马里昂·马奥尼·格里芬

C. Vernon
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引用次数: 1

摘要

马里恩·马奥尼·格里芬(1871 - 1871)1961年)在她漫长而传奇的职业生涯中,她在一系列创造性的努力中表现出色。1894年至1949年间,马奥尼在美国、澳大利亚和印度担任建筑师、插画家、规划师、房地产开发商、社区领袖、公众演说家和作家。从一开始,马奥尼的职业生涯包括个人委托,独立展览,讲座以及与同时代的人一起完成的工作,像马奥尼一样,在芝加哥的施坦威大厅阁楼开始他们的职业生涯。他们包括弗兰克·劳埃德·赖特,赫尔曼·冯·霍尔斯特,以及马奥尼的丈夫和职业合伙人沃尔特·伯利·格里芬。对马奥尼对建筑和城市主义的贡献的批判兴趣反映了美国对建筑现代主义的接受。20世纪初,马奥尼的作品被认为有可能预示着一个新时代的到来。在本世纪中叶,它被视为欧洲现代主义的一个可能的灯塔和替代品。自21世纪初以来,经过一段时间对她的作品的冷漠,历史学家和专业人士开始分析Mahony的实践,它的概念环境,以及它的接受历史,以反映建筑现代主义的跨国路线,建筑史学的偏见,以及对城市主义的生态敏感方法的潜力。奇怪的是,美国人对马奥尼的反应从希望到冷漠,再到重新燃起兴趣,这种轨迹也适用于其他国家对马奥尼的通俗和学术描述。这表明了一种以美国为中心的理解马奥尼作品的方法,直到最近,这种方法还掩盖了反殖民主义在塑造马奥尼1914年开始在美国以外生活和工作后的视觉、空间和文学实践中的重要性。关于Mahony工作的新奖学金使她的才能得到了大众和专业的认可:麻省理工学院的Marion Mahony新兴从业者奖学金表彰了一位杰出的校友;Marion’s List是澳大利亚从事建筑和建筑环境工作的女性的公共登记册,由Parlour与澳大利亚建筑师协会全国性别平等委员会合作推出;澳大利亚首都领地政府将堪培拉安斯利山上的瞭望台命名为“马里恩·马奥尼·格里芬景观”,该瞭望台因马奥尼绘制的马里恩·马奥尼·格里芬景观而闻名;芝加哥公园区和马奥尼老社区的现任居民将芝加哥的一个湖滨海滩命名为马里昂·马奥尼格里芬海滩公园。
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Marion Mahony Griffin
Marion Mahony Griffin (b. 1871–d. 1961) excelled in a range of creative endeavors as extensive as the geographic expanse of her long and storied career. Between 1894 and 1949, Mahony worked as an architect, illustrator, planner, real estate developer, community leader, public speaker, and author in the United States, Australia, and India. From the outset, Mahony’s career included solo commissions, independent exhibitions, and lectures as well as work completed in conjunction with contemporaries who, like Mahony, began their careers in Chicago’s Steinway Hall loft. They included, Frank Lloyd Wright, Hermann von Holst, and Mahony’s husband and professional partner Walter Burley Griffin. Critical interest in Mahony’s contribution to architecture and urbanism mirrors the reception of architectural modernism in the United States. At the beginning of the 20th century, Mahony’s work was examined for its potential to herald a new age. In the middle of the century, it was seen as a possible beacon and alternative to European modernism. Since the dawn of the 21st century, and after a period of apathy toward her work, historians and professionals have begun analyzing Mahony’s practice, its conceptual surround, and the history of its reception to reflect on the transnational routes of architectural modernism, biases in the historiography of architecture, and the potential for an ecologically sensitive approach to urbanism. This trajectory of US reactions to Mahony from hope to apathy to renewed interest is curiously also true of popular and scholarly portrayals of Mahony in other countries. It evinces a US-centric approach to understanding Mahony’s work that, until very recently, obscured the importance of anti-colonialism in shaping Mahony’s visual, spatial, and literary practice after 1914 when she began to live and work outside the United States. New scholarship on Mahony’s work has led to popular and professional acknowledgement of her talent: the Marion Mahony Emerging Practitioner Fellowship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology honors a distinguished alumna; Marion’s List is a public register of women working in architecture and the built environment in Australia, launched by Parlour in collaboration with the National Committee for Gender Equity of the Australian Institute of Architects; the Australian Capital Territory Government named the lookout on Mount Ainslie in Canberra, made famous by a Mahony rendering the Marion Mahony Griffin View; and the Chicago Park District and current residents in Mahony’s old neighborhood named a lakefront beach in Chicago the Marion Mahony Griffin Beach Park.
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