A FRANK GEHRY COLLECTION
If Frank Gehry has brought an artist’s sensibility to architecture, Los Angeles has been his palette. Five of his better-known buildings:
Loyola Law School. Expanding the Downtown campus, Gehry set out to create a space that would not upstage the surrounding neighborhood. Echoing the Roman Forum, he placed small buildings and a chapel around a miniature piazza.
Rebecca’s. The Venice hot spot is blue-chip Mexican and a wry social comment on itself. Huge crocodiles and a bejeweled octopus swim from the ceiling, and an imitation-Mexican painting on velvet by Peter Alexander depicts sea life.
The Norton House. In this “ultimate beach shack,†Gehry co-opts the cacophony of the Venice boardwalk with a zany mix of low-budget materials, including ordinary kitchen tile and a pile of logs used as a sunscreen. Most stunning is the study that perches like a lifeguard tower over the beach. But the glare, it turns out, prevents the screenwriter-owner from using his word processor there.
The Wosk Residence. Constructing an artist’s penthouse home-atelier in Beverly Hills, Gehry made an eye-catching rooftop village. The colliding exterior elements contrast with a continuous interior space flooded with natural light.
The California Aerospace Museum. A real Lockheed F-104 Starfighter jet is frozen in takeoff, and the building was conceived as a giant, hangar-like space. Gehry has observed, “It’s the closest thing I’ll ever get to designing a Gothic cathedral.â€
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.