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Greg Lynn

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Greg Lynn
Born1964
NationalityAmerican
Alma materMiami University, Princeton University
OccupationArchitect
PracticeGreg Lynn FORM
Websiteglform.com

Greg Lynn (born 1964) is an American architect, founder and owner of the Greg Lynn FORM office and a professor at the UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture.[1] He is CEO and co-Founder of the Boston based robotics company Piaggio Fast Forward.[2] He was the winner of the Golden Lion[3] at the 2008 Venice Biennale of Architecture. In 2010 Lynn was named a Fellow by United States Artists.[4] He is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Canadian Centre for Architecture.[5]

Life and works

Lynn was born in North Olmsted, Ohio, and claims always to have wanted to be an architect. "When I was twelve, I could already construct perspective drawings and draw axonometric projections," says Lynn. "In high school, someone taught drafting and in the first day of class they saw that I could do all these constructed drawings. I started picking oddly-shaped objects like threaded cones and I would try to draw them in two-point perspective. I got into drawing as a kind of sport."[6] Lynn graduated cum laude from Miami University (OH) with degrees in Architecture and Philosophy, and Princeton University School of Architecture with a Master of Architecture.[7] He is distinguished for his use of computer-aided design to produce irregular, biomorphic architectural forms, as he proposes that with the use of computers, calculus can be implemented into the generation of architectural expression. Lynn has written extensively on these ideas, first in 1993 as the Editor of an AD Special Issue called “Folding in Architecture”.[8] In 1999, his book “Animate FORM”,[9] funded in part by the Graham Foundation focused on the use of animation and motion graphic software for design. In “Folds, Bodies & Blobs: Collected Essays”[10] is the republished essay from ANY Magazine “Blobs, or Why Tectonics is Square and Topology is Groovy”[11] for which he is credited with coining the term ‘blob architecture’ later to become ‘blobitecture’ popularized in a weekly Sunday New York Times article “ON LANGUAGE: Defenestration”[12] by the late William Safire. The recent book “Greg Lynn FORM”,[13] edited by Mark Rappolt, includes contributions by his colleagues, collaborators and critics including Ross Lovegrove, Jeffrey Kipnis, Chris Bangle, Sylvia Lavin, Imaginary Forces, Peter Schröder, Bruce Sterling and J. G. Ballard. Along with Hani Rashid, Jesse Reiser and Stan Allen, he was one of the earliest teachers to explore the use of the digital technology for building design and construction when he was teaching the ‘Paperless Studios’ started while Bernard Tschumi was Dean at Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (GSAPP) from 1992–1999. He was the Professor of Spatial Conception and Exploration at the ETH Zurich Faculty of Architecture (ETHZ) from 1999–2002 and was the Davenport Visiting Professor at the Yale School of Architecture from 1999-2016.

Lynn's New York Presbyterian Church in Queens, New York,[14] with Douglas Garofalo, Michael McInturf is an early project which used vector-based animation software in its design conception. He was profiled by Time Magazine in their projection of 21st century innovators in the field of architecture and design.[15]

Lynn's latest works begin to explore how to integrate structure and form together as he discovered some biomorphic forms are inherently resistant to load. He often experiments with methods of manufacturing from aerospace, boat building and automobile industries in his installations such as Swarovski Crystal Sails[16] and HSBC Designers Lounge for 2009 Design Miami, “Bubbles in the Wine” installation at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco, 1999 Predator Installation at Wexner Center for the Arts with Fabian Marcaccio, 2002 „Expanding the Gap“ installation at Eigelstein 115 (Martin Rendel & René Spitz) with Ross Lovegrove and Tokujin Yoshioka, and in his industrial design projects like the super formed titanium Alessi Tea and Coffee Towers of 2003 and the Vitra Ravioli Chair.[17] Working with Panelite his studio invented a hollow plastic brick called the Blobwall[18] and using an upcycling approach to design and materials is repurposing children’s toys as the building bricks for Toy Furniture[19] and a Fountain[20] at the Hammer Museum by scanning rotomolded plastic toys, composing them on a computer, cutting them with a 5 axis CNC router and assembling them into welded monolithic objects. The Bloom House[21] includes curvaceous interior elements and windows built in plastics, fiberglass and wood all using this software and CNC controlled machines for its fabrication.

