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PETER EISENMAN
HOA - 5
SHIVANI
SEM 5
INTRODUCTION
• Born August 11, 1932 (age
85) Newark, New Jersey, U.S.
• Nationality American
• Occupation Architect
• Buildings House VI
Memorial to the
Murdered Jews of Europe
City of Culture of Galicia
Peter Eisenman (born 1932) is an American architect. Considered one of the New York Five,
Eisenman is known for his writing and speaking about architecture as well as his designs,
which have been called high modernist or deconstructive.
EARLY LIFE
• Peter Eisenman was born to Jewish parents[3] on
August 11, 1932, in Newark, New Jersey.
• As a child, he attended Columbia High School
located in Maplewood, New Jersey.
• He transferred in to the architecture school as an
undergraduate at Cornell University and gave up
his position on the swimming team in order to
commit full-time to his studies.
• He received a Bachelor of Architecture degree
from Cornell, a Master of Architecture degree
from Columbia University's Graduate School of
Architecture, Planning and Preservation, and
M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of
Cambridge.
• He received an honorary degree from Syracuse
University School of Architecture in 2007.
CAREER
• He first rose to prominence as a member of the
New York Five (also known as the Whites, as
opposed to the Grays of Yale: Robert A.M. Stern,
Charles Moore, etc.), five architects (Eisenman,
Charles Gwathmey, John Hejduk, Richard Meier, and
Michael Graves) some of whose work was
presented at a CASE Studies conference in 1969.
• Eisenman received a number of grants from the
Graham Foundation for work done in this period.
• These architects' work at the time was often
considered a reworking of the ideas of Le Corbusier.
Subsequently, the five architects each developed
unique styles and ideologies, with Eisenman
becoming more affiliated with Deconstructivism.
PHILOSOPHY
• HE REJECTED THE FUNCTIONAL CONCEPT OF
MODERNISM BY DESIGNING STAIRWAYS THAT LED
NOWHERE OR COLUMNS THAT DID NOT FUNCTION
AS SUPPORT
• HIS WORKS WERE CHARACTERIZED BY
DISCONCERTING FORMS, ANGLES AND MATERIALS
• ACCORDING TO EISENMAN, WHEN YOU CAN SENSE
THE INCOMPLETENESS OF A FINISHED STRUCTURE, IT IS
A PARADOXICAL EXPERIENCE. IF THE PARTS THAT MAKE
UP A WHOLE ARE IN CONFLICT, THE SENSATION OF THE
INCOMPLETE CONTESTS THE FACT THAT THE
STRUCTURE IS, IN FACT, A FINISHED AND FULLY
ENCLOSED SPACE
STYLE
• EISENMAN HAS ALWAYS SOUGHT SOMEWHAT
OBSCURE PARALLELS BETWEEN HIS
ARCHITECTURAL WORKS AND PHILOSOPHICAL
OR LITERARY THEORY.
• His earlier houses were “generated” from a
transformation of forms related to te tenuous
relationship of launguage to an underlying
structure.
• Eisenman's latter works show a sympathy
with the ideas of deconstructionism.
• His tries to do is to “unlink” the function that
architecture may represent from the
apperance - form - of that same architectural
object.
CONEPT
- Artifical excavation
- tracing
- layering
- deformation
TECHNIQUES
- shear
- interference
- intersection
- distortion
- scaling
DIAGRAMMATIC IMAGE
- add to superposition
- Deform coposition
METHODS
- Historical reading of the site:
Superposition
-Deformation strategy:
Diagrammatic image
-Elaboration: Design
DISCONSTRUCTIONSIUM
- Characterized by ideas of
fragmentation.
- Characterized by a
stimulating unpredictability
and a controlled chaos.
QUOTES
• “THE ARCHITECTURE WE REMEMBER IS THAT WHICH NEVER
CONSOLES OR COMFORTS US “.
• “IN ANYRCHITECTURE THERE IS AN EQUITY BETWEEN THE
PRAGMATIC FUNCTION AND THE SYMBOLIC FUNCTION”.
WORKS
• House VI(Frank residence), Cornwall, Connecticut.Design: 1972.
