Graham Foundation 2017 Grants, Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts USA, Individuals
Graham Foundation Grants in 2018
Funding for individuals and organizations in the Fine Arts, USA
June 2, 2021
Mar 16, 2018
Graham Foundation 2018 News
Graham Foundation announces Fellowship program
We are so pleased to share that the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts has announced the organization’s new Graham Foundation Fellowship program
Aug 3, 2017
Graham Foundation Grants 2017 News
Graham Foundation Announces 2017 Grants to Organizations Over $400,000 awarded to organizations supporting innovative and challenging ideas in architecture
CHICAGO, August 3, 2017 – The Graham Foundation is pleased to announce over $400,000 in new grants to organizations around the world to support 41 innovative projects engaging original ideas in architecture.
Among the funded projects are exhibitions, publications, events, research projects, and site-specific installations and performances. These diverse projects and programs advance new scholarship, fuel creative experimentation and critical dialogue, and expand opportunities for public engagement with architecture and its role in contemporary society.
photo – helloeverything/SelgasCano, Kibera Hamlets School, 2016, Nairobi, Kenya. Courtesy of architects. From the 2017 organizational grant to New York Foundation for Architecture-Center for Architecture for “Scaffolding”
“This year marks an extraordinary group of projects from organizations around the world working to advance architectural thinking, push the boundaries of the field, and expand into previously underrepresented areas,” says Graham Foundation director Sarah Herda.
photo – Gwyneth Shanks, From Above Looking Down, 2017, Los Angeles. Courtesy the artist. From the 2017 organizational grant to Materials & Applications for “Privacies Infrastructure”
This year’s awarded projects were selected from a competitive pool of more than 220 submissions. The 41 funded projects are being undertaken by significant and emerging museums, educational institutions, architectural organizations, and biennials and triennials from around the world in cities such as Paris, Mexico City, Rotterdam, Cleveland, and Chicago, where the Graham Foundation is based.
The new grantees join an international network of individuals and institutions that the Graham Foundation has supported through the award of more than 4,300 grants over the past 61 years in its role as one of the most significant funders in the field of architecture.
photo – Estudio MMX, Eco Pavilion, 2011, Mexico City. Courtesy of Buró-Buró/Museo Experimental el Eco. From the 2017 organizational grant to Buró-Buró for “Libretas Pabellón Eco/Eco Pavilion”
photo – Hirsuta, Ambivalent House, 2017. Courtesy the artist. From the 2017 organizational grant to Project: A Journal for Architecture for “Project: A Journal for Architecture”
photo – Pietro Paolini, UR12 Downward Spiral: El Helicoide’s Descent from Mall to Prison. El Helicoide, Caracas, Venezuela, 2012. Courtesy of Pietro Paolini/Terra Project. From the 2017 organizational grant to Terreform for “UR (Urban Research) 2017”
photo – Roundhouse, DuSable Museum of African American History, 2017, Chicago. Photo: Assaf Evron. From the 2017 organizational grant to Palais de Tokyo for “Singing Stones”
photo – Richard Rezac, Quimby (painted steel, plate glass, enameled plate glass, and cherry wood), 2017, Chicago. Courtesy of the artist. From the 2017 organizational grant to The Renaissance Society for “Richard Rezac: Address”
Among the awarded projects are:
• Projects that explore architecture’s roles and functions in the social context, including The Architectural League’s publication examining the physical dimensions of the criminal justice system in the built environment as critical spaces of urban infrastructure; the Harvard University Graduate School of Design African American Student Union’s 2017 Black in Design Conference, promoting discourse around the agency of the design profession to address and dismantle institutional barriers faced by communities of color; and Storefront for Art and Architecture’s exhibition curated by Bryony Roberts, examining marching performance as a medium for community cultural identity and political resistance, from its historical roots to contemporary practices.