Publications

  • Animate Form. Princeton Architectural Press, New York, 1999 & 2011 ISBN 978-1568980836
  • Folding in Architecture: Architectural Design Profile 102. Academy Editions, London, 1995 ISBN 978-0470092187
  • Folds, Bodies & Blobs : Collected Essays (Books-by-architects), La Lettre volée, Bruxelles, 1998 ISBN 978-2873170684
  • Archaeology of the Digital, Sternberg Press co-publisher with Canadian Centre for Architecture, 2013 ISBN 978-3-943365-80-1
  • Greg Lynn Form, with Mark Rappolt, Rizzoli International Publications, New York, 2008 ISBN 978-0-8478-3102-9
  • Log 36: Robolog, with Cynthia Davidson, Anyone Corporation, New York, 2016 ISBN 978-0-9907352-4-3
  • Composites, Surfaces and Software: High Performance Architecture, with Mark Foster Gage, Yale School of Architecture, New Haven, 2011 ISBN 978-0-393-73333-4
  • Architectural Laboratories, with Hani Rashid, NAI Publishers, Rotterdam, 2003 ISBN 978-9056622411
  • Architecture for an Embryologic Housing (IT Revolution in Architecture)
  • Intricacy (with Claudia Gould), ICA Philadelphia, 2003 ISBN 978-0884541028

Selected exhibitions

References

  1. ^ Design, UCLA Architecture & Urban. "UCLA Architecture and Urban Design: Greg Lynn". www.aud.ucla.edu. Retrieved 2021-01-05.
  2. ^ Piaggio Fast Forward official website
  3. ^ Los Angeles Times. “UCLA professor a winner at Venice Architecture Biennale”, 24 Sept 2008.
  4. ^ United States Artists Official Website Archived 2010-11-10 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "CCA Board of Trustees". Canadian Centre for Architecture.
  6. ^ "Greg Lynn: Curve Your Enthusiasm". 032c. Retrieved December 17, 2013.
  7. ^ Yale Office of Public Affairs & Communications. Renowned Architects to Hold Endowed Chairs at Yale Archived 2010-07-27 at the Wayback Machine January 3, 2001.
  8. ^ Greg Lynn ed., Folding in Architecture: Architectural Design Profile No. 102 (London: Academy Group Ltd., 1993).
  9. ^ Lynn, Greg. 1999. Animate Form. New York: Princeton Architectural Press.
  10. ^ Lynn, Greg. 1998. Folds, Bodies & Blobs : Collected Essays. Bruxelles: La Lettre Volée.
  11. ^ ANY Magazine. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-03-13. Retrieved 2010-08-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Greg Lynn, “Blobs, or Why Tectonics is Square and Topology is Groovy”, ANY 14 (May 1996):
  12. ^ William Safire, "ON LANGUAGE; Defenestration" NY Times. [1] (December 1, 2001):
  13. ^ Greg Lynn and Mark Rappolt eds., [2] Greg Lynn Form (New York: Rizzoli, October 2008).
  14. ^ Modern Steel. New York. Presbyterian Church, New York, NY. Merit Award. June 2002.
  15. ^ Richard Lacayo, You Could Call Him Mr. Softee. Innovators, Time 100: The Next Wave. July 17, 2000.
  16. ^ Pilar Viladas, NY Times. Design Miami 2009 | Conceptual Healing. December 2, 2009.
  17. ^ Ravioli Chair. Greg Lynn. MoMA Permanent Collection, 2005.
  18. ^ Blobwall."[3] Archived 2010-06-05 at the Wayback Machine" arcspace.com. June 9, 2008.
  19. ^ Mike Boehm."[4]" Architecture with plastic toy ducks, Los Angeles Times. September 24, 2008.
  20. ^ Fountain of Toys."[5] Archived 2010-06-04 at the Wayback Machine" arcspace.com. May 31, 2010.
  21. ^ Nicolai Ouroussoff. Ahead of the curve, T Magazine, New York Times. Spring 2009.