• Wexner Centre for the Arts, Ohio State University,Ohio, 1989
• Nunotani Building, Edogawa Tokyo Japan, 1991
• Greater Columbus Convention Centre, Ohio,1993
• Aronoff Centre for Design and Art, University for Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio,
1996
• City of Culture of Galcia, Santiago de Compostela, Galcia, Spain, 1999
• Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, Berlin, 2005
• University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale , Arizona, 2006
HOUSE VI
INTRODUCTION
• Located in cornawall,Connecticut.
• Eisenman created a form from the
intersection of four planes , subsequently
manipulating the structures again and
again, until coherent spaces began to
emerge.
• The envelope and structure of the building
are just a manifestation od the changed
elements of the original four slab, with
some limited madification.
• The purely conceptual design meant that
the architecture is strictly plastic, bearing no
relationship to construction techniques or
purely ornamental form.
LOCATION
• In the earlier stage of his career he
designed a series of houses, named as
house I to house X. His House II, VI and
X are most famous projects of his initial
ones.
• • Eisenman, one of the New York Five,
designed the house for Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Frank between 1972-1975 who
found great admiration for the
architect’s work despite previously
being known as a “paper architect” and
theorist.
• • By giving Eisenman a chance to put his
theories to practice, one of the most
famous, and difficult, houses emerged
in the United States.
• Situated on a flat site in Cornwall, House VI stands its own ground as a
sculpture in its surroundings.
• • The design emerged from a conceptual process that began with a grid.
Eisenman manipulated the grid in a way so that the house was divided into
four sections and when completed the building itself could be a “record of the
design process.”
• • Therefore structural elements, were revealed so that the construction
process was evident, but not always understood.
• • Thus, the house became a study between the actual structure and
architectural theory. The house was effeciently constructed using a simple
post and beam system.
• • However some columns or beams play no structural role and are
incorporated to enhance the conceptual design. For example one column in
the kitchen hovers over the kitchen table, not even touching the ground! In
other spaces, beams meet but do not intersect, creating a cluster of supports.
DRAWING
S LIVING
STUDY
STORAGE
ENTRYCLOSET
DINING
KITCHEN
GROUND FLOOR
PLAN
GROUND FLOOR
PLAN
CLOSET
LAV
M.BEDROOM
DRESSING
OPEN
BATH
ELEVATION
SECTION
• The structure was incorporated into
Eisenman’s grid to convey the module that
created the interior spaces with a series of
planes that slipped through each other.
• • Purposely ignoring the idea of form
following function, Eisenman created
spaces that were quirky and well-lit, but
rather unconventional to live with.
• • He made it difficult for the users so that
they would have to grow accustom to the
architecture and constantly be aware of it.
For instance, in the bedroom there is a
glass slot in the center of the wall
continuing through the floor that divides
the room in half, forcing there to be
separate beds on either side of the room.
• Another curious aspect is an upside
down staircase, the element which
portrays the axis of the house and is
painted red to draw attention.
• • There are also many other difficult
aspects that disrupt conventional
living, such as the column hanging
over the dinner table that separates
diners and the single bathroom that is
only accessible through a bedroom.
• • Eisenman was able to constantly
remind the users of the architecture
around them and how it affects their
lives.
• He succeeded in building a
structure that functioned both
as a house and a work of art,
but changing the priority of
both so that function followed
the art.
• • He built a home where man
was forced to live in a work of
art, a sculpture, and according
to the clients who enjoyed
inhabiting Eisenman’s artwork
and poetry, the house was very
successful.
WEXNER CENTER OF
ARTS
INTRODUCTION
• The firm of Peter Eisenman and Richard Trott won the design competition for
Wexner Center of Arts.
• • Eisenman wowed the Jury with his bold ideas for the art center, which were
aimed at linking the past to the present (“Timeless Earth 1), through the use
of unconventional means.
• • The end result became both Peter Eisenman’s first large public commission
and one of the first large scale constructions of Deconstructivist Architecture.
• • The building is tucked in between the Mershon Auditorium and Weigel Hall
both of which are home to programs that were to be consolidated into the
Wexner Center.
