Philip Johnson was an American architect born in 1906 who became one of architecture's most influential forces. After graduating from Harvard in 1930, he introduced modern European architects like Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier to American audiences. Some of Johnson's most notable works include the Glass House (1949), the Four Seasons Restaurant in the Seagram Building (1959), and the AT&T Building in New York (1984), which brought postmodernism into the mainstream. Throughout his career, Johnson experimented with different architectural styles from Modernism to Postmodernism. He is remembered both for stimulating new ideas and for creating luxurious, elegant buildings.
Philip Johnson was an American architect born in 1906 who became one of architecture's most influential forces. After graduating from Harvard in 1930, he introduced modern European architects like Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier to American audiences. Some of Johnson's most notable works include the Glass House (1949), the Four Seasons Restaurant in the Seagram Building (1959), and the AT&T Building in New York (1984), which brought postmodernism into the mainstream. Throughout his career, Johnson experimented with different architectural styles from Modernism to Postmodernism. He is remembered both for stimulating new ideas and for creating luxurious, elegant buildings.
Philip Johnson was an American architect born in 1906 who became one of architecture's most influential forces. After graduating from Harvard in 1930, he introduced modern European architects like Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier to American audiences. Some of Johnson's most notable works include the Glass House (1949), the Four Seasons Restaurant in the Seagram Building (1959), and the AT&T Building in New York (1984), which brought postmodernism into the mainstream. Throughout his career, Johnson experimented with different architectural styles from Modernism to Postmodernism. He is remembered both for stimulating new ideas and for creating luxurious, elegant buildings.
Philip Johnson was an American architect born in 1906 who became one of architecture's most influential forces. After graduating from Harvard in 1930, he introduced modern European architects like Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier to American audiences. Some of Johnson's most notable works include the Glass House (1949), the Four Seasons Restaurant in the Seagram Building (1959), and the AT&T Building in New York (1984), which brought postmodernism into the mainstream. Throughout his career, Johnson experimented with different architectural styles from Modernism to Postmodernism. He is remembered both for stimulating new ideas and for creating luxurious, elegant buildings.
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Philip Johnson
...about Philip Johnson
• Philip Johnson was born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1906, and in the years since has become one of architecture's most potent forces. Before designing his first building at the age of 36, Johnson had been client, critic, author, historian, museum director, but not an architect. • After graduation from Harvard in 1930, Philip Johnson became the first Director of the Department of Architecture at the Museum of Modern Art, New York (1932-1934 and 1945-1954). • He coined the term International Style and introduced the work of modern European architects such as Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier to America • Johnson returned to Harvard University in 1940 to study architecture under Marcel Breuer • He received a B.Arch in 1943 and practised architecture in Cambridge, Massachusetts until 1946, when he moved back to New York to serve as Director of Architecture at MOMA. He worked with Richard Foster from 1964 to 1967 and with John Burgee from 1967 until his retirement. • For his master degree thesis, he designed a residence for himself, the now famous Glass House (1949), which has been called one of the world's most beautiful and yet least functional homes. • By the fifties, Johnson was revising his earlier views, culminating with a building that proved to be one of the most controversial of his career—the AT&T headquarters in New York with its so-called "Chippendale" top. • In 1979, Philip Johnson was honored with the first Pritzker Architecture Prize in recognition of "50 years of imagination and vitality embodied in a myriad of museums, theaters, libraries, houses, gardens and corporate structures.“ • Toward the end of his life, Johnson went public with some private matters -- his homosexuality and his past as a disciple of Hitler-style fascism
Celebrated architect Philip Johnson dies at 98",
Ideologies • As an architect, Johnson is most widely respected for his work in the early 1950s while still under the influence of Mies Van Der Rohe. However, he altered his architectural principles from Modernist to Post- Modernist to anti-Post Modernist at will. This has led to the criticism that he showed more interest in style than in substance. He will probably be remembered more as a stimulator of ideas than as a designer • Philip Johnson's buildings were luxurious in scale and materials, featuring expansive interior space and a classical sense of symmetry and elegance. These same traits epitomized corporate America's dominant role in world markets in prominent skyscrapers for such leading companies as AT&T (1984), Pennzoil (1976) and Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company (1984). The Glass house, New Cannan,connecticut(1949)
