 |
|
side_sponsors.php
|
|
|
|
| |
The AIA gratefully
acknowledges the following sponsors of our 150th Anniversary
celebration:
|
| |
| |
Founders Circle: $1,000,000:
McGraw-Hill Construction,
Official Media
Sponsor
Autodesk,
Official Software Sponsor |
| |
| |
|
| |
| |
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
| |
Year Awarded: 2001
Born: July 09, 1934;
Indianapolis, Indiana, USA
|
| |
|
|
|
|
| Projects
2002: National Museum of History, Taitung, Taiwan
2002: Martel College, Rice University, Houston
1996: Central Library, Denver
1996: Indianapolis Art Center, Indianapolis
1995: Bryan Hall, University of Virginia, Charlottesville,
Va.
1995: Engineering Research Center, University of
Cincinnati
1993: Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University,
Atlanta
1993: 1500 Ocean Drive, South Beach, Fla.
1991: Team Disney Building, Burbank, Calif.
1990: Ten Peachtree Place, Atlanta
1990: Swan and Dolphin Resort, Walt Disney World, Orlando,
Fla.
1983: Public Library, San Juan Capistrano, Calif.
1982: Humana Building, Louisville, Ky.
1980: Portland Building, Portland, Ore.
1976: Crooks House, Fort Wayne, In.
1973: Alexander House, Princeton, N.J.
1967: Hanselmann House, Fort Wayne, In. Biography
Michael Graves, an American post-modern architect, earned a
bachelor's degree from the University of Cincinnati in 1958 and an
MArch in 1959 from Harvard University. While at Cincinnati, he
took part in a program that allowed him to work at Carl A. Strauss
and Associates while finishing his formal education.
He won the two-year Prix de Rome fellowship at the American Academy
in Rome in 1960. In 1962 he returned to the United States to work
as a lecturer in architecture at Princeton University; he became a
full professor at Princeton in 1972. Graves is also the Robert
Schirmer Professor of Architecture, Emeritus, at Princeton.
In 1964 he started his own practice, Michael Graves &
Associates, in Princeton, N.J. He was also a member of the New York
Five. He has designed more than 300 buildings, hotels, and
houses.
As a post-modern designer, Graves creates buildings that are often
described as fun, colorful, and humorous; they are sophisticated
and use interesting geometric shapes. Borrowing heavily from
classical and Mediterranean styles, he uses many historial elements
in his designs, such as colonnades, vaulted ceilings, arches, and
columns, and he employs materials such as marble, granite, copper,
and inlaid wood on his buildings facades.
In 1999 Graves was awarded the National Medal of Arts. In 2003, a
spinal cord infection left Graves paralyzed from the waist down; he
remains active in his practice. |
 |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|