Guests: Frank Gehry RSS

2009:

  1. A conversation with architect Frank Gehry
    Duration
    34 min
    Comments
    8 comments
    Rating
    * * * *
  2. Daily Highlights Wednesday May 20, 2009
    Duration
    7 min
    Comments
    1 comment
    Rating
    * * * * *

2008:

  1. Pritzker Prize Winners Jean Nouvel, Frank Gehry, Zaha Hadid and Renzo Piano
    Duration
    54 min
    Comments
    18 comments
    Rating
    * * * *

2006:

  1. A clip from a conversation with architect Frank Gehry
    Duration
    8 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * *
  2. A conversation with guest host Nicolai Ouroussoff and architect Frank Gehry
    Duration
    33 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *

2005:

  1. A panel discussion about architecture
    Duration
    52 min
    Comments
    1 comment
    Rating
    * * * *
  2. A conversation with architect Frank Gehry
    Duration
    60 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * *

2001:

  1. An hour with architect Frank Gehry from the Guggenheim Museum
    Duration
    51 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * *

1999:

  1. A discussion about the Corcoran Gallery
    Duration
    17 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * *
  2. A conversation with architect Frank Gehry
    Duration
    60 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * *

1998:

  1. A panel discussion about the architecture of museums
    Duration
    30 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *

1997:

  1. An interview with Frank Gehry
    Duration
    32 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *

Frank Owen Gehry is a Pritzker Prize winning architect.

Gehry’s buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions. Many museums, companies, and cities seek Gehry’s services as a badge of distinction, regardless of the product he delivers.

His best known works include the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, which is covered in titanium, Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown Los Angeles, Dancing House in Prague, Czech Republic, and his private residence in Santa Monica, California, the latter of which jump-started his substantive career and lifted it from the stature of “paper architecture”, a phenomenon in which many famous architects are observed to have experienced their formative decades experimenting almost exclusively on paper before receiving their first major commission in their later years.

Source-Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Gehry