• The main facade at the end of the approach
walk; cars are parked some distance away • Plan of the house showing brick fire place/ablution tower and approach path. • View showing the combined reflectivity and transparency of the glass wall , black painted steel frame and brick plinth. • Interior showing wood-block flooring, brick tower to right , and chair designed Mies Van der rohe. Four Seasons Restaurant, Seagram Building, New York (1959)
• Curtains made from chain
of anodised aluminium. • Part of the interior showing pool, and chairs designed by Mies Van der rohe • Interior view showing suspended sculpture by Lippold and lavish appointments. Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, Lincoln, Nebraska.(1963)
• The two storey travertine columns which became
pilasters on either side of the entrance. • The entrance portico showing well-studied sciography and fluted columns. • Section showing internal two storey hall and central staircase. • Ground and first floor plans • Staircase up from entrance hall, with columns of portico beyond glazed entrance. • First floor gallery spanning the central hall, with symmetrical access stair and view through rear portico • Stair access showing travertine interior finish and rib intersection on ceiling. Pennzoil Place, Houston,Texas(1976) • Pennzoil Plaza in Houston by Johnson & Burgee is a geometrically manipulative, modernist approach. • Twin 36-story towers, mirror images of each other and trapezoidal in plan, are related at the ground level by triangular shaped plazas that are 8- story spaces enclosed by a 45-degree glass slope • The 'twins' are in dramatic tension since they are separated only by a narrow 10-foot vertical slot, making them a changing visual presence in the urban landscape • The geometry of the idea is absolutely clear, especially since the towers are unbroken, neutral masses clad in bronze-tinted glass and a dark brown anodized aluminum curtain wall AT&T Headquarters Building, New York(1984).(Now the Sony building) • This was the building which brought post modernism to the attention of the world. • Its broken pediment has now been so widely copied that it has become cliche. • It is 647 foot skyscraper for 1500 employees. • It has arcade in the rear, a science museum, and a loggia on the ground floor. • Both Seagram and AT&T were office towers similar in plan , steel construction and overall shape. • This building has hidden the structure away under pink granite cladding. • As a urban object, this building was a failure. • Both perceptually and compositionally, it was a misfit for the site. • Mark Alden Branch points out (progressive architecture, july1994) that the arcades soon became notorious for their inhospitability. • At a height of 60 feet they managed to capture almost no sunlight but lots of wind. • The galleria, located behind the building was nothing but “a wind tunnel”. • Thus , the New York times announced that, due to its many failing, the buildings new owner, the Sony corporation, were prompted to hire the firm of Gwathmey and Siegel to enclose and air-conditioned the galleria and turn arcade into Sony retail outfits. Philip Johnson’s Recent Work Turning Point, case western Reserve university, Cleveland, Ohio.(1996) • Turning point is an architecture composed of five sculptural forms organized around the turning point of a campus pedestrian path. • The shapes each approximately six meter in height and varying from one to five meters in width. Aerial view of plaster study model • The individual shapes will be constructed in polyester resin and fiberglass formed over structurally reinforced polyurethane foam. • Night lighting for the project is similarly other-worldly, utilizing fiber optic radiating from a central origin, like moon light, which illuminate the interior faces of the structure. Sketch Elevations from Design Process Lewis Guest House
A plaster study model
• A guest house developed for the patron of arts who wished to push the limits of design and building tecnology. • It is also inspired by visionary designs of the turn of the century German Expressionist painters and designers. • The form is dominated by central volume, just over 11 meter height ,with complex continuous curved walls and vertical slit windows. • Around this main room are clustered various smaller spaces for bedrooms, bathrooms, entry and services. • Each of these smaller private room is top lit by individual skylight. • The entire building is placed at the edge of pool, giving the main living room a dramatic view through a large window. • The construction techniques involves prefabricated panels of structural wire mesh around an insulating polyurethane foam core. • This is easily cut to the require shape and then sprayed with concrete to complete its structural integrity Plan Section