Design process
• The literal use of the rotated grid is
used by Eisenman as an extensive
method of giving the architecture
its own voice.
• • The identification of the dialectic
grids stems from conditions that
exist at the boundary of the site,
Eisenman then grafts one grid on
top of the other and seeks
potential connections or ‘event
sites’ at the urban, local, and
interior scales.
• Scalar operations are performed as a
means of mediating the scale of the
urban grid towards a pedestrian or
human scale, lastly, the results of these
operations serves as a map that is used
to locate program, pathways, structure,
interior forms, excavations, and views
along the newly afforded possibilities of
‘event sites’ in both the horizontal and
vertical planes.
• • The results of these operations are
visible in almost every aspect of the
construction, from the module in the
curtainwall, the tiling of the pavers,
planters and trees on site.
• To add to the depth of possibilities afforded by this
excavation of the immediate condition of the grid
Eisenman grafts figured scaffolding onto the site and
integrates this figure into the primary circuit or
pathway of the building.
• • The scaffolding is scaled to represent the module
of the grid that is interpretable at a human scale.
• • The scaffold is reduced to its raw type, to the
essential condition that signifies the essence of its
existence that being an impermanent accessory to
architecture that allows its construction, but does
not necessarily shelter.
• • This architecture of non-shelter is aligned directly
adjacent to an interior pathway within the building
that does enclose and protect.
• Eisenman coupled his grid abstractions with
a series of figures that would play a key role
in his aim of linking the past with the
present.
• • The most prominent of these figures exists
as a reconstruction of a part of the armoury
that occupied the site from 1898 until it was
terminally damaged by fire on May 17th
1958.
• • The figure of the armoury Eisenman has
presented along the south pedestrian access
(the most visually accessible elevation of the
building) has been reduced to a series of
fragments of armoury-like forms that
indicate the ‘essence’ of the armoury
without reproducing any of the original
intricate detail.
• Within the armoury forms the negative space
carved out of the solid brick masses that
make up these figures is cast with a dark
tinted curtain wall, within which is an
aluminum mullion pattern evocative of the
use of grid.
• • The contrast created by the anodized
aluminum of the mullions intensifies the
impenetrable depth of the glass.
• • The lack of historical fidelity in the
reconstruction of the armoury, the
fragmentation of the form, and the insertion
of dark glass into the voids left between
these fragments seems to speak of the
disjointed manner in which we reflect the
past, and in turn, it serves to remind us of a
past we have lost and can never return to.
• SITE SECTION
SITE
THANK YOU

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Peter eisenman

  • 1. PETER EISENMAN HOA - 5 SHIVANI SEM 5
  • 2. INTRODUCTION • Born August 11, 1932 (age 85) Newark, New Jersey, U.S. • Nationality American • Occupation Architect • Buildings House VI Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe City of Culture of Galicia Peter Eisenman (born 1932) is an American architect. Considered one of the New York Five, Eisenman is known for his writing and speaking about architecture as well as his designs, which have been called high modernist or deconstructive.
  • 3. EARLY LIFE • Peter Eisenman was born to Jewish parents[3] on August 11, 1932, in Newark, New Jersey. • As a child, he attended Columbia High School located in Maplewood, New Jersey. • He transferred in to the architecture school as an undergraduate at Cornell University and gave up his position on the swimming team in order to commit full-time to his studies. • He received a Bachelor of Architecture degree from Cornell, a Master of Architecture degree from Columbia University's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Cambridge. • He received an honorary degree from Syracuse University School of Architecture in 2007.
  • 4. CAREER • He first rose to prominence as a member of the New York Five (also known as the Whites, as opposed to the Grays of Yale: Robert A.M. Stern, Charles Moore, etc.), five architects (Eisenman, Charles Gwathmey, John Hejduk, Richard Meier, and Michael Graves) some of whose work was presented at a CASE Studies conference in 1969. • Eisenman received a number of grants from the Graham Foundation for work done in this period. • These architects' work at the time was often considered a reworking of the ideas of Le Corbusier. Subsequently, the five architects each developed unique styles and ideologies, with Eisenman becoming more affiliated with Deconstructivism.
