James Wines

Last updated
James Wines
Born1932 (age 9192)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationArchitect
Awards Smithsonian National Design Award: Lifetime Achievement; 2013 [1] Premio di Architettura ANCE (2011) Chrysler Award for Design Innovation; 1995 [2] Architectural Record Award for Excellence in Residential Design (1985), The Pulitzer Prize Award for Graphic Art (1955)
Practice SITE environmental Design
Projects Ghost Parking Lot, [3] Indeterminate Facade, Tilt Building, Forest Building, HighRise of Homes, [4] Highway 86, Laurie Mallet House, Museum of Islamic Arts Proposal, Madison Square Park Kiosk (Shake Shack)
ShakeShack-Madison Square Park Shake Shack Madison Square.jpg
ShakeShack-Madison Square Park

James Wines (born 1932) is an American artist and architect associated with environmental design. Wines is founder and president of SITE, [5] a New York City-based architecture and environmental arts organization chartered in 1970. [6] This multi-disciplinary practice focuses on the design of buildings, public spaces, environmental art works, landscape designs, master plans, interiors and product design. [7] The main focus of his design work is on green issues and the integration of buildings with their surrounding contexts.

Contents

Wines is currently a professor of architecture at Penn State University. In addition to critical writing, he has lectured in fifty-two countries on green topics since 1969. In 1987, his book De-Architecture [8] was released by Rizzoli International Publications. There have been twenty two monographic books museum catalogues [9] have published his drawings, models and built works for SITE. [5] In total, Wines has designed more than 150 projects for private and municipal clients in eleven countries. He has won twenty-five writing and design awards including the 1995 Chrysler Design Award. [10]

Wines explicitly expresses his own "concern for the Earth." Having written at length on new modes of architecture, design, and planning:

The [20th] century began with architects being inspired by an emerging age of industry and technology. Everybody wanted to believe a building could somehow function like a combustion engine. As an inspirational force in 1910, one can understand it. But as a continuing inspiration in our post-industrial world, or our new world of information and ecology, it doesn't make any sense.

--from the film Ecological Design: Inventing the Future [11]

Background and career

James Wines graduated from Syracuse University in 1956. He became a Fellow of the American Academy in Rome that year and was bestowed a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1962. He began his career as a successful sculptor and graphic designer, exhibiting with the Otto Gerson Gallery (subsequently Marlborough Gallery) in New York.[ citation needed ]

Professor Wines’ corporate clients include Swatch, MCA Universal, MTV, Nickelodeon, Williwear, Isuzu, Disney, Costa Coffee, Carrabba's Restaurants, Saporiti Italia, Brinker International, Allsteel, Ranger Italia, Reliance Energy Corporation, and Denny's. Among municipal clients, he has worked for the cities of Hiroshima, Yokohama, Toyama, Seville, Vienna, Vancouver, Le Puy en Velay, Chattanooga, and New York City. His original drawings for these projects have graced the covers of dozens of international design magazines.[ citation needed ]

As an educator, Wines originally held adjunct positions at the New School for Social Research (1963–65) and a number of other institutions. In 1974, he taught as an Associate Professor of Fine Art in the New York University Department of Art and Arts Professions. This was followed by visiting professorships at Dartmouth College, the University of Wisconsin, New Jersey School of Architecture, and Cooper Union Design Center. He was chair of the Environmental Design department at Parsons School of Design from 1984 to 1990. After teaching at Domus Academy in Italy and at the University of Oklahoma, he became a professor of architecture at Pennsylvania State University in 1999. Wines has built a legacy of mentoring emerging art talent, including noted designer, Alex Donahue.[ citation needed ]

Wines' daughter Suzan is also an Architect and is co owner with fellow Architect Azin Valy of the award winning firm I-Beam Design. Both Suzan and Azin are graduates of Cooper Union.[ citation needed ]

Philosophy on hand drawing

Professor Wines strongly advocates hand drawing as a key to conceptual processes, alongside computer-aided tools [12] “For most architects graphic representation is notional, technical, or illustrative and mainly used as an analytical tool to record design intentions. I consider drawing more as a way of exploring the physical and psychological state of inclusion, suggesting that buildings can be fragmentary and ambiguous, as opposed to conventionally functional and determinate.” [13]

Selected works by James Wines & SITE

Professional recognition

Bibliography

Monographs, special publications and exhibition catalogues

See also

Notes

  1. see also: Best Products
  2. see also: Shake Shack

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alvar Aalto</span> Finnish architect and designer (1898–1976)

