Monday, March 22, 2010

Maya Lin.



Maya Lin is an American artist and architect who is known for her work in sculpture,landscape art and architecture. Her best-known work is the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.She was born October 5, 1959.Lin studied at Yale University, where she received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1981 and a Master of Architecture degree in 1986. She has also been awarded honorary doctorate degrees from Yale, Harvard University, Williams College, and Smith College.She is married to Daniel Wolf, a New York photography dealer. They have two daughters, India and Rachel.

Memorial.



Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Washington, DC, 1982
Two black granite walls, placed below grade, engraved in chronological order with the names of the men and women who gave their lives in the Vietnam War. At the apex where the two walls meet, the dates 1959 and 1973 (marking the beginning and end of the war) "meet" thus closing the circle of the time span of the war. A returning veteran can find his or her own time upon the wall, making each one's experience of the memorial very personal and individual. The siting of the piece is directly related to the presence of both the Lincoln Monument and Washington Memorial, tying it physically and historically to t

Architecture.






The Box House
Telluride, CO, 2006
Situated in the mountains in southwestern Colorado, this 4000 square foot residence evolved out of a desire to create the simplest of forms - a wooden box - set at the edge of an aspen forest. The structure is composed of two separate wood clad volumes connected by two levels of outdoor decks. The larger main house emerges from the aspen grove while the second box is embedded within the forest.

In each floor plan one interior wooden box is set within the larger volume - there are no other interior walls. The house is in essence a box within a box.  The hidden sliding panels and doors concealed within the interior boxes operate to define the different rooms, from the master bedroom to the master bath to the upstairs study. Privacy from room to room is maintained, though the box can open up completely to create rooms that flow from one zone to the next. The exterior volume has hinged wooden shutters that frame the outdoor decks that open up to create exterior spaces that extend into the landscape. When the client is away, the box literally closes up, shuttering itself in.

The house frames the exterior, giving one a new way of looking at the landscape and surrounding mountain range. The house provides a full 270-degree panoramic view that unfolds as one walks through.
Associated Architect: Bialosky + Partners, Architects & Planners, New York City