  • 5. PHILOSOPHY • HE REJECTED THE FUNCTIONAL CONCEPT OF MODERNISM BY DESIGNING STAIRWAYS THAT LED NOWHERE OR COLUMNS THAT DID NOT FUNCTION AS SUPPORT • HIS WORKS WERE CHARACTERIZED BY DISCONCERTING FORMS, ANGLES AND MATERIALS • ACCORDING TO EISENMAN, WHEN YOU CAN SENSE THE INCOMPLETENESS OF A FINISHED STRUCTURE, IT IS A PARADOXICAL EXPERIENCE. IF THE PARTS THAT MAKE UP A WHOLE ARE IN CONFLICT, THE SENSATION OF THE INCOMPLETE CONTESTS THE FACT THAT THE STRUCTURE IS, IN FACT, A FINISHED AND FULLY ENCLOSED SPACE
  • 6. STYLE • EISENMAN HAS ALWAYS SOUGHT SOMEWHAT OBSCURE PARALLELS BETWEEN HIS ARCHITECTURAL WORKS AND PHILOSOPHICAL OR LITERARY THEORY. • His earlier houses were “generated” from a transformation of forms related to te tenuous relationship of launguage to an underlying structure. • Eisenman's latter works show a sympathy with the ideas of deconstructionism. • His tries to do is to “unlink” the function that architecture may represent from the apperance - form - of that same architectural object.
  • 7. CONEPT - Artifical excavation - tracing - layering - deformation TECHNIQUES - shear - interference - intersection - distortion - scaling DIAGRAMMATIC IMAGE - add to superposition - Deform coposition METHODS - Historical reading of the site: Superposition -Deformation strategy: Diagrammatic image -Elaboration: Design DISCONSTRUCTIONSIUM - Characterized by ideas of fragmentation. - Characterized by a stimulating unpredictability and a controlled chaos.
  • 8. QUOTES • “THE ARCHITECTURE WE REMEMBER IS THAT WHICH NEVER CONSOLES OR COMFORTS US “. • “IN ANYRCHITECTURE THERE IS AN EQUITY BETWEEN THE PRAGMATIC FUNCTION AND THE SYMBOLIC FUNCTION”.
  • 9. WORKS • House VI(Frank residence), Cornwall, Connecticut.Design: 1972. • Wexner Centre for the Arts, Ohio State University,Ohio, 1989 • Nunotani Building, Edogawa Tokyo Japan, 1991 • Greater Columbus Convention Centre, Ohio,1993 • Aronoff Centre for Design and Art, University for Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1996 • City of Culture of Galcia, Santiago de Compostela, Galcia, Spain, 1999 • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, Berlin, 2005 • University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale , Arizona, 2006
  • 11. INTRODUCTION • Located in cornawall,Connecticut. • Eisenman created a form from the intersection of four planes , subsequently manipulating the structures again and again, until coherent spaces began to emerge. • The envelope and structure of the building are just a manifestation od the changed elements of the original four slab, with some limited madification. • The purely conceptual design meant that the architecture is strictly plastic, bearing no relationship to construction techniques or purely ornamental form.
  • 13. • In the earlier stage of his career he designed a series of houses, named as house I to house X. His House II, VI and X are most famous projects of his initial ones. • • Eisenman, one of the New York Five, designed the house for Mr. and Mrs. Richard Frank between 1972-1975 who found great admiration for the architect’s work despite previously being known as a “paper architect” and theorist. • • By giving Eisenman a chance to put his theories to practice, one of the most famous, and difficult, houses emerged in the United States.
  • 14. • Situated on a flat site in Cornwall, House VI stands its own ground as a sculpture in its surroundings. • • The design emerged from a conceptual process that began with a grid. Eisenman manipulated the grid in a way so that the house was divided into four sections and when completed the building itself could be a “record of the design process.” • • Therefore structural elements, were revealed so that the construction process was evident, but not always understood. • • Thus, the house became a study between the actual structure and architectural theory. The house was effeciently constructed using a simple post and beam system. • • However some columns or beams play no structural role and are incorporated to enhance the conceptual design. For example one column in the kitchen hovers over the kitchen table, not even touching the ground! In other spaces, beams meet but do not intersect, creating a cluster of supports.
