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Sign In Not a Subscriber?Join NowWith the runaway success of his Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, Frank Gehry became the most sought-after architect in the world. In a burst of glorious creativity, he has since designed the magnificently metaphorical DG Bank building in Berlin, a trio of towers in Düsseldorf, the cafeteria for Condé Nast’s Times Square headquarters, and a voluptuous purple-red-and-gold home for Paul Allen's Experience Music Project, which opens this month in Seattle. PAUL GOLDBERGER finds the 71-year-old master reaching for ever greater tests, including plans for a new Guggenheim museum—a silver cloud on the waters of Lower Manhattan—while TODD EBERLE captures his undulating buildings on film
June 2000 Paul Goldberger Todd EberleWith the runaway success of his Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, Frank Gehry became the most sought-after architect in the world. In a burst of glorious creativity, he has since designed the magnificently metaphorical DG Bank building in Berlin, a trio of towers in Düsseldorf, the cafeteria for Condé Nast’s Times Square headquarters, and a voluptuous purple-red-and-gold home for Paul Allen's Experience Music Project, which opens this month in Seattle. PAUL GOLDBERGER finds the 71-year-old master reaching for ever greater tests, including plans for a new Guggenheim museum—a silver cloud on the waters of Lower Manhattan—while TODD EBERLE captures his undulating buildings on film
June 2000 Paul Goldberger Todd EberleSubscribers have complete access to the archive.
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