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Designer of Eugene's Federal Courthouse
Wins Architecture Award
California Architect Thom Mayne
Becomes the 2005 Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureate
Los Angeles, CA–Thom Mayne, who founded his firm Morphosis
to surpass the bounds of traditional forms and materials,
while also working to carve out a territory beyond the limits
of modernism and postmodernism, has been chosen as the 2005
Laureate of the Pritzker Architecture Prize. The Pritzker
Prize caps a three-decade career in which Mayne has received
54 AIA Awards, some 25 Progressive Architecture Awards, as
well as numerous other honors around the world. The sixty-one
year old architect is the first American Laureate in 14 years.
Mayne's most recent built works to capture major media attention
include the Caltrans District 7 Headquarters and the Science
Education Resource Center / Science Center School, both completed
in 2004 in Los Angeles.
Mayne has numerous other Southern California landmarks: the
Diamond Ranch High School in Pomona, two Salick Medical Office
buildings on Beverly Boulevard in Los Angeles, and several
distinctive private residences. Mayne is also currently working
on the Cahill Center for Astrophysics at the California Institute
of Technology in Pasadena, California. Nationally, Mayne is
completing three projects of major importance for the United
States General Services Administration's Design Excellence
program including a Federal Office Building in San Francisco,
California, the Wayne L. Morse United States Courthouse in
Eugene, Oregon, and the NOAA Satellite Operation Control Facility
in Suitland, Maryland.
Two major competitions in New York City were also recently
awarded to his firm: the New Academic Building for The Cooper
Union for the Advancement of Science and Art; and the NYC2012
Olympic Village, a project in association with NYC's bid for
the 2012 Olympics.
His most recent commission, granted just this month as the
result of a winning competition design is for the new Alaska
State Capitol building to be constructed in Juneau, Alaska.
On the world stage, he has the Hypo Alpe-Adria Center in Klagenfurt,
Austria; the ASE Design Center in Taipei, Taiwan; the Sun
Tower in Seoul, South Korea; and a Social Housing project
slated for completion next year in Madrid, Spain.
Throughout his career, Mayne has remained active in the academic
world. He currently holds a tenured professorship at the University
of California in Los Angeles and is a founder of the influential
and progressive Southern California Institute of Architecture.
He has been a visiting professor and/or lecturer at institutions
and universities around the world.
In announcing the jury's choice, Thomas J. Pritzker, president
of The Hyatt Foundation, said, "When this prize was founded
in 1979, Thom Mayne had just received his Master of Architecture
degree from Harvard the year before. The intervening years
have seen 28 Laureates chosen. Thom Mayne is the twenty-ninth,
and only the eighth American to be so honored."
The formal ceremony for what has come to be known throughout
the world as architecture's highest honor will be held on
May 31, 2005 in Chicago's Millennium Park in the Jay Pritzker
Pavilion, a structure named for the founder of the prize and
designed by juror and 1989 Pritzker Laureate, Frank Gehry.
At that time, a $100,000 grant and a bronze medallion will
be bestowed.
Lord Palumbo, beginning his term as Pritzker Jury Chairman,
spoke of the jury's choice, "Every now and then an architect
appears on the international scene, who teaches us to look
at the art of architecture with fresh eyes, and whose work
marks him out as a man apart in the originality and exuberance
of its vocabulary, the richness and diversity of its palette,
the risks undertaken with confidence and brio, the seamless
fusion of art and technology."
Bill Lacy, an architect, speaking as the executive director
of the Pritzker Prize, quoted from the jury citation which
states, "Thom Mayne is a product of the turbulent 60's
who has carried that rebellious attitude and fervent desire
for change into his practice, the fruits of which are only
now becoming visible in a group of large scale projects."
Frank Gehry, in his capacity as Pritzker Juror, said, "I
was thrilled that our new laureate hails from my part of the
world. I've known him for a long time, watched him grow into
a mature and, I like to say, 'authentic' architect. He continues
to explore and search for new ways to make buildings useable
and exciting."
Ada Louise Huxtable, architecture critic and member of the
jury, commented further saying, "The work of Thom Mayne moves
architecture from the 20th to the 21st century in its use
of today's art and technology to create a dynamic style that
expresses and serves today's needs."
Another juror, Carlos Jimenez from Houston who is professor
of architecture at Rice University, said, "Thom Mayne's work
exemplifies an astonishing level of consistency and conviction.