Hugo Alvar Henrik Aalto was a Finnish architect and designer. His work includes architecture, furniture, textiles and glassware, as well as sculptures and paintings. He never regarded himself as an artist, seeing painting and sculpture as "branches of the tree whose trunk is architecture." Aalto's early career ran in parallel with the rapid economic growth and industrialization of Finland during the first half of the 20th century. Many of his clients were industrialists, among them the Ahlström-Gullichsen family, who became his patrons. The span of his career, from the 1920s to the 1970s, is reflected in the styles of his work, ranging from Nordic Classicism of the early work, to a rational International Style Modernism during the 1930s to a more organic modernist style from the 1940s onwards.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Meier</span> American architect

Richard Meier is an American abstract artist and architect, whose geometric designs make prominent use of the color white. A winner of the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 1984, Meier has designed several iconic buildings including the Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art, the Getty Center in Los Angeles, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, and San Jose City Hall. In 2018, some of Meier's employees accused him of sexual assault, which led to him resigning from his firm in 2021.

Raymond Pettibon is an American artist who lives and works in New York City. Pettibon came to prominence in the early 1980s in the southern California punk rock scene, creating posters and album art mainly for groups on SST Records, owned and operated by his older brother, Greg Ginn. He has subsequently become widely recognized in the fine art world for using American iconography variously pulled from literature, art history, philosophy, and religion to politics, sport, and sexuality.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Daniel Libeskind</span> Polish-American architect

Daniel Libeskind is a Polish-American architect, artist, professor and set designer. Libeskind founded Studio Daniel Libeskind in 1989 with his wife, Nina, and is its principal design architect.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peter Eisenman</span> American architect

Peter David Eisenman is an American architect, writer, and professor. Considered one of the New York Five, Eisenman is known for his high modernist and deconstructive designs, as well as for his authorship of several architectural books. His work has won him several awards, including the Wolf Prize in Arts.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ettore Sottsass</span> Italian architect (1917–2007)

Ettore Sottsass was a 20th-century Italian architect, noted for also designing furniture, jewellery, glass, lighting, home and office wares, as well as numerous buildings and interiors — often defined by bold colours.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Steven Holl</span>

Steven Holl is a New York–based American architect and watercolorist.

Diller Scofidio + Renfro is an American interdisciplinary design studio that integrates architecture, the visual arts, and the performing arts. Based in New York City, Diller Scofidio + Renfro is led by four partners – Elizabeth Diller, Ricardo Scofidio, Charles Renfro, and Benjamin Gilmartin – who work with a staff of architects, artists, designers, and researchers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gaetano Pesce</span> Italian architect

Gaetano Pesce is an Italian architect and a design pioneer of the 20th century. Pesce was born in La Spezia in 1939, and he grew up in Padua and Florence. During his 50-year career, Pesce has worked as an architect, urban planner, and industrial designer. His outlook is considered broad and humanistic, and his work is characterized by an inventive use of color and materials, asserting connections between the individual and society, through art, architecture, and design to reappraise mid-twentieth-century modern life.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eric Owen Moss</span> American architect

Eric Owen Moss practices architecture with his eponymously named LA-based firm founded in 1973.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Raimund Abraham</span> Austrian architect (1933–2010)

Raimund Johann Abraham was an Austrian architect.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stacy Levy</span> American sculptor

Stacy Levy is a sculptor who works with ecological natural patterns and processes, often using water and water flows as a medium. Many of her works address environmental problems at the same time that they make the functioning of the environment visible. Her studio is based in rural Pennsylvania, but she works on projects around the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ron Wigginton</span> American artist and landscape architect (born 1944)

Ron Wigginton is an American artist and landscape architect. His paintings and sculptures are found in West Coast museums and many private collections. His landscapes are known for their narrative and aesthetic qualities, and his artwork typically involves and explores human perceptions of natural and built landscapes. Wigginton is considered to be one of the first Landscape Architects to approach the design of a landscape as a conceptual work of art, for which he has received international recognition through publication and awards.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emilio Ambasz</span>

Emilio Ambasz is an Argentinian-US architect and award-winning industrial designer. From 1969 to 1976 he was Curator of Design at the Museum of Modern Art, in New York. Ambasz has been labeled as "the father, poet, and prophet" of the green architecture by Japanese architect Tadao Ando.

George Joseph Ranalli is an American modernist architect, scholar, curator, and fellow of the American Institute of Architects. He is based in New York City.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Miss</span> American environmental artist (born 1944)

Mary Miss is an American artist and designer. Her work has crossed boundaries between architecture, landscape architecture, engineering and urban design. Her installations are collaborative in nature: she has worked with scientists, historians, designers, and public administrators. She is primarily interested in how to engage the public in decoding their surrounding environment.

