dismissed, shunned, laughed at or locked up. But sometimes they triumph, as Gehry has. And when that happens, their influence is palpable and the world expands before our very eyes.
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