Anne Tyng’s Inhabiting Geometry at Graham Foundation

Anne Tyng’s Inhabiting Geometry at Graham Foundation

Graham Foundation

View of “Anne Tyng: Inhabiting Geometry,” 2011, Graham Foundation, Chicago.
Icosahedron with nested cube, 2010. Photo James Prinz.

June 8, 2011


Anne Tyng: Inhabiting Geometry

On view at the Graham Foundation through June 18, 2011

Graham Foundation
for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts
Madlener House
4 West Burton Place
Chicago, IL 60610    

www.grahamfoundation.org

Closing reception and talk with William Whitaker
June 18, 2011, 4pm

For more information, click here.

Inhabiting Geometry is the first major exhibition of the work of the visionary architect and theorist Anne Tyng. Since the 1950s, when she worked closely with Louis I. Kahn and independently pioneered habitable space-frame architecture, Tyng has applied natural and numeric systems to built forms on all scales, from urban plans to domestic spaces. This exhibition features room size models of the five platonic solids (the tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, dodecahedron and icosahedron). Identified in ancient times, the platonic solids are the only regular equilateral and equiangular polyhedra. These forms can be found in nature, such as in the structure of crystals. The installation, together with archival material, illustrates the synthesis of Tyng’s life-long research on advanced geometry and how she derives her own built forms through the symmetries, orders, and dynamic progressions by which one form in geometry becomes another.

Demonstrating this vision at work is a selection of drawings, models, and other documentation of past projects, including: City Tower (with Kahn, 1952­–1957); Urban Hierarchy (1970); and the Four-Poster House (1971–1974). There are also examples of Tyng’s publications and research, which investigate Jungian cycles, city squares, and the cosmos. Throughout, geometry is both rational and expressive, as much a means of contemplation as of calculation and construction.

In 1965, Anne Tyng was one of the first women to receive a fellowship from the Graham Foundation for her project Anatomy of Form: The Divine Proportion in the Platonic Solids. In her research she developed a theory of hierarchies of symmetry—symmetries within symmetries—and a search for architectural insight and revelation in the consistency and beauty of all underlying form. A portion of this research was published in the article Geometric Extensions of Consciousness in the Italian architectural journal Zodiak #19 in1969.

“Tyng’s ideas, supported by the Graham Foundation over 45 years ago, resonate deeply with contemporary architects who are working with complex geometry as a source for new forms in building,” notes Sarah Herda, Director of the Graham Foundation. “She was at the forefront of experimentation in the field, and this exhibition introduces her work to new generations who are also working to push the spatial potential of architecture.”

An interview with Anne Tyng and Srdjan Jovanovic Weiss is featured in the most recent issue of Domus, click here to read it.

Anne Tyng (b. 1920 Jiangxi, China; lives in San Francisco) was among the first women ever to receive a Masters of Architecture from Harvard University. Beginning in 1947, she worked with Louis I. Kahn and was instrumental in the design of the Trenton Bath House and Yale University Art Gallery. After 1968, she focused her attention on research, earning her doctoral degree from the University of Pennsylvania where she subsequently taught for almost thirty years.

Anne Tyng: Inhabiting Geometry is organized by the Institute of Contemporary Art Philadelphia (ICA) and curated by ICA Senior Curator Ingrid Schaffner; consulting curator Srdjan Jovanovic Weiss, Assistant Professor, Tyler School of Art and Architecture, Temple University; and William Whitaker, Curator and Collections Manager, The Architectural Archives, University of Pennsylvania. Additionally, Director of the Graham Foundation, Sarah Herda and Program Coordinator, Ellen Hartwell Alderman contributed to the Chicago exhibition.

A catalog co-published by the ICA and the Graham Foundation and distributed by DAP is forthcoming.

Founded in 1956, the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts makes project-based grants to individuals and organizations and produces public programs to foster the development and exchange of diverse and challenging ideas about architecture and its role in the arts, culture, and society. The Graham Foundation was created by a bequest from Ernest R. Graham (1866–1936), a prominent Chicago architect who was a protégé of Daniel Burnham.

 

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