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American Academy of Arts and Letters Unveils 2013 Architecture Award Winners

By Bustler Editors|

Monday, Apr 22, 2013

Alberto Campo Baeza, 2013 winner of the Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize in Architecture: Offices for Junta Castilla León in Zamora, Spain (Photo: Javier Callejas)

The American Academy of Arts and Letters has announced the recipients of its 2013 architecture awards. Spanish architect Alberto Campo Baeza was awarded the Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize in Architecture in recognition of significant contributions to architecture as an art. American architects Teddy Cruz, Thomas Phifer, Barry Bergdoll, and Sanford Kwinter each won the academy's Arts and Letters Awards in Architecture.

Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize in Architecture

Alberto Campo Baeza has been practicing and teaching architecture in Madrid for over 35 years. Through the use of timeless forms like the box and a virtuosic control of light, he has created a body of work that raises architecture to art. He is the 2013 recipient of the Heinrich Tessenow Gold Medal, and has taught at ETH Zürich, EPFL Lausanne, University of Pennsylvania, and Catholic University of America. Notable projects include the Caja Granada Savings Bank, Granada, Spain; Olnick Spanu House, Garrison, NY; Benetton Nursery, Treviso, Italy; Andalucia Museum of Memory, Granada, Spain; and the offices for Junta de Castilla y León, Zamora, Spain. "Architecture is the art of the practical," said awards committee chairman Richard Meier. "It is the creation of space that we move through and live in, and it must be beautiful and respectful to its local context. The work of Alberto Campo Baeza fully recognizes this and is thoughtful, confident, precise, and meticulous in its seemingly simplistic and finely crafted spatial forms."

Arts and Letters Awards in Architecture

Two Arts and Letters Awards in Architecture regognizing American architects whose work is characterized by a strong personal direction were given to Teddy Cruz and Thomas Phifer.

Teddy Cruz is an architect, academic, and activist whose San Diego-based studio has been exploring and challenging the politics and economics that drive urban conflict. "With the Tijuana-San Diego border as an experimental architectural laboratory," said Elizabeth Diller, "Cruz taps into a new civic imagination in which informal, adaptive architectural strategies replace top-down development. Cruz inserts himself between marginal immigrant populations, community-based nonprofit organizations, and political and economic leaders to act on both physical space and urban policy. His work demonstrates that architecture can play a central role in a broad range of social, economic, and cultural initiatives." Projects include the Casa Familiar: Living rooms at the Border and Senior Housing with Childcare, San Ysidro, CA; the Alter-Terra incubator for science, art, and socio-economic development in Los Laureles settlement, Tijuana, MX; and The Political Equator Meetings, a nomadic urban-pedagogical project that links the specialized knowledge of institutions and the activist, socio-economic, and political intelligence embedded in border communities.

Thomas Phifer has led his own practice in New York City since 1996. His work combines the beauty and simplicity of Modernism with a nuanced attention to the natural environment—to light and landscape and weather. Notable works include the Glenstone Museum, Potomac, MD; Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, NY; North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC; Rice University Brochstein Pavilion, Houston, TX; and Salt Point House, Salt Point, NY. "The architecture of Thomas Phifer is pure and clear, touching the earth with the lightness of a dancer," said Tod Williams. "It is built with a tectonic elegance and rigor that speaks to the continued importance and development of classical ideals."

Two Arts and Letters Awards in Architecture recognizing Americans who explore ideas in architecture through any medium of expression were presented to Barry Bergdoll and Sanford Kwinter.

Barry Bergdoll is a scholar of 19th- and 20th-century architectural history, and is the Philip Johnson Chief Curator of Architecture and Design at the Museum of Modern Art, where "he has distinguished himself as the curator of one didactic exhibition after another," said Kenneth Frampton. "These exhibitions range from systematic reappraisals of various luminaries and movements in the past to the presentation of topics of pertinence to the development of contemporary architecture in relation to society. His contribution on both of these fronts has exercised a seminal influence in contemporary practice." Recent exhibitions include Henri Labrouste: Structure Brought to Light, 2013; Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream, 2012; Rising Currents: Projects for New York’s Waterfront, 2010; and Home Delivery: Fabricating the Modern Dwelling, 2008.

Sanford Kwinter is a New York-based writer and editor who is Professor of Architectural Theory and Criticism at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, where he codirects the Master in Design Studies program. His books include Requiem: For the City at the End of the Millennium, Actar, 2010; Far From Equilibrium: Essays on Technology and Design Culture, Actar, 2008; Architectures of Time: Toward a Theory of the Event in Modernist Culture, MIT Press, 2001; Mutations: The American City, Actar, 2001; and ZONE 1/2: The Contemporary City, MIT Press, 1986. "With his erudite and passionate texts on architecture, Sanford Kwinter has become one of the most important critics of our time," said Steven Holl. "His ability to assimilate developments in architecture, art, and science today is astonishing. He is a uniquely talented and highly intelligent theorist who raises architecture to a new level of thought."

Work by the winners will be featured in the upcoming Exhibition of Work by Newly Elected Members and Recipients of Honors and Awards, which will be on view in the Academy’s galleries on Audubon Terrace between 155 and 156 Streets on the west side of Broadway in New York City.

