Descriptive Summary
Biographical / Historical
Administrative Information
Scope and Content of Collection
Indexing Terms
Descriptive Summary
Title: Coop Himmelblau architectural models and drawings for five projects
Date (inclusive): 1983-1995
Number: 2002.M.2
Creator/Collector:
Coop Himmelblau
Physical Description:
138.21 Linear Feet
(33 boxes and 1 flatfile folder)
Repository:
The Getty Research Institute
Special Collections
1200 Getty Center Drive, Suite 1100
Los Angeles 90049-1688
reference@getty.edu
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10020/askref
(310) 440-7390
Abstract: This collection consists of architectural models and drawings for five
projects designed by the architectural firm Coop Himmelblau from 1983 to 1995. The five projects are: Open House, Malibu,
California, 1983-circa
1990; Rooftop Office Remodeling, Vienna, 1983-1989; City Plan for Melun Sénart, France, 1987; Rehak House, Malibu, California,
1990-circa 1995; and
Anselm Kiefer Studios, Buchen, Germany, 1990 and Barjac, France, 1992. The firm name is also presented as Coop Himmelb(l)au.
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Language: Collection material is in English with some German
Biographical / Historical
Coop Himmelblau is a Viennese architectural firm founded in 1968 by Wolf D. Prix, Helmut Swiczinsky, and Michael Holzer.
Holzer left the firm in
1971, and Prix and Swiczinsky continued working as partners until Swiczinsky's retirement in the early 2000s. The name Coop
Himmelblau translates to
Blue Sky Cooperative and reflects the firm's focus on designing structures that reach towards the sky and endeavor to leave
the ground. The firm's
early work was rooted in theory and performance art, and by the 1980s had developed into experimentations with structure and
design processes. Prix
and Swiczinsky explored architectural tectonics and the visual expression of tension through structural materials. They pushed
their design process
by cycling back and forth between sketching and modeling, and by sketching with their eyes closed.
The materials in this collection date from the 1980s to early 1990s as the firm's work was gaining international recognition.
The Rooftop Office
Remodeling project brought the firm attention, and the firm was included in the 1988 exhibition
Deconstructivist Architecture at the
New York Museum of Modern Art.
Coop Himmelblau opened a Los Angeles office in the late 1980s, where they would develop such unbuilt projects as Open House
and Rehak House.
In the mid 1990s, the firm began to concentrate on built work, and also began to present the firm name as Coop Himmelb(l)au
to emphasize the role of
construction in their practice.
Bibliography:
Coop Himmelblau website; coop-himmelblau.at
Wim de Wit, Acquisition Approval Form for "Twenty-seven architectural models and 49 drawings by the Viennese firm of Coop
Himmelb(l)au", accession
no. 2002.M.2, August 21, 2001.
Administrative Information
Conditions Governing Access
Open for use by qualified researchers. Contact the repository for information regarding access to the architectural models.
Publication Rights
Preferred Citation
Coop Himmelblau architectural models and drawings for five projects, 1983-1995, The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles,
Accession no.
2002.M.2.
http://hdl.handle.net/10020/cifa2002m2
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Acquired in 2002.
Processing Information
The collection was rehoused upon receipt. In 2017, Sara McGillivray rehoused the drawings and wrote the finding aid.
Scope and Content of Collection
This collection comprises architectural models and drawings related to five projects designed by the architectural firm Coop
Himmelblau from 1983 to
1995. There are 27 models in the collection, including conceptual and sketch models, site models, and finished models. The
drawings consist of 38
computer generated negatives, 41 prints printed directly from the negatives, nine computer generated prints, 16 original drawings,
and two color
photocopies. Materials for each project include both models and drawings.
The five projects are: Open House, Malibu, California, 1983-circa 1990; Rooftop Office Remodeling, Vienna, 1983-1989; City
Plan for Melun Sénart,
France, 1987; Rehak House, Malibu, California, 1990-circa 1995; and Anselm Kiefer Studios, Buchen, Germany, 1990 and Barjac,
France, 1992.
Open House began as a paradigmatic design in 1983, and was later developed for a New York-based client, to be built on a site
in Malibu. The
double-skinned structure was conceived as a shell only, with an open floor plan balanced above the ground plane. The project
was not realized.
The design for Rooftop Office Remodeling began in 1983, and was further developed and constructed between 1987 and 1989. The
project consists of an
addition to an existing building on Falkestrasse in Vienna for the law firm Schuppich, Sporn, Winischhofer, Schuppich. The
cantilevered structure
houses a meeting room and office space.
The firm's City Plan for Melun Sénart is a master plan study that responds to urban sprawl in an area outside Paris.
Rehak House is an unbuilt project sited in Malibu. Material for this project includes 15 models at various stages of the design
process.
The firm designed studios for the German artist Anselm Kiefer in two different locations, neither of which were realized.
Arrangement
This archive is arranged by project in rough chronological order guided by the job numbers assigned to each project by the
firm.
Indexing Terms
Subjects - Topics
Architecture, Modern -- 20th century
Genres and Forms of Material
Architectural models
Architectural drawings -- 20th century
Contributors
Coop Himmelblau
Prix, Wolf D.
Swiczinsky, Helmut, 1944-