• Exhibitions organized by major international and national contemporary art and architecture museums, including the first major US exhibition examining the unique range of forms, embodied identities, and modes of production in the modernist architecture of socialist Yugoslavia, to take place at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Palais de Tokyo’s first US-based off-site exhibition, showcasing emerging artists from France and Chicago, to take place in the Roundhouse by Burnham and Root at Chicago’s DuSable Museum of African American History, in partnership with Institut Français and EXPO CHICAGO; continued support for the annual Folly competition at the Socrates Sculpture Park in collaboration with The Architectural League, which challenges entrants with a specific opportunity to address park functions through design, a program the Graham Foundation has funded since its launch in 2011; and the 2017 Serpentine Pavilion designed by Francis Kéré, which features a sheltering canopy to highlight architecture’s social function as a focal point for communities.
• Wide-ranging exhibitions and projects undertaken by the country’s leading educational institutions, including a celebration of groundbreaking studio thesis work by some of the Cooper Union’s leading graduates over the past five decades, from Daniel Libeskind to Elizabeth Diller; the University of Illinois at Chicago School of Art & Art History’s international conference devoted to the history of design in Chicago, exploring its modernist tradition cultivated and developed since the late nineteenth century; and publications by the students from the University of California, Los Angeles Department of Architecture and Urban Design, the Rice University School of Architecture, and the University of Florida to advance critical dialogue about architecture and design.
• Support for international and national biennials and triennials, including the catalogue and exhibition guide for the FRONT Exhibition Company’s inagural triennial as the permanent record of its artistic interventions, public programs, and residencies taking place in Cleveland next year; the accompanying publication to Performa’s biennial program examining the use of performance as a radical tool to rethink architecture and its agency, goals, and aesthetics; and a project for the 10th edition of the Liverpool Biennial inviting leading international artists and architects to create a series of urban projects that embrace creative invention and encourage the public to engage with the context playfully and critically.
A list of the 2017 organizational grantees follows, as well as descriptions of the awarded projects. To learn more about the new grants, click on any grantee name below to visit their online project page, or go to grahamfoundation.org/grantees.
LIST OF 2017 ORGANIZATIONAL GRANTEES (41 awards)
EXHIBITIONS (14)
The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art-Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture (New York, NY) Heritage Fund-The Community Foundation of Bartholomew County- Landmark Columbus (Columbus, IN) Liverpool Biennial of Contemporary Art (Liverpool, United Kingdom) Materials & Applications (Los Angeles, CA) The Museum of Modern Art (New York, NY) New York Foundation for Architecture- Center for Architecture Foundation (New York, NY) Palais de Tokyo (Paris, France) Queens Museum (Queens, NY) The Renaissance Society (Chicago, IL) S AM Swiss Architecture Museum (Basel, Switzerland) Serpentine Galleries (London, United Kingdom) Socrates Sculpture Park (Long Island City, NY) Storefront for Art and Architecture (New York, NY) University of Chicago-Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts (Chicago, IL)
FILM/VIDEO/NEW MEDIA (2)
The Architectural League (New York, NY) Chicago Architectural Club (Chicago, IL)
OTHER-FELLOWSHIP (1)
The University of Illinois at Chicago- School of Architecture (Chicago, IL)
PUBLIC PROGRAMS (8)
Association of Architecture Organizations (Chicago, IL) Harvard University-Graduate School of Design-African American Student Union (Cambridge, MA)
Illinois Institute of Technology-Graham Resource Center & Master of Landscape Architecture + Urbanism Program (Chicago, IL) Institute of Contemporary Arts (London, United Kingdom) Lampo (Chicago, IL) National Trust for Historic Preservation- Farnsworth House (Washington, DC; Plano, IL) Navy Pier (Chicago, IL) The University of Illinois at Chicago- School of Art & Art History (Chicago, IL)
PUBLICATIONS (16)
Anyone Corporation (New York, NY) Architectural Association School of Architecture-Unknown Fields Division (London, United Kingdom) Buró-Buró (Mexico City, Mexico) e-flux Architecture (New York, NY) Flat Out (Chicago, IL) FRONT Exhibition Company (Cleveland, OH) The Funambulist (Paris, France) Harvard University-Graduate School of Design-New Geographies (Cambridge, MA) Het Nieuwe Instituut-Research Department (Rotterdam, The Netherlands) New Museum (New York, NY) Performa (New York, NY) Project: A Journal for Architecture (Brooklyn, NY) Rice University-School of Architecture (Houston, TX) Terreform (New York, NY) University of California, Los Angeles Department of Architecture and Urban Design (Los Angeles, CA) University of Florida-School of Architecture (Gainesville, FL)
DESCRIPTIONS OF AWARDED PROJECTS—2017 GRANTS TO ORGANIZATIONS
EXHIBITIONS (14 awards)
THE COOPER UNION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE AND ART-IRWIN S. CHANIN SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE New York, NY Archive and Artifact: The Virtual and the Physical To celebrate 50 years of architectural education through the lens of leading studio thesis work, a selection will be on display and made available through the launch of a new online digital database. The exhibit chronicles an historic half century of architecture themes and typologies from 1966 to 2016 exemplified by the formative student work of prominent Cooper Union graduates, such as Daniel Liebeskind, Toshiko Mori, Stan Allen, and Elizabeth Diller.
