The Prague Post - Frank Gehry: five key works

EUR -
AED 4.199256
AFN 73.179727
ALL 93.91772
AMD 420.553613
ANG 2.047204
AOA 1049.123095
ARS 1708.383446
AUD 1.650281
AWG 2.061036
AZN 1.936253
BAM 1.955077
BBD 2.304708
BDT 141.087805
BGN 1.933407
BHD 0.431459
BIF 3403.68966
BMD 1.143432
BND 1.476718
BOB 7.924415
BRL 5.910055
BSD 1.144307
BTN 109.015054
BWP 15.433695
BYN 3.320117
BYR 22411.267075
BZD 2.301409
CAD 1.624657
CDF 2568.148077
CHF 0.919577
CLF 0.02677
CLP 1053.603821
CNY 7.762874
CNH 7.763703
COP 3825.054442
CRC 521.329934
CUC 1.143432
CUP 30.300948
CVE 110.226632
CZK 24.187023
DJF 203.769963
DKK 7.474585
DOP 67.787886
DZD 152.562232
EGP 56.237381
ERN 17.15148
ETB 183.495941
FJD 2.58467
FKP 0.85631
GBP 0.856715
GEL 3.012928
GGP 0.85631
GHS 12.999191
GIP 0.85631
GMD 82.900305
GNF 10035.72618
GTQ 8.73296
GYD 239.361916
HKD 8.967634
HNL 30.628009
HRK 7.534989
HTG 149.671175
HUF 353.600058
IDR 20559.993506
ILS 3.428752
IMP 0.85631
INR 108.880685
IQD 1499.010998
IRR 1573305.251693
ISK 144.003761
JEP 0.85631
JMD 181.159617
JOD 0.810715
JPY 184.976994
KES 147.971296
KGS 99.990498
KHR 4582.525143
KMF 492.819773
KPW 1029.089194
KRW 1753.42435
KWD 0.354795
KYD 0.953689
KZT 541.153467
LAK 25838.683982
LBP 102472.171886
LKR 383.284966
LRD 207.682261
LSL 18.561026
LTL 3.376257
LVL 0.691651
LYD 7.334479
MAD 10.701209
MDL 20.128434
MGA 4851.33256
MKD 61.612207
MMK 2401.073792
MNT 4095.942326
MOP 9.243984
MRU 45.669102
MUR 53.798951
MVR 17.677408
MWK 1984.317975
MXN 19.983589
MYR 4.65891
MZN 73.07671
NAD 18.560945
NGN 1566.70736
NIO 42.106264
NOK 11.245995
NPR 174.428099
NZD 2.009354
OMR 0.441228
PAB 1.144327
PEN 3.89366
PGK 5.02736
PHP 70.323928
PKR 318.138953
PLN 4.292992
PYG 6957.608616
QAR 4.183044
RON 5.223543
RSD 116.909045
RUB 88.100154
RWF 1675.334063
SAR 4.29766
SBD 9.214394
SCR 15.348229
SDG 686.631334
SEK 11.033187
SGD 1.477406
SHP 0.853687
SLE 27.842833
SLL 23977.20138
SOS 654.018107
SRD 42.954193
STD 23666.733688
STN 24.49201
SVC 10.012734
SYP 126.385937
SZL 18.557622
THB 37.95091
TJS 10.60713
TMT 4.013446
TND 3.377224
TOP 2.75311
TRY 53.533312
TTD 7.755368
TWD 36.662432
TZS 3002.215619
UAH 50.963483
UGX 4176.637512
USD 1.143432
UYU 46.022773
UZS 13707.988747
VES 730.54244
VND 30069.974568
VUV 135.990185
WST 3.170942
XAF 655.774619
XAG 0.018484
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.090182
XCG 2.062327
XDR 0.81552
XOF 655.73162
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.050785
ZAR 18.579237
ZMK 10292.256451
ZMW 21.025773
ZWL 368.184635
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • RBGPF

    2.5400

    68.15

    +3.73%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    19.68

    +2.74%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

Frank Gehry: five key works
Frank Gehry: five key works / Photo: MICHAL CIZEK - AFP/File

Frank Gehry: five key works

Star architect Frank Gehry has designed some of the most famous and eye-catching buildings of modern times. Here are five standouts:

Text size:

- Gehry House, Santa Monica, 1978 -

Frank Gehry's own house, which he built early in his career, already signalled the essentials of his architectural style -- convention-busting, a fondness for layered facades, jagged angles and form-defying shapes.

It also made use of raw materials such as plywood, corrugated metal and glass.

Located on a street corner in Santa Monica, the architectural mash-up of the Gehry House was built around a Dutch Colonial bungalow from the 1920s.

It was the family home for four decades and has become a California tourist attraction.

- Dancing House, Prague, 1996 -

A remarkable apparition on a banal waterfront in Prague, one of the twin towers of this concrete and glass building appears to lean into the other, as a dancer might into a partner.

The nine-floor office building, nicknamed Fred and Ginger after the famous dancing duo, was a collaboration between Gehry and Czech architect Vlado Milunic.

Set on the site of a US bombing in 1945 at the end of World War II, it is a vivid expression of the deconstructivism style that Gehry became indelibly associated with -- opting for fragmentation over symmetry but often creating a new kind of harmony.

- Guggenheim, Bilbao, 1997 -

Described by The Guardian as "the most influential building of modern times", Gehry's design for the art museum coined the term the "Bilbao effect" to describe the economic boom created in run-down locations through cultural regeneration and eye-catching architecture.

Gehry used computer software intended for the aviation industry to design his building, which is a massive structure made of stone and glass with multiple flat facades in gold gleaming titanium sheathing.

"The finish of the approximately 33,000 extremely thin titanium sheets provides a rough and organic effect, adding to the material’s color changes depending on the weather and light conditions," the museum says on its website.

- Walt Disney Concert Hall, Los Angeles, 2003 -

The multi-facades of shimmering stainless steel that encase this concert hall, home of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, took 16 years to finish after Walt Disney's widow donated an initial $50 million.

The ambitious plan to create a cultural hub in downtown Los Angeles eventually cost $274 million, the outcome hailed by the New York Times in 2003 as "the most gallant building you're ever likely to see".

The dazzling structure makes the most of the year-long LA sunshine, luminous both outside and in, with 293,000 square feet (27,200 square metres) of interior space and a main auditorium which seats 2,265.

- Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris, 2014 -

Nestled in the Bois de Boulogne just outside Paris, this vast gallery offers a beguiling site amid the trees, with its overlapping glass and steel panels and a cascade of water flowing underneath it.

Celebrated by some critics as among Gehry's most technologically advanced and creative buildings, it cost $135 million and houses the private art collection of French billionaire Bernard Arnault.

T.Musil--TPP