Zaha Hadid

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BMW Central Building, Leipzig
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Vitra fire station, Weil am Rhein, Germany

Zaha Hadid (Arabic: زها حديد) CBE (born October 31, 1950, Baghdad, Iraq) is a notable Iraqi-British deconstructivist architect.

Born in Baghdad, Iraq, she received a degree in mathematics from the American University of Beirut before moving to study at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London. After graduating she worked with her former teacher, Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas at the Office for Metropolitan Architecture, becoming a partner in 1977. In 1980 she established her own London-based practice. During the 1980s she also taught at the Architectural Association. She has also taught at prestigious institutions around the world; she held the Kenzo Tange Chair at the Graduate School of Design, Harvard University, the Sullivan Chair at the University of Chicago School of Architecture, guest professorships at the Hochschule für Bildende Künste in Hamburg, the Knolton School of Architecture, Ohio, the Masters Studio at Columbia University, New York and the Eero Saarinen Visiting Professor of Architectural Design at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut. In addition, she was made Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and Fellow of the American Institute of Architecture. She is currently Professor at the University of Applied Arts Vienna in Austria.

A winner of many international competitions, theoretically influential and groundbreaking, a number of Hadid's winning designs were initially never built: notably, The Peak Club in Hong Kong (1983) and the Cardiff Bay Opera House in Wales (1994). In 2002 Hadid won the international design competition to design Singapore's one-north masterplan. In 2005, her design won the competition for the new city casino of Basel, Switzerland. In 2004 Hadid became the first female recipient of the Pritzker Architecture Prize, architecture's equivalent of the Nobel Prize. Previously, she had been awarded a CBE for services to architecture. She is a member of the editorial board of the Encyclopædia Britannica. In 2006, Hadid was honoured with a retrospective spanning her entire work at the Guggenheim Museum in New York.

Contents

[edit] Work

Much of Hadid's early work was conceptual, realized projects include:

  • Price Tower extension hyrbid project (2002), Bartlesville, Oklahoma - pending

She has also undertaken some high-profile interior work, including the Mind Zone at the Millennium Dome in London. One current project is for the 20,000-seat Aquatics Centre for London, one of the new venues being constructed for the 2012 Summer Olympics.

[edit] Exhibits

Zaha Hadid retrospective- Guggenheim Museum, New York City 2006 [1]

  • 1 June - 29 July 2006 – Max Protetch Gallery, Chelsea, NYC
  • 3 June - 25 October 2006Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
  • 4 May - 17 August 2003 - MAK - Museum of Applied Arts Vienna
  • 2001 - Kunstmuseum, Wolfsburg
  • 1997 - San Francisco MoMA
  • 1995 - Graduate School of Design at Harvard University
  • 1988 - Deconstructivist Architecture show at MoMA, New York
  • 1985 - GA Gallery, Tokyo
  • 1978 - Guggenheim Museum, New York
  • 1983 - Retrospective at the Architectural Association, London

[edit] Films and Videos

  • A Day with Zaha Hadid 2004, 52 minutes, color. New York: Michael Blackwood Productions.

[edit] External links

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