HERITAGE FUND-THE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF BARTHOLOMEW COUNTYLANDMARK COLUMBUS Columbus, IN Exhibit Columbus This annual exploration of architecture, art, design, and community alternates programming between symposium and exhibition years, with the inaugural exhibition occurring in fall 2017. Featuring more than 15 temporary architecture, art, design, and site-responsive installations, the project will engage in critical dialogue with the design heritage of Columbus and programs for the community.
LIVERPOOL BIENNIAL OF CONTEMPORARY ART Liverpool, United Kingdom Liverpool Folly This urban folly by a leading artist marks the 10th edition of the Liverpool Biennial and 20 years of commissioning international artists to make work that celebrates and critically engages with the city of Liverpool.
MATERIALS & APPLICATIONS Los Angeles, CA Privacies Infrastructure A presentation of newly commissioned work by four artists and designers (Besler & Sons, Tanya Brodsky, Fiona Connor, and Gwyneth Shanks) that explores the social, physical, and embodied forms of private property in Los Angeles’s residential landscape.
THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART New York, NY The Architecture of Socialist Yugoslavia, 1945–1991 This major exhibition will be the first in the United States to examine the modernist architecture of Yugoslavia, introducing the exceptional built work of the former country’s leading architects to an international audience.
NEW YORK FOUNDATION FOR ARCHITECTURE-CENTER FOR ARCHITECTURE FOUNDATION New York, NY Scaffolding This exhibition explores the history of this flexible kit-of-parts system, scaffolding, and its unique capacity to empower designers and non-architects alike with a potent tool for redefining space through collaborative initiative.
PALAIS DE TOKYO Paris, France Singing Stones (Roundhouse, DuSable Museum of African American History, Chicago, IL) Presented within the singular architecture of Burnham and Root’s Roundhouse at the DuSable Museum of African American History, this first US-based off-site exhibition organized by Palais de Tokyo in partnership with Institut Français and EXPO CHICAGO, showcases emerging artists from both France and Chicago, exploring the dialogue between contemporary art and architecture.
QUEENS MUSEUM Queens, NY Mel Chin: All Over the Place (Queens Museum and Times Square, NY) A comprehensive survey of conceptual artist Mel Chin’s work, this exhibition will include two new major commissions that spotlight his ongoing investigation into how power structures embedded in our built and lived environments can enact devastating tolls on vulnerable populations.
THE RENAISSANCE SOCIETY Chicago, IL Richard Rezac: Address An exhibition of old and new works by Chicago-based sculptor Richard Rezac offers the chance to reflect on his ongoing contributions to the history of art in Chicago and the eclectic range of references that have informed his last decade of production.
S AM SWISS ARCHITECTURE MUSEUM Basel, Switzerland Bengal Stream: The Vibrant Architecture Scene of Bangladesh The first international exhibition on contemporary Bangladeshi architecture, curated by Niklaus Graber, Andreas Ruby, and Viviane Ehrensberger, provides an understanding of the cultural origins of the local architecture, focusing primarily on the country’s contemporary architecture scene influenced strongly by Muzharul Islam and Louis I. Kahn.
