Spaces for Art, People, and Light

Exterior of the Herta and Paul Amir Building at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art
The new building’s 87-foot-high, spiraling “Lightfall” atrium
The building’s library
Another view of “Lightfall”
A multifunctional gallery
“Lightfall”
“Lightfall” and a gallery displaying Israeli art
The Amir Building in situ
An exterior shot
Exterior detail

[extra:Extra]

 

The photo gallery above contains additional images complementing those that appear in the print edition. Use your mouse or the arrow keys to browse.

This winter, the entire Gund Hall lobby of the Graduate School of Design (GSD) was given over to various depictions, commentaries, and celebrations of the Herta and Paul Amir Building at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, which opened in November. Its designer is McCue professor of architecture Preston Scott Cohen, who is chairman of the GSD’s architecture department. The dramatic 195,000-square-foot building greatly enlarges the museum housing Israel’s largest collection of modern and contemporary art. Cohen’s plan won the design competition in 2003; design development went on from 2005 to 2007 and construction proceeded over the four years ending in 2011. An 87-foot-tall spiraling atrium that Cohen styles as “Lightfall” is the structure’s central element.

In a booklet on the building, Cohen writes that it “embodies the tension between two prevailing models: the museum of neutral white boxes that allow for maximum curatorial freedom and the museum of architectural specificity that intensifies the experience of public spectacle. An antidote to the Bilbao phenomenon [a reference to the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in Spain, one of the most widely admired works of contemporary architecture, designed by Frank Gehry, Ds ’57, Ar.D. ’00], the Amir Building signals a new synthesis: deeply interiorized and socially choreographed space, as opposed to the tendency in the 1990s to display the museum as a sculptural object in the city.”

Read more articles by: Craig Lambert

You might also like

Harvard Students form Pro-Palestine Encampment

Protesters set up camp in Harvard Yard.

Artificial Intelligence in the Academy

Harvard symposium assesses the new technology.

How Does Hate Spread?

Harvard symposium probes antisemitic, Islamophobic sentiments

Most popular

Fall River: Phoenix Rising?

“A good place to be pleasantly surprised”

Sam Altman’s Vision for the Future

OpenAI CEO on progress, safety, and policy

Artificial Intelligence in the Academy

Harvard symposium assesses the new technology.

More to explore

How is Artificial Intelligence Being Taught at Harvard?

A new Harvard course on artificial intelligence teaches students how to use the tool responsibly.

The Evolution of Human Fathers

Exploring the evolutionary biology of human fathers as caretakers

Civil War American Writer and Abolitionist John Greenleaf Whittier

Homes of the poet and abolitionist, whose verses were said to have inspired Abraham Lincoln.