Hodgetts + Fung, also known as HplusF, is an interdisciplinary design studio based in Culver City, California specializing in architectural design, advanced material fabrication, historical restorations, and exhibition design and is led by principals Craig Hodgetts and Hsinming Fung.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elizabeth A. T. Smith</span> American art historian, museum curator (born 1958)

Elizabeth A. T. Smith is an American art historian, museum curator, writer, and presently the executive director of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation. She has formerly held positions as a curator at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art (MoCA), the chief curator and deputy director of programs at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, and the executive director, curatorial affairs, at the Art Gallery of Ontario. She is the author of numerous books on art and architecture, including Blueprints for Modern Living: History and Legacy of the Case Study Houses; Lee Bontecou: A Retrospective, Helen Frankenthaler: Composing with Color, 1962–63, and many others.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emre Arolat</span>

Emre Arolat is a Turkish architect. In 2004, he co-founded EAA-Emre Arolat Architecture with Gonca Paşolar.

Torkwase Dyson is an interdisciplinary artist based in Beacon, New York, United States. Dyson describes the themes of her work as "architecture, infrastructure, environmental justice, and abstract drawing." Her work is informed by her own theory of Black Compositional Thought. This working term considers how spatial networks—paths, throughways, water, architecture, and geographies—are composed by Black bodies as a means of exploring potential networks for Black liberation. She is represented by Pace Gallery and Richard Gray Gallery.

References

  1. 1 2 "James Wines on The National Design Awards Gallery". Ndagallery.cooperhewitt.org. 2013-04-30. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  2. 1 2 "Vendor - Bridge". Chrysler.com. Archived from the original on 2012-03-06. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  3. 1 2 "The Collection | SITE (Sculpture in the Environment), James Wines. Ghost Parking Lot, project, Hamden, Connecticut, Perspective. 1978". MoMA . Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  4. 1 2 "The Collection | SITE (Sculpture in the Environment), James Wines. Highrise of Homes, project, Exterior perspective. 1981". MoMA. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  5. 1 2 SITE, Environmental Design Official website
  6. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Siteenvirodesign.com. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  7. "Site Environmental Design, Overview, 2012" . Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  8. Wines, James; Rizzoli (1987-12-15). De-Architecture: James Wines: 9780847808618: Amazon.com: Books. Rizzoli. ISBN   0847808610.
  9. "James Wines - Artist, Fine Art, Auction Records, Prices, Biography for James N. Wines". Askart.com. 1997-11-06. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  10. "Penn State Professor of Architecture Gives Lecture | College of Arts and Architecture". Artsandarchitecture.psu.edu. 2010-02-24. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  11. Zelov, Chris. and Danitz, Brian. Dir. “Ecological Design: Inventing the Future” Ecological Design Project, 1994
  12. Wines, James. "Mind and Hand: Drawing the Idea | Boston Society of Architects". Architects.org. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  13. "James Wines: On drawing « Drawing on the Land". Drawingontheland.com. 2009-12-15. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  14. "Empire State Plaza Art Collection". Visit the Empire State Plaza & New York State Capitol. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  15. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Siteenvirodesign.com. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  16. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Siteenvirodesign.com. Archived from the original on 2013-06-07. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  17. criteria=O%3AAD%3AE%3A7570&page_number=3&template_id=1&sort_order=1 The Collection Museum of Modern Art
  18. "The Collection | SITE (Sculpture in the Environment), James Wines. Terrarium Showroom, Elevations. 1979". MoMA. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  19. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Sitenewyork.com. Archived from the original on 2013-09-26. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  20. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Siteenvirodesign.com. Archived from the original on 2012-01-22. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  21. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Sitenewyork.com. Archived from the original on 2015-01-02. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  22. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Sitenewyork.com. Archived from the original on 2013-10-21. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  23. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Sitenewyork.com. Archived from the original on 2015-03-11. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  24. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Sitenewyork.com. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  25. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Sitenewyork.com. Archived from the original on 2014-11-10. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  26. Nelson, Emily (1998-04-08). "Chili's Hope Customers Warm To Pepper-Shaped Restaurant". Wall Street Journal. ISSN   0099-9660 . Retrieved 2021-10-05.
  27. "Carrabba's Italian Grills". Greenroofs.com. Retrieved 2021-10-05.
  28. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Siteenvirodesign.com. Archived from the original on 2015-01-02. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  29. "SITE | architecture, art & design". Sitenewyork.com. Archived from the original on 2013-07-27. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  30. "Wines Wins International Architecture Award | College of Arts and Architecture". Artsandarchitecture.psu.edu. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  31. "Faculty Accomplishments | College of Arts And Architecture". Stuckeman.psu.edu. 2008-03-01. Archived from the original on 2013-06-07. Retrieved 2013-11-04.