SERPENTINE GALLERIES London, United Kingdom Serpentine Pavilion 2017 by Francis Kéré Inspired by the tree that serves as a central meeting point for life in Gando, Burkino Faso, Francis Kéré has designed a pavilion that seeks to connect visitors to nature—and to each other.
SOCRATES SCULPTURE PARK Long Island City, NY Folly/Function 2018 An ongoing collaboration with The Architectural League of New York, this open design/ build competition annually awards architects and designers the opportunity to realize a fullscale project outdoors. Exploring the intersection of architecture and sculpture, the program challenges entrants to address park functions through design
STOREFRONT FOR ART AND ARCHITECTURE New York, NY Marching On: The Politics of Performance Curated by architectural designer and scholar Bryony Roberts, this exhibition explores marching performances as mediums for communicating cultural identity and political resistance, specifically examining the role of marching bands and drum lines within African American communities in asserting both visibility and equal rights.
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO-REVA AND DAVID LOGAN CENTER FOR THE ARTS Chicago, IL Cinthia Marcelle & Tiago Mata Machado: Divine Violence Featuring the Brazilian artist Cinthia Marcelle, this exhibition will bring together for the first time three films created by the artist in partnership with film critic, curator, and filmmaker Tiago Mata Machado.
FILM/VIDEO/NEW MEDIA (2)
THE ARCHITECTURAL LEAGUE OF NEW YORK New York, NY The Location of Justice A yearlong series of features on Urban Omnibus, the Architectural League’s online magazine, will focus on examining the physical dimensions of the criminal justice system, the spaces it occupies and transforms, and its role as a critical piece of urban infrastructure.
CHICAGO ARCHITECTURAL CLUB Chicago, IL TIGERman Through On the Table, a new short documentary series exploring stories of its cultural citizens, the inaugural film, TIGERman tells the story of architect Stanley Tigerman, and celebrates the 130th anniversary of the Chicago Architectural Club.
FELLOWSHIP (1)
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT CHICAGO-SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE Chicago, IL Francesco Marullo, 2016–17 Douglas A. Garofalo Fellow: The Jungle: Architecture, Production and Logistics of Chicago Garofalo Fellow Francesco Marullo’s research explores the historical relations between the architecture of logistics, the development of the finance economy, and the rise of labor movements in Chicago over the last two centuries.
PUBLIC PROGRAMS (8)
ASSOCIATION OF ARCHITECTURE ORGANIZATIONS Chicago, IL 2017 Design Matters Conference An annual event for not-for-profit architectural organizations, the conference explores conceptual and practical issues of public engagement around architecture and design through a series of keynote lectures, architectural tours, exhibitions, and public programs.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY-GRADUATE SCHOOL OF DESIGN-AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDENT UNION Cambridge, MA Black in Design 2017: Designing Resistance, Building Coalitions This conference promotes discourse around the agency of the design profession to address and dismantle institutional barriers faced by communities of color, and provides a platform to examine the imbalance of representation of people of color across the design fields.
ILLINOIS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY-GRAHAM RESOURCE CENTER & MASTER OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE + URBANISM PROGRAM Chicago, IL Alfred Caldwell and the Performance of Democracy: Archives and Events A series of events drawing on research with institutional and family archives on the landscape architect Alfred Caldwell initiates two public lectures, an outdoor performance, and two academic workshops. These sequential programs touch on a diverse range of geographies and constituencies to amplify access, interpretations, and scholarship on Caldwell.
INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ARTS London, United Kingdom The Legacy of Jane Drew: Architecture, Urbanism, and the Built Environment A new program at the ICA will explore radical architecture, urbanism, and the built environment with a focus on modernist architect Jane Drew, her involvement with the ICA, and her pioneering contribution to the field of architecture.
LAMPO Chicago, IL Lampo 2017 concert series at the Graham Foundation Now in its seventh year, this program will present experimental music concerts, bringing artists from around the world to perform their work for Chicago audiences at the Graham Foundation. The organization promotes and supports artists working in electronic and electroacoustic music, free improvisation, sound art, and other new forms.