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American Academy of Arts and Letters Unveils 2013 Architecture Award Winners

By Bustler Editors|

Monday, Apr 22, 2013

Share

Alberto Campo Baeza, 2013 winner of the Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize in Architecture: Offices for Junta Castilla León in Zamora, Spain (Photo: Javier Callejas)

Related

usa ● prize ● new york ● brunner memorial prize ● award ● arnold w. brunner memorial prize in architecture ● american academy of arts and letters ● alberto campo baeza

The American Academy of Arts and Letters has announced the recipients of its 2013 architecture awards. Spanish architect Alberto Campo Baeza was awarded the Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize in Architecture in recognition of significant contributions to architecture as an art. American architects Teddy Cruz, Thomas Phifer, Barry Bergdoll, and Sanford Kwinter each won the academy's Arts and Letters Awards in Architecture.

Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize in Architecture

Alberto Campo Baeza has been practicing and teaching architecture in Madrid for over 35 years. Through the use of timeless forms like the box and a virtuosic control of light, he has created a body of work that raises architecture to art. He is the 2013 recipient of the Heinrich Tessenow Gold Medal, and has taught at ETH Zürich, EPFL Lausanne, University of Pennsylvania, and Catholic University of America. Notable projects include the Caja Granada Savings Bank, Granada, Spain; Olnick Spanu House, Garrison, NY; Benetton Nursery, Treviso, Italy; Andalucia Museum of Memory, Granada, Spain; and the offices for Junta de Castilla y León, Zamora, Spain. "Architecture is the art of the practical," said awards committee chairman Richard Meier. "It is the creation of space that we move through and live in, and it must be beautiful and respectful to its local context. The work of Alberto Campo Baeza fully recognizes this and is thoughtful, confident, precise, and meticulous in its seemingly simplistic and finely crafted spatial forms."

Arts and Letters Awards in Architecture

Two Arts and Letters Awards in Architecture regognizing American architects whose work is characterized by a strong personal direction were given to Teddy Cruz and Thomas Phifer.

Teddy Cruz is an architect, academic, and activist whose San Diego-based studio has been exploring and challenging the politics and economics that drive urban conflict. "With the Tijuana-San Diego border as an experimental architectural laboratory," said Elizabeth Diller, "Cruz taps into a new civic imagination in which informal, adaptive architectural strategies replace top-down development. Cruz inserts himself between marginal immigrant populations, community-based nonprofit organizations, and political and economic leaders to act on both physical space and urban policy. His work demonstrates that architecture can play a central role in a broad range of social, economic, and cultural initiatives." Projects include the Casa Familiar: Living rooms at the Border and Senior Housing with Childcare, San Ysidro, CA; the Alter-Terra incubator for science, art, and socio-economic development in Los Laureles settlement, Tijuana, MX; and The Political Equator Meetings, a nomadic urban-pedagogical project that links the specialized knowledge of institutions and the activist, socio-economic, and political intelligence embedded in border communities.

Thomas Phifer has led his own practice in New York City since 1996. His work combines the beauty and simplicity of Modernism with a nuanced attention to the natural environment—to light and landscape and weather. Notable works include the Glenstone Museum, Potomac, MD; Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, NY; North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC; Rice University Brochstein Pavilion, Houston, TX; and Salt Point House, Salt Point, NY. "The architecture of Thomas Phifer is pure and clear, touching the earth with the lightness of a dancer," said Tod Williams. "It is built with a tectonic elegance and rigor that speaks to the continued importance and development of classical ideals."

Two Arts and Letters Awards in Architecture recognizing Americans who explore ideas in architecture through any medium of expression were presented to Barry Bergdoll and Sanford Kwinter.

Barry Bergdoll is a scholar of 19th- and 20th-century architectural history, and is the Philip Johnson Chief Curator of Architecture and Design at the Museum of Modern Art, where "he has distinguished himself as the curator of one didactic exhibition after another," said Kenneth Frampton. "These exhibitions range from systematic reappraisals of various luminaries and movements in the past to the presentation of topics of pertinence to the development of contemporary architecture in relation to society. His contribution on both of these fronts has exercised a seminal influence in contemporary practice." Recent exhibitions include Henri Labrouste: Structure Brought to Light, 2013; Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream, 2012; Rising Currents: Projects for New York’s Waterfront, 2010; and Home Delivery: Fabricating the Modern Dwelling, 2008.

Sanford Kwinter is a New York-based writer and editor who is Professor of Architectural Theory and Criticism at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, where he codirects the Master in Design Studies program. His books include Requiem: For the City at the End of the Millennium, Actar, 2010; Far From Equilibrium: Essays on Technology and Design Culture, Actar, 2008; Architectures of Time: Toward a Theory of the Event in Modernist Culture, MIT Press, 2001; Mutations: The American City, Actar, 2001; and ZONE 1/2: The Contemporary City, MIT Press, 1986. "With his erudite and passionate texts on architecture, Sanford Kwinter has become one of the most important critics of our time," said Steven Holl. "His ability to assimilate developments in architecture, art, and science today is astonishing. He is a uniquely talented and highly intelligent theorist who raises architecture to a new level of thought."

Work by the winners will be featured in the upcoming Exhibition of Work by Newly Elected Members and Recipients of Honors and Awards, which will be on view in the Academy’s galleries on Audubon Terrace between 155 and 156 Streets on the west side of Broadway in New York City.

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