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side_sponsors.php
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The AIA gratefully
acknowledges the following sponsors of our 150th Anniversary
celebration:
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Founders Circle: $1,000,000:
McGraw-Hill Construction,
Official Media
Sponsor
Autodesk,
Official Software Sponsor |
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Year Awarded: 1978
Born: July 08, 1906;
Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Died: 2005;
New Canaan,Connecticut,USA
Quote
The job of the architect today is to create beautiful buildings. That's all.
Comfort is not a function of beauty . . . purpose is not necessary to make a building beautiful . . . sooner or later we will fit our buildings so that they can be used . . . where form comes from I don't know, but it has nothing at all to do with the functional or sociological aspects of our architecture.
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1984: Transco Tower, Houston
1984: Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, Pittsburgh (with John
Burgee)
1984: AT&T Headquarters, New York City
1983: Williams Tower, Houston
1980: Crystal Cathedral, Garden Grove, Calif.
1973: Boston Public Library
1972: South Texas Art Museum, Corpus Christi, Tex.
1972: IDS Center, Minneapolis, Minn.
1972: Elmer Holmes Bobst Library, New York University
1964: New York State Theater at Lincoln Center (with Richard
Foster), New York City
1962: Kline Science Center, Yale University, New Haven,
Conn.
1958: Seagram Building (with Mies van der Rohe), New York
City
1950: John de Menil House, Houston
1949: Glass House, New Canaan, Conn. Biography
Philip Cortelyou Johnson first studied at Harvard University in
the late 1920s, earning a degree in architectural history in 1930.
At that time, he went to work at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in
New York, becoming the first director of the museums
department of architecture. He directed the modern architecture
exhibition at MoMA, introducing the principles of European modern
architecture to Americans, and he followed this with his book
The International Style: Architecture since 1922,
co-authored with Henry-Russell Hitchcock.
In 1940 Johnson returned to Harvard to work on a second degree and,
studying under Marcel Breuer, he earned a BArch in 1943. For the
next three years, he practiced architecture in Cambridge; in 1946
he returned to MoMA to work again as the director of architecture.
He became a trustee of MoMA in 1958.
In 1953 Johnson established his firm Philip Johnson Alan Ritchie
with an old friend from England. From 1964 to 1967, he worked with
Richard Foster, and from 1967 until he retired in 1991, he worked
with John Burgee.
In 1979 Johnson received the first Pritzker Architecture Prize. In
1975 The Glass House in New Caanan, Conn., a building he
designed for his own residence, received the AIA Twenty-five Year
Award.
Johnson is known for introducing and popularizing European
modernism to America, and he coined the term International Style to
reflect the evolving approach. His own approach also evolved over
the years, and he maintained a passion for promoting new and
important design movements to support the growth of architecture
practice.
Johnson believed that architecture should be concerned more with
its aesthetic purpose than with the clients needs.
Emphasizing beauty and style above all else, he rejected the idea
that architecture must address the purposes and needs of a
buildings users. |
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