NATIONAL TRUST FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION-FARNSWORTH HOUSE Washington, DC Modern Living (Washington, DC and Plano, IL) Presented in collaboration with the 2017 Chicago Architecture Biennial, this performance and film by Los Angeles-based artists Gerard & Kelly explores themes of queer intimacy and domestic space within the legacies of modernist architecture.
NAVY PIER Chicago, IL Here Hear Chicago Showcasing two of Chicago’s premier leaders in the arts and design, a commissioned series of site-specific visual and performance works by artist Nick Cave and architect Jeanne Gang will be presented in conjunction with the 2017 Chicago Architecture Biennial and EXPO CHICAGO.
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT CHICAGO-SCHOOL OF ART & ART HISTORY Chicago, IL Chicago Design: Histories and Narratives This international conference, organized in collaboration with the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, will convene scholars from across the region, country, and globe to reexamine well-known figures and events in the city’s remarkable tradition of modernist design, as well as to consider lesser-known actors, agents, and forces in an expanded history of Chicago design that will explore the full scope of practices cultivated and developed from the late nineteenth century until the end of the twentieth.
PUBLICATIONS (16)
ANYONE CORPORATION New York, NY Log: Observations on Architecture and the Contemporary City An internationally renowned journal of writing on architecture and the contemporary city in the United States, Log publishes criticism and commentary in a literary format, allowing for a meaningful discussion of the central concerns of architectural thinking and practice today.
ARCHITECTURAL ASSOCIATION SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE-UNKNOWN FIELDS DIVISION London, United Kingdom Unravelled (Architectural Association/Bedford Press) A full-color publication using original material collected across India and Bangladesh, Unravelled combines photography, interviews, and research to explore the landscapes and human stories behind fast fashion, from the scale of a single stitch to the planetary supply chain.
BURÓ-BURÓ Mexico City, Mexico Libretas Pabellón Eco/Eco Pavilion Documenting the built pavilions of Museo Experimental el Eco’s annual architecture competition in Mexico City, this series of six publications expands on the ways that ephemeral architectural interventions can shape how we experience and think about space in a contemporary and local context.
E-FLUX ARCHITECTURE New York, NY Superhumanity (University of Minnesota Press & e-flux Architecture) This publication brings together over 50 writers, scientists, artists, architects, designers, philosophers, historians, archeologists, and anthropologists to explore and challenge our understanding of “design.”
FLAT OUT Chicago, IL Flat Out This independent print magazine enacts multiple genres of architectural criticism through 15 recurring, fictitious characters positioned to produce surprising points of view and expand the range and terms of critical writing for architecture.
FRONT EXHIBITION COMPANY Cleveland, OH An American City: Exhibition Catalogue and Guide The first edition of FRONT International: Cleveland Triennial for Contemporary Art, conceived of by the co-artistic directors, Michelle Grabner and Jens Hoffmann, comprises a multipart program of 11 interconnected “cultural exercises” that address aesthetics in relation to political change and societal uncertainty.
THE FUNAMBULIST Paris, France The Funambulist A print and online magazine dedicated to the politics of space and bodies, it is further complemented by a book series, a blog, and a podcast to bridge the disciplines of architecture and design with those of the humanities.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY-GRADUATE SCHOOL OF DESIGN-NEW GEOGRAPHIES Cambridge, MA New Geographies 09: Posthuman This journal, led by doctoral students, aims to examine the emergence of the geographic, a new but for the most part latent paradigm in design today, in order to articulate it and bring it to bear effectively on the social role of design. Through critical essays and design projects, this project seeks to position design’s agency amid concerns of scale, infrastructure, ecology, and globalization.
HET NIEUWE INSTITUUT-RESEARCH DEPARTMENT Rotterdam, The Netherlands Architecture of Appropriation: On Squatting as Spatial Practice This publication investigates squatting as an architectural practice in order to reexamine notions of vacancy and property, and propose alternative urban and domestic arrangements to the dominant, market-oriented housing policies.
