John Hejduk

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Hejduk (b. New York, N.Y. 1929; d. New York, N.Y. 3 July 2000), was an architect, artist, educator that spent much of his life in New York City. Hejduk is known by some for his use of attractive and often difficult-to-construct objects and shapes; also for a profound interest in the fundamental issues of shape, organization, representation, and reciprocity.

Hejduk studied at the Cooper Union School of Art and Architecture, the University of Cincinnati, and the Harvard Graduate School of Design, from which he graduated with a Masters in Architecture in 1953. He worked in several offices in New York including that of I. M. Pei and Partners and the office of A.M. Kinney and Associates. He established his own practice in New York in 1965. (1)

Contents

[edit] Career

Hejduk is associated with several schools, including The New York Five (MOMA publication "Five Architects" that also included works of the architects Peter Eisenman, Richard Meier, Michael Graves, and Charles Gwathmey), and The Texas Rangers(A group of innovative architects and professors, at the Texas School of Architecture, Austin, responsible for changing architecture education as a discourse. Other well-known participants include Colin Rowe and Werner Seligmann). Hejduk was dean of the Cooper Union School of Art and Architecture from 1972 to 2000. His arrival including the cooperation of many other influential Professors (including Raimund Abraham, Ricardo Scofidio, Peter Eisenman, Charles Gwathmey, Elizabeth Diller, David Shapiro, and many others) transformed the practice and critical thought of architecture in ways that might be compared to Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe's transformation of the Armor Institute into the Illinois Institute of Technology.

His early work and curriculum grew from a set of excercises exploring cubes, grids, and frames, through an examination of square grids placed within diagonal containers set against an occasional curving wall, towards a series of experiments with flat planes and curved masses in various combinations and colors (1). Eventually, John Hejduk's "hard-line" modernist space-making excercises, heavily influenced by Frank Lloyd Wright and Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe, moved away from his interests in favor of free-hand "figure/objects" influenced by mythology and spirituality, clearly expressing the nature of his poetry. The relationship between Hejduk's shape/objects and their surroundings is a controversial subject, raising questions similar to those raised by the early houses of Peter Eisenman. The built work of Hejduk began to appear in the 1980s (Mask of Medusa, Brazil; Kreuzberg Tower, Berlin; House for Two Brothers, Tegel Harbor - Berlin; Security (Interventions), Berlin; etc...) and continue beyond his death. (Wall House 2, Groningen, NL; and Hejduk Tribute Towers, Galicia Cultural Center - Santiago de Compastello Peter Eisenman).

Contemporary Theorists/Researchers/Academics publishing work/research by and about John Hejduk include K Michael Hayes, Mark Linder, R.E. Somol, and Renata Hejduk.

A large portion of his work is archived at the Canadian Centre for Architecture in Montreal.

[edit] Key Buildings

[edit] Bibliography

  • Education Of An Architect A Point Of View (2000)
  • Pewter Wings Golden Horns Stone Veils: Wedding in a Dark Plum Room (1997)
  • Adjusting Foundations (1995)
  • Architectures In Love (1995)
  • Security (1995)
  • Berlin in Night (1993)
  • Soundings (1993)
  • Aesop's Fables with Joseph Jacobs. Illustrations by John Hejduk. (1991)
  • PrĂ¡ce (Practice) (1991)
  • The Riga Project (1989)
  • Vladivostok (1989)
  • Bovisa (1987)
  • Mask of Medusa (1985)
  • Fabrications (1974)
  • Three Projects (1969)

[edit] References

(1) The Great Buildings Collection web site profile of John Hejduk

[edit] External links

 This article about an American architect is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.