How Frank Gehry became Frank Gehry

  • By James Tarmy Bloomberg News
  • Friday, September 25, 2015 6:51pm
  • LifeGo-See-Do

Even if you can’t name a building by architect Frank Gehry, you’ll know it when you see it: Gehry’s is the structure whose panoply of lines pile up against one another, with angles so improbable as to look barely functional. His style is bright, dynamic, and as subtle as a police siren.

This instantly recognizable aesthetic — think: Seattle’s Experience Music Project Museum — has helped make Gehry arguably the most famous architect in the world. His name is a brand in itself: There was a Frank Gehry line of jewelry at Tiffany’s, a Frank Gehry furniture line from Knoll, and a Frank Gehry handbag from Louis Vuitton. His level of celebrity transcends architecture, derived instead from the perception that Gehry is simply an artistic genius.

In a 1997 New York Times review, architecture critic Herbert Muschamp wrote that Gehry “changed an art form and in the process is changing a culture.” Eighteen years later, his reputation continues to grow.

Where does this genius come from? Was it always there, simmering below the surface, a universal truth waiting for the opportunity to be recognized by an adoring public? This is what architecture critic Paul Goldberger set out to discover in creating his new biography, “Building Art: The Life and Work of Frank Gehry.”

In Goldberger’s excellent and comprehensive treatment, Gehry doesn’t come across as a genius at all. He is depicted as a very talented man who worked very hard for a very long time, learning only gradually how to design the buildings that would make him famous. The narrative isn’t very sexy, but it is undeniably fascinating. Mirroring the rise of contemporary architecture, Gehry emerges from the constraints of mid-century modernism, grapples with questions of urban development and human scale, and comes increasingly to rely on hyper- sophisticated, proprietary computer software.

This isn’t to say that Goldberger, an explicit, perhaps relentless admirer of Gehry, ever denigrates Gehry or his early buildings. In this book, Gehry can do no wrong. There’s always something to compliment. An innocuous, vaguely modernist house Gehry built in 1958 in Brentwood, L.A., has “a tight, formal elegance.” In a white stucco, six-unit apartment house in Santa Monica, Calif., Goldberger finds “a subtly asymmetrical arrangement of solids and voids,” even though the voids, in this case, are recessed doors on an unremarkable balcony.

The banality of Gehry’s early buildings is partially because he needed work and took it wherever he could get it. He grew up poor, as we are repeatedly reminded over the course of the first hundred pages of the book. (Goldberg slogs through the minutiae of Gehry’s origin story; it takes 61 pages for “Frank,” as he’s known in the book, to enroll in architecture school.) To cut it down a few pages: For the first decade of his career, Gehry was comparatively hard up.

Only in the mid-1960s, when Gehry built a house/studio for graphic designer Lou Danziger, did a unique architectural vision begin to emerge. The structure, Goldberger writes, was “two oblong boxes, set parallel but one offset from the other, positioned as carefully as pieces of minimalist sculpture.”

By the early 1990s, Gehry was also beginning to use computer software to model his buildings, which played a key role in the submission of his design for the Guggenheim Bilbao.

Unsurprisingly, this is also when the buildings became identifiably Gehry-esque-curving, disjointed shapes piled into an unlikely building-simply because they would have been impossible to engineer before the computer age.

Gehry’s software helped “design the structural framework, calculating the structural stresses at each point of the building, and determining the most economical way to construct the curving forms,” Goldberger explains. And because of the software, Gehry managed to keep costs under control, coming in below the museum’s $100 million budget.

The success of the Guggenheim Bilbao put Gehry on the map permanently, and his aesthetic has remained almost entirely unchained in the subsequent 20 years. That’s partially a result of client demands; if you shell out for a Frank Gehry building, you can be forgiven for wanting it to look like one (see: Biomuseo Panama). It’s also because, to a remarkable extent, Gehry seems to have found a language of his own, which he could finally and fully articulate.

To be sure, he’s lucky to have reached this point, but that’s hardly the same thing as genius. It’s just hard work.

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