The dynamics of this focused pursuit do not result in predictable
or rarefied architecture, but produce an architecture that
invites us to be full participants and recipients of the architect's
abundant inventiveness. In the process we come to experience
architecture anew: from how it is imagined to how it is drawn,
to how it is constructed and becomes a collective experience."
And from juror Victoria Newhouse, architectural historian,
author, and founder and director of the Architectural History
Foundation, "I feel that in the past few years Thom Mayne's
work has shown an impressive development, from being merely
good to being outstanding. Diamond Ranch High School (2000)
was for me the benchmark. I visited it the year of its completion
and found not only the original design admirable, but the
way in which the architect adapted that design to the government's
financial limitations was ingenious."
Juror Karen Stein, who is editorial director of Phaidon Press
in New York, commented, "Thom Mayne sees architecture as a
contact sport – a group activity that pushes physical
limits, in this case of form making. From his earliest complex,
multi-layered drawings to his more recent completed buildings,
he has used the latest technologies as both theme and apparatus
of his designs, creating a body of work that has consistently
explored and expressed architecture as a risk-taking, visceral
experience."
The purpose of the Pritzker Architecture Prize is to honor
annually a living architect whose built work demonstrates
a combination of those qualities of talent, vision and commitment,
which has produced consistent and significant contributions
to humanity and the built environment through the art of architecture.
The distinguished jury that selected Mayne as the 2005 Laureate
consists of its chairman, Lord Palumbo, chairman of the Serpentine
Gallery Trustees, former chairman of the Arts Council of Great
Britain and well known as an art and architectural patron;
and alphabetically: Balkrishna Vithaldas Doshi, Architect,
Planner and Professor of Architecture of Ahmedabad, India;
Rolf Fehlbaum, chairman of Vitra, Basel, Switzerland; Frank
Gehry, architect and 1989 Pritzker Laureate; Ada Louise Huxtable,
author and architectural critic of New York; Carlos Jimenez,
professor at Rice University School of Architecture, and principal,
Carlos Jimenez Studio in Houston, Texas; Victoria Newhouse,
architectural historian and author who founded and is the
director of the Architectural History Foundation in New York;
and Karen Stein, editorial director of Phaidon Press in New
York.
The prize presentation ceremony moves to different locations
around the world each year, paying homage to historic and
contemporary architecture. Last year, the ceremony was held
in the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia. The
year before in Madrid, Spain in the Royal Academy of Fine
Arts of San Fernando. Michelangelo's Campidoglio in Rome,
Italy was the location in 2000. In 2002, Thomas Jefferson's
home, Monticello, in Charlottesville, Virginia was the venue.
In 2000, the ceremony was held in Jerusalem in the Archaeological
Park surrounding the Dome of the Rock.
The late Philip Johnson was the first Pritzker Laureate in
1979. The late Luis Barragán of Mexico was named in
1980. The late James Stirling of Great Britain was elected
in 1981, Kevin Roche in 1982, Ieoh Ming Pei in 1983, and Richard
Meier in 1984. Hans Hollein of Austria was the 1985 Laureate.
Gottfried Böhm of Germany received the prize in 1986.
Kenzo Tange was the first Japanese architect to receive the
prize in 1987; Fumihiko Maki was the second from Japan in
1993; and Tadao Ando the third in 1995. Robert Venturi received
the honor in 1991, and Alvaro Siza of Portugal in 1992. Christian
de Portzamparc of France was elected Pritzker Laureate in
1994. The late Gordon Bunshaft of the United States and Oscar
Niemeyer of Brazil, were named in 1988. Frank Gehry was the
recipient in 1989, the late Aldo Rossi of Italy in 1990. In
1996, Rafael Moneo of Spain was the Laureate; in 1997 Sverre
Fehn of Norway; in 1998 Renzo Piano of Italy, in 1999 Sir
Norman Foster of the UK, and in 2000, Rem Koolhaas of the
Netherlands. In 2001, two architects from Switzerland received
the honor: Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron. The 2002 laureate
was Australian Glenn Murcutt. In 2003, Jørn Utzon of
Denmark was chosen and last year, the first woman to be selected
was Zaha Hadid of the UK.
The field of architecture was chosen by the Pritzker family
because of their keen interest in building due to their involvement
with developing the Hyatt Hotels around the world; also because
architecture was a creative endeavor not included in the Nobel
Prizes. The procedures were modeled after the Nobels, with
the final selection being made by the international jury with
all deliberations and voting in secret. Nominations are continuous
from year to year with hundreds of nominees from countries
all around the world being considered each year.
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here for additional information about the 2005 Pritzker Architecture
Prize Laureate
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