Elizabeth Diller

Architect Class of 1999
location icon Location
Princeton, New Jersey
age iconAge
45 at time of award

About Elizabeth's Work

Elizabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio are architects who have created an alternative form of architectural practice that unites design, performance, and electronic media with cultural and architectural theory and criticism.

Their work explores how space functions in our culture and illustrates that architecture, when understood as the physical manifestation of social relationships, is everywhere, not just in buildings. “We Interrupt This Program” is a collaborative proposal commissioned by CNN for the atrium of its headquarters in Atlanta. “Cold War” proposes to use an ice hockey rink as a video-projection surface for computer-animated videos. Recent projects include an expansion of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts and collaboration on the design of a public park plan for the High Line, a 1.6 mile elevated railroad platform on Manhattan’s West Side. In 2003, the Whitney Museum hosted Scanning: The Aberrant Architecture of Diller + Scofidio, their first major retrospective exhibition.

Biography

Diller is a professor of architecture at Princeton University and taught previously at The Cooper Union (1981-1990). She is a principal of the firm Diller Scofidio + Renfro, which she co-founded in 1979. They have published Flesh: Architectural Probes (1995) and Blur: The Making of Nothing (2002).

Diller attended the Cooper Union School of Art and received a B.Arch. (1979) from its School of Architecture.

Last updated January 1, 2005

Published on July 1, 1999

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