George Ranalli

George Ranalli, FAIA
Born George Joseph Ranalli
1946
New York
Nationality United States
Alma mater Pratt Institute
Harvard University
Occupation Architect
Awards Sydney L. Strauss Award, Stanford White Award
Website georgeranalli.com
georgeranallidesigns.com
Practice architect, curator, scholar, higher education administrator

George Joseph Ranalli (born 1946) [1] is an American modernist architect, academic, scholar, curator, and a fellow of the American Institute of Architects.[2] He is based in New York City.[3]

Early life and education

A native of The Bronx, New York [4] of Italian American decent,[5] Ranalli attended Mount St. Michael Academy high school.[6] He was inspired to become an architect at the age of about 13 when he saw the then-unfinished Guggenheim Museum which was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.[7] He graduated from Mount Saint Michael Academy in The Bronx in 1964. From 1967 to 1968, he attended New York Institute of Technology, and Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, New York, where he received a Bachelor of Architecture in 1972.[8] Thereafter, Ranalli attended Harvard Graduate School of Design, Cambridge, Massachusetts, earning a Master of Architecture in 1974. Upon graduation, Ranalli traveled on a research grant throughout Europe before returning to New York.[7]

Career

Ranalli founded his firm, George Ranalli, Architect in New York in 1977.[9] In his early career, architecture critic Paul Goldberger described Ranalli in a New York Times article as among the "better younger architects" working in the Modernist idiom.[10] Goldberger commented that Ranalli's designs were tied "as closely to the ancient craft of building as to the modern business of churning out huge commercial projects, yet they bespeak a consistent awareness of the realities of our age as well." [11] In 1991, Michael Sorkin, another modern American architect, later described Ranalli as "a creator and preserver of worlds, a precisionist."[12] Ranalli is credited with carrying forward the lessons of Italian architect Carlo Scarpa into new settings.[13][14] Architecture critic Ada Louise Huxtable wrote Ranalli's "purpose is to move modernism into an enriched and more deeply referenced style."[15]Architectural Record (2015) noted Ranalli's career has been a kind of Gesamtkunstwerk.[16] In 1996, Yale University granted Ranalli a Master of Arts degree, honoris causa.

Selected architecture

Callender School, Newport, Rhode Island

Museum and gallery exhibitions

Ranalli has been exhibited in New York City at the Metropolitan Museum of Art,[33] Whitney Museum of American Art,[34] MoMA, Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum,[35] American Craft Museum),[36] Skyscraper Museum,[37] Architectural League of New York,[38] American Institute of Architects,[39] Sperone Westwater Fisher gallery,[40] Artists Space,[41] and The Drawing Center.[42]

Throughout the United States, Ranalli has contributed to exhibitions at Bass Museum,[43] Memphis Brooks Museum of Art,[44] Denver Art Museum,[45] Indianapolis Museum of Art, Yale University [46] The Art Institute of Chicago [47] Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts [48] Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago,[49] Otis Art Institute,[50] and the Library of Congress.[51]

International exhibitions of Ranalli work include Centre Pompidou [52] Canadian Centre for Architecture,[53] Museum of Finnish Architecture,[54] XVII Triennale di Milano, and Design Museum, Helsinki.[55]

Professional recognition

Ranalli has received professional awards from the College of Fellows of the American Institute of Architects in 2015,[56] the New York Society of Architects,[57]New York Foundation for the Arts,[58] and the Architectural League of New York.[59][60]

Between 1969 and 2015, Ranalli has received design awards from the Society of American Registered Architects;[61][62] American Institute of Architects,[63][64][65][66] and Progressive Architecture.[67] In 2015, he received Stanford White Award.[68]

Academia

Ranalli taught architectural design and visual studies at Yale University School of Architecture & Environmental Design for 23 years, starting in 1976 when he became an Assistant Professor and ending upon his elevation to dean in 1999. He was elevated to William Henry Bishop Visiting Professor in 1988,[69] Associate professor with tenure from 1991, and full Professor from 1995 to 1999.[70] From 1987 to 1999, Ranalli was also appointed to the fellowship of Morse College at Yale University.[71][72]

Additionally, Ranalli has been a visiting professor of design and visual studies at numerous colleges and universities, including Boston Architectural Center, Rhode Island School of Design,[73] University of Illinois at Chicago, Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies,[74] and Cooper Union.[75][76]

In 1999, Ranalli was appointed to the position of dean of the school of architecture at the City College of New York, renamed in 2009 the Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture.[77][78] In 2005, Ranalli was honored with the Renaissance Award from the Alumni Association of the City College School of Architecture.[79] In April 2015, Ranalli went on leave of absence.[80]

Curation

Ranalli is known for his academic work in the areas of architecture curation.