NEW MUSEUM New York, NY 100 Actions for the Future City (New Museum with Phaidon) This publication presents an index of ideas, interventions, projects, artworks, and social initiatives from the New Museum’s IdeasCity network of artists, architects, and urban visionaries in support of thriving metropolises. Each act is accompanied by a diagrammatic illustration, offering replicable and scalable maps for readers to implement actions locally.
PERFORMA New York, NY Bodyspacemotionthings A companion to the curatorial initiative presented as part of the Performa 17 biennial, this publication compiles historical and contemporary examples and analyses examining the use of performance as a critical tool to rethink architecture and its agency, goals, and aesthetics. Featuring newly commissioned historical analyses, essays, and portfolios, the book uses the lens of performance to reframe critical questions about the built environment.
PROJECT: A JOURNAL FOR ARCHITECTURE Brooklyn, NY Project: A Journal for Architecture (Consolidated Urbanism) A print and online platform for critical writing and architectural projects, the publication is focused on publishing the work of emerging practices and critics. Now on its seventh issue, it offers the opportunity to present contemporary projects, statements by younger architects, and long-form critical essays to consider the discipline of architecture today.
RICE UNIVERSITY-SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE Houston, TX PLAT 7.0: Sharing (The Prolific Group) The latest issue of this journal by students and faculty investigates whether the ubiquitous phrase “Sharing is caring!,” first trademarked in the 1950s by the Salvation Army, is still relevant today. If so, how? And regardless, what do the so-called sharing and platform economies mean for architecture and the built environment?
TERREFORM New York, NY UR (Urban Research) 2017 This book series is devoted to speculation about the conditions and the future of the city seeking to become a key venue for both individuals and organizations engaged in progressive urban research, design, and critical advocacy.
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES-DEPARTMENT OF ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN DESIGN Los Angeles, CA POOL: Issue No. 3 Content for this issue of UCLA’s student-lead publication in the Department of Architecture and Urban Design focuses on an expanding definition of architectural work that considers curation as a primary form of cultural production in a culture of high volume content exchange.
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA-SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE Gainesville, FL VORKURS: Exquisite Corpse The second edition of this architecture publication, produced by graduate students at the University of Florida’s School of Architecture, conjures the surrealist folded-paper game to examine how concepts of the collective, authorship, process, and poetry relate to contemporary architectural discourse.
May 25 + 24, 2017
Graham Foundation Grants, 2017
The Graham Foundation awards over $560,000 in Grants to Individuals
Twice a year, the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts issues a series of significant grants, first to individuals and then to organizations. The Foundation has released the list of recipients of the 2017 Grants to Individuals, totaling over $560,000 divided amongst 72 innovative projects engaging original ideas in architecture.
“Many of our grantees this year are exploring the agency of design,” states Graham Foundation director Sarah Herda. “They are testing the limits of conventional practice to make new work that directly engages the social and political dimensions of the designed environment.”
This year’s awarded projects were selected from a competitive pool of nearly 700 submissions. The funded projects are being undertaken by individuals and collaborative teams—72 projects by 99 grantees representing 20 countries—who include architects, designers, curators, filmmakers, visual artists, musicians, and writers from around the world in cities such as Karachi, Caracas, Kassel, Istanbul, and Chicago.