  • 19. • The structure was incorporated into Eisenman’s grid to convey the module that created the interior spaces with a series of planes that slipped through each other. • • Purposely ignoring the idea of form following function, Eisenman created spaces that were quirky and well-lit, but rather unconventional to live with. • • He made it difficult for the users so that they would have to grow accustom to the architecture and constantly be aware of it. For instance, in the bedroom there is a glass slot in the center of the wall continuing through the floor that divides the room in half, forcing there to be separate beds on either side of the room.
  • 20. • Another curious aspect is an upside down staircase, the element which portrays the axis of the house and is painted red to draw attention. • • There are also many other difficult aspects that disrupt conventional living, such as the column hanging over the dinner table that separates diners and the single bathroom that is only accessible through a bedroom. • • Eisenman was able to constantly remind the users of the architecture around them and how it affects their lives.
  • 21. • He succeeded in building a structure that functioned both as a house and a work of art, but changing the priority of both so that function followed the art. • • He built a home where man was forced to live in a work of art, a sculpture, and according to the clients who enjoyed inhabiting Eisenman’s artwork and poetry, the house was very successful.
  • 23. INTRODUCTION • The firm of Peter Eisenman and Richard Trott won the design competition for Wexner Center of Arts. • • Eisenman wowed the Jury with his bold ideas for the art center, which were aimed at linking the past to the present (“Timeless Earth 1), through the use of unconventional means. • • The end result became both Peter Eisenman’s first large public commission and one of the first large scale constructions of Deconstructivist Architecture. • • The building is tucked in between the Mershon Auditorium and Weigel Hall both of which are home to programs that were to be consolidated into the Wexner Center.
  • 24. Design process • The literal use of the rotated grid is used by Eisenman as an extensive method of giving the architecture its own voice. • • The identification of the dialectic grids stems from conditions that exist at the boundary of the site, Eisenman then grafts one grid on top of the other and seeks potential connections or ‘event sites’ at the urban, local, and interior scales.
  • 25. • Scalar operations are performed as a means of mediating the scale of the urban grid towards a pedestrian or human scale, lastly, the results of these operations serves as a map that is used to locate program, pathways, structure, interior forms, excavations, and views along the newly afforded possibilities of ‘event sites’ in both the horizontal and vertical planes. • • The results of these operations are visible in almost every aspect of the construction, from the module in the curtainwall, the tiling of the pavers, planters and trees on site.
  • 26. • To add to the depth of possibilities afforded by this excavation of the immediate condition of the grid Eisenman grafts figured scaffolding onto the site and integrates this figure into the primary circuit or pathway of the building. • • The scaffolding is scaled to represent the module of the grid that is interpretable at a human scale. • • The scaffold is reduced to its raw type, to the essential condition that signifies the essence of its existence that being an impermanent accessory to architecture that allows its construction, but does not necessarily shelter. • • This architecture of non-shelter is aligned directly adjacent to an interior pathway within the building that does enclose and protect.
  • 27. • Eisenman coupled his grid abstractions with a series of figures that would play a key role in his aim of linking the past with the present. • • The most prominent of these figures exists as a reconstruction of a part of the armoury that occupied the site from 1898 until it was terminally damaged by fire on May 17th 1958. • • The figure of the armoury Eisenman has presented along the south pedestrian access (the most visually accessible elevation of the building) has been reduced to a series of fragments of armoury-like forms that indicate the ‘essence’ of the armoury without reproducing any of the original intricate detail.
  • 28.
  • 29. • Within the armoury forms the negative space carved out of the solid brick masses that make up these figures is cast with a dark tinted curtain wall, within which is an aluminum mullion pattern evocative of the use of grid. • • The contrast created by the anodized aluminum of the mullions intensifies the impenetrable depth of the glass. • • The lack of historical fidelity in the reconstruction of the armoury, the fragmentation of the form, and the insertion of dark glass into the voids left between these fragments seems to speak of the disjointed manner in which we reflect the past, and in turn, it serves to remind us of a past we have lost and can never return to.