Yale School of Architecture Art and Architecture Gallery
Spitzer School of Architecture of City College of New York

Monographic publications

References

  1. ID: 500056726: Ranalli, George (American architect, born 1946). Getty Research: Union List of Artist Names Online. Accessed September 2015.
  2. "2015 FAIA Announcement". The American Institute of Architects. The American Institute of Architects.
  3. Wright, Sylvia Hart (1989). Sourcebook of contemporary North American architecture from postwar to postmodern. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold. pp. 200,:ill.;29 cm. ISBN 0442291906.
  4. Solis, Gustavo (November 13, 2014). "Famed Architect George Ranalli Ditches Chelsea for Harlem". DNAInfo.
  5. Iannucci, Lisa (April 1, 2003). "HIGH PROFILE; Italian Americans making news". VIII (2). Italian America: 2. ISSN 1089-5043.
  6. Mountaineer (high school yearbook: 1964) Mount Saint Michael Academy: Bronx, New York. p. 74 (viewable via e-yearbook.com. Digital Data Online, Inc: Burlingame, California).
  7. 1 2 Szenasy, Susan S. (November 2010). "Q&A: George Ranalli".Metropolis. Bellerophon Publications, Inc.: New York, New York. Retrieved July 22, 2015
  8. Institute, Pratt (1995). "Alumni Directory". White Plains, New York: Bernard C. Harris Publishing Co., Inc.: p. 263. OCLC 33266982.
  9. "Profile: George Ranalli Architect". Architectural Digest. 48 (9): 196. August 15, 1991.
  10. Goldberger, Paul (November 24, 1985). "Architecture View; Modernism Reaffirms Its Power". New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  11. Goldberger, Paul (January 1, 1989). "ARCHITECTURE VIEW; Taking the Pulse of New American Architecture". The New York Times.
  12. Sorkin, Michael (1991). Exquisite corpse : writing on buildings (1st ed.). London;New York:: Verso. pp. x,365p.:ill.;25cm. ISBN 0860913236.
  13. Stern;, Robert A M; Fishman, David; Tilove, Jacob (2006). New York 2000 : architecture and urbanism between the Bicentennial and the Millennium. New York: Monacelli Press. pp. 1520 pages : color illustrations ; 29 cm. ISBN 1580931774.
  14. Brooker, Graeme; Stone, Sally (2012). From organisation to decoration : an interiors reader (1st ed.). London: Routledge,. pp. xvii, 294 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm. ISBN 9780415436199.
  15. Huxtable, Ada Louise (May 13, 2009). "Breaking All the Rules With New York's Public Building Design". The Wall Street Journal.
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  33. Valentine 2 Chair (1990)
    Met Museum exhibition history:
    "Highlights from the Modern Design Collection: 1900–Present, Part II"
    May 23, 2011 – July 1, 2012
    "A Century of Design, Part IV: 1975–2000"
    June 25, 2001 – January 6, 2002
    OCLC 429605724
    Met Museum Accession N° 1990.306 (1990)
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  46. "1977–1985, Yale School of Architecture, Exhibitions: George Ranalli: Recent Works". Bulletin of Yale University, School of Architecture, 1998–1999. 94 (3): 70. June 30, 1999.
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  84. Ranalli, George (1981). "Diana Agrest/Mario Gandelsonas : exhibition Jan. 2-30, 1981, Yale School of Architecture.". New Haven: Yale School of Architecture: 22, [2] pages : chiefly illustrations ; 22 x 28 cm. OCLC 10109788.
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  87. Ranalli, George (1982). "Gaetano Pesce: A Yale School of Architecture Exhibition: October 31 – December 2, 1982". New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press: 24.
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  93. George Ranalli (2013). City University of New York, ed. "Building the modern Gothic : George Post at City College" (exh. cat.). New York, NY: CUNY: 53 pages : chiefly illustrations (some color), portraits, plans, facsimiles ; 26 cm. OCLC 871036277.
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  97. Ranalli, George. In Situ: George Ranalli Works & Projects (1st ed.). Shinzen China: Oscar Riera Ojeda. pp. 487 pages, [9] pages : colored illustrations, plans ; 22 cm x 25 cm. + 1 CD (4 3/4 in.). ISBN 9789881619471.
  98. "Community Building: Saratoga Avenue Community Center by George Ranalli, Architect". ArchNewsNow. January 14, 2009.
  99. Ranalli, George (2009). Saratoga. San Rafael, Calif.: ORO Editions. pp. 111 pages : chiefly illustrations (some color), plans ; 24 cm. ISBN 9780981462882.
  100. Abercrombie, Stanley (July 1, 1999). "Casas Internacional: George Ranalli.(Review)". Interior Design. 70: 97.
  101. Riera Ojeda, Oscar, ed. (1998). "Casa Internacional: George Ranalli". Casas (in Spanish and English). 57. Madrid, Spain: Kliczkowski Publisher: 71 pages : color illustrations, plans ; 24 cm. OCLC 51379793.
  102. Nakamura, Toshio, ed. (1990). "Special Feature = George Ranalli". Architecture and Urbanism (in English and Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: A+U Publishing Co. Ltd. 8 (239): 71–126. OCLC 23880409.
  103. Ranalli, George (1990). Bauten und Projekte = Constructions et projets (in German). Zurich: Verl. für Architektur Artemis. pp. 116 S. : überwiegend ill., graph. Darst. ; 28 cm. ISBN 3760880746.
  104. Abercrombie, Stanley (November 1, 1989). "George Ranalli: Buildings and Projects". Interior Design.
  105. Ranalli, George (1988). George Ranalli: buildings and projects (1st ed.). New York, N.Y.: Princeton Architectural Press. pp. 107 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. ISBN 0910413428.
  106. Ranalli, George (1988). George Ranalli : buildings and projects (1st ed.). New York: Princeton Architectural Press. pp. 107 pages : illustrations ; 28 cm. ISBN 0910413428.
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