Name: David Adjaye
Place of Birth: Dar es Salaam Tanzania (often described as Tanzanian-born, London-based Ghanian- definitely an Afropolitan!)
Date of Birth: September 1966
Education: BA London South Bank University and MA from Royal College of Art
Some of his designs: Museum of Contemporary Art in Denver, The Nobel Peace Centre in Oslo, The Skolkovo Moscow School of Management, and the much-celebrated National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C. amongst many others.
“I’m driven by the work, but I’m also driven by my need for the work to have something more, to be something more. I’m slightly burdened by being in this transitional moment.” says, David Adjaye.
He was once described and referred to as a Starchitect in the making by FastCompany. And yes, he has been living to the name! Describing this latest design, the new 350,000 square-foot Smithsonian museum in Washington DC, Janelle Zara, a writer for artinfo.com writes;
His design, a collaboration with the Freelon Group, Davis Brody Bond, and SmithGroup, foregrounds his characteristic attention to texture and natural light: copper plates perforated with designs evoking traditional African crafts cover the exterior, changing color according to the position of the sun and moderating the natural light that penetrates the building; inside, wooden embellishments hang from the ceiling, with skylights throughout; and a spacious porch extends from the south entrance into the landscape. Its most distinct feature is its “corona” shape — an inverted, stacked pyramid.”
Even though the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture did cost $500 million, someone who knows him quite well described him as one who knows how to deal with little as well as with much.
David is uniquely able to deal with the high end and the low…He does community projects with very small budgets, and he does major institutional projects with huge ones. Nobody else does that.”,” says Stan Allen, dean of the architecture school at Princeton.
Images Sourced from artinfo.com
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