Famous Architect Antoni Gaudi
Famous Architect Antoni Gaudi
Famous Architect Antoni Gaudi
most original architect of the Art Nouveau style. Art Nouveau, the new art,
replaced straight lines with the free-form curves, wavy walls, and the textures
and shapes of nature's plants and trees. His most important work, Casa Mila,
is one of the outstanding buildings of Art Nouveau architecture. Gaudi began
work on the Church of La Sagrada Familia, which resembles a surreal
sandcastle or a clay sculpture, but he died before its completion. Seeing his
imaginative work is the highlight of a trip to Barcelona, Spain.
The Guaranty Building (1896) Buffalo, New York by Adler and Sullivan.
The Woolworth Building (1913) New York, by Cass Gilbert, distinctive
for its use of historic decorations and crowns.
Chrysler Building (1930) by William Van Alen. In the Art Deco style, it
has eagle gargoyles that look like hood ornaments.
The Empire State Building (1931) New York, by Shreve, Lamb &
Harmon. With 102 stories, the Empire State Building was the world's
tallest building for 40 years.
The Seagram Building (1958) New York, by Mies Van der Rohe and
Johnson.
The AT&T Building (1984) New York, by Philip Johnson and John
Burgee. It is now called the Sony Building.