The list of Grants to Individuals:
Exhibitions
Marcelo Araya, Andrés Garcés, Iván Ivelic & Manuel Sanfuentes
Daniel Cardoso Llach
Assaf Evron
Nathan Friedman
Anna Halprin
Suzanne Harris-Brandts & Angela Wheeler
Rick Lowe
Zahra Malkani & Shahana Rajani
Senam Awo Okudzeto
Maxi Spina
Martine Syms
Film/Video/New Media Projects
Josef Asteinza & Mariano Ros
TOMA: Leandro Cappetto, Mathias Klenner, Eduardo Pérez, Ignacio Rivas & Ignacio Saavedra
Aggie Ebrahimi, Oscar Molina, Brenda Isabel Steinecke Soto, Catalina Ortiz & Sandra Tabares-Duque
Daniel Eisenberg
Sean Lally
Liam Young
Public Program
Seán Curran & David Skidmore, with Diana Balmori
Publications
Kunlé Adeyemi & Suzanne Lettieri Esra Akcan
Barry Bergdoll & Jonathan Massey
Caitlin Berrigan
Michael Carriere & David Schalliol
Irene Cheng, Charles L. Davis II & Mabel O. Wilson
Alison J. Clarke
Francesc o Dal Co
Roberto Damiani
Martha Deese
Teresa Fankhänel
Leonardo Finotti
Reto Geiser
Design Earth: Rania Ghosn & El Hadi Jazairy
Cristina Goberna & Urtzi Grau
Sarah Williams Goldhagen
Maria Gough
Helen Gyger
Aimi Hamraie
Rory Hyde
Office for Political Innovation: Andrés Jaque
Omar Kholeif
Tiffany Lambert
Paolo Nicoloso
Conor O’Shea
Itohan I. Osayimwese
Kyong Park
Angelo Plessas
Mil M2: Fernando Portal
Anders Herwald Ruhwald
Catherine Seavitt Nordenson
Elisa Silva
Christopher Sims
Anna-Sophie Springer & Etienne Turpin
Molly Wright Steenson
Paulo Tavares
Allyson Vieira
Research
Michelle Moore Apotsos
Tulay Atak
Lee Azus
Andrea Bagnato
Eva Díaz
WAI Think Tank: Nathalie Frankowski & Cruz Garcia
Miyuki Aoki Girardelli
Virginia Hanusik
Sophie Debiasi Hochhäusl
Branden W. Joseph, Felicity D. Scott & Mark Wasiuta
Jeffrey Mansfield
Rebecca O’Neal Dagg
Jason Oddy
MK Smaby & Carolyn Wheeler
Irene V. Small
Despina Stratigakos
Chat Travieso
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.
Madlener House, 4 West Burton Place, Chicago, Illinois 60610, USA
Telephone: 312.787.4071 info@grahamfoundation.org
Graham Foundation
Every Building in Baghdad: The Rifat Chadirji Archives at the Arab Image Foundation
Design: Nomad Studio, landscape architecture
Madlener House, Graham Foundation, Chicago, Illinois, USA
September 15 – December 31, 2016
photo – Rifat Chadirji, IRQ/315/186: Offices, Central Post, Telegraph and Telephone Administration, Baghdad, 1975. Photographic paste-ups, 8.27” × 11.69”. Courtesy of the Arab Image Foundation
Exhibition at the Graham Foundation
Architecture of Independence: African Modernism
Jan 29 – Apr 9, 2016
photograph © Iwan Baan
Graham Foundation Exhibition
This exhibition explores the legacy of modernist architecture in Sub-Saharan Africa during the 1960s and 1970s. Featuring commissioned photographs by Iwan Baan and Alexia Webster and archival material, “Architecture of Independence” imparts a new perspective on the intersection of architecture and nation-building in Ghana, Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire, Kenya, and Zambia following independence.
Location: 4 W Burton Pl, Chicago, IL 60610, United States of America
Chicago Architecture
Chicago Architecture Design – chronological list
Recent Chicago Buildings
Ryan Center for the Musical Arts in Chicago
Design: Goettsch Partners
photo from architects
Aqua Tower Chicago Skyscraper
Design: Studio Gang Architects
860-880 Lake Shore Drive Apartments
Design: Krueck & Sexton, Architects
Place is the Space – Unprecedented Collaboration with Museum Architect Brad Cloepfil
Design: Brad Cloepfil + Allied Works Architecture
Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis – CAM Exhibition
American Architecture Design – chronological list
Green Air, a kinetic living sculpture at Contemporary Art Museum of Saint Louis, USA. Summer 2016
photograph : Alise O’Brien Photography
Green Air, Contemporary Art Museum of Saint Louis
Nelson Atkins Museum of Art – Extension, Kansas
Design: Steven Holl Architects
Nelson Atkins Museum of Art building
Comments / photos for the Graham Foundation Grants, 2017 page welcome
Website: Madlener House Chicago