The award "honors an individual who has made outstanding contributions to architecture education for at least 10 years, whose teaching has influenced a broad range of students and who has helped shape the minds of those who will shape our environment."
From the AIA release:
In a culture that struggles to grasp a deep or broad understanding of the power and delight of architecture, Tigerman has been a remarkably influential and effective advocate of the profession we love and the work we do,” wrote Jane Weinzapfel, FAIA, principal of Leers Weinzapfel Associates in her nominating letter. “Tigerman is a nonpareil instructor whose impact on the students he has taught formally and informally for so long is magnified many times over by the informed and passionate love of architecture those students, now teachers and practitioners themselves bring to the world.Previous recipients of the award include Lance Jay Brown (2007), William G. McMinn (2006), Denise Scott Brown in 1996, Henry Cobb in 1995, and Charles Moore in 1989.
The award comes as Tigerman, 77, is preparing to pass on the reins to Archeworks, which he has been running with Eva Maddox since they co-founded the institution in 1993.
Archeworks is sponsoring a January 16th symposium, Passing the Baton: The New Generation of Design Leadership in Chicago, at which the schools new co-directors are scheduled to appear, along with a panel of Chicago architectural illuminati including:
- former Sun-Times architecture critic and Chicago deputy mayor and current Central Area Committee Executive Director Lee Bey
- Sarah Herda, Director of the Graham Foundation
- Hennie Reynders, Chair, Architecture, Interior Architecture and Designed Objects at the School at the Art Institute of Chicago
- Joseph Rosa, John H. Bryan Curator of Architecture and Zoe Ryan, Neville Bryan Curator of Design, both at the Art Institute of Chicago
- Robert Somol, recently named Director, UIC College of Architecture and the Arts.
"Tradition", of course, is what the great orchestra conductor Arturo Toscanini once defined as "the last bad performance." All great architecture draws on the past; most bad architecture, including much of what passes as "traditional design," merely parrots it. The Tigerman-McCurry website talks of tradition, not as a generic slather, but as having its roots in "the Chicago architectural tradition of innovative design, as well as construction."
It should be an interesting evening.
I hate to say this because he is old and stuff but OMG!!!, am I on crazy pills? Am I the only person that can see that Tigerman is absolutely horrible? Enough with awards and commissions for this guy. He is not even fun bad or cool bad or boring bad he is just bad bad and not in a good way. Archeworks is a carpet tiled hell hole where design goes to die.
ReplyDeleteThe above comment was maybe a bit strong but I agree with its point. I fail to understand why certain members of the media and some professional treat Mr. Tigerman as if he is an expert. Huh? They also treat him as an acclaimed architect. Huh? His main accomplishment seems to be a colorful surname.
ReplyDeleteThe above commenter has said something that others like have felt all along but have not bothered to say. The emporer has no clothes.
Please - Should Tigerman get an award for destroying UIC's program to? No wonder architectural education is a joke - this is who they look up to.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a big evening of incest is at hand. Tigerman, Somol, Cramer.... YAWN!
ReplyDeleteTime to move on. Tigerman has left a legacy of favoritism and shallowness.
Ive often thought architects retreating into the sacred cloak of social concern or environmental evangelicalism seem to be running from failure. The new Homeless shelter is by far in my opinion his best work, however, much ado about nothing really imho.
ReplyDelete