National Gallery of Art East Building
Pei, I. M.
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Date
1969-1978Description
View of a gallery space, top floor west side; The architect faced several challenges. The new building had to fit an irregularly shaped, trapezoidal site; conform to the monumental scale of the Mall; and harmonize with John Russell Pope's classicizing West Building, completed in 1941. During the laborious design process, Pei and a small team of young architects explored many creative possibilities for the building's plan, exterior profile, and roofing of the great atrium. In a moment of insight, I. M. Pei solved the problem of the site's irregular shape by dividing it into an isosceles triangle and a smaller right triangle. Early in 1969, Pei's design was refined and elaborated to near-final form. The two triangles of the architect's original conception were pulled apart to create a slot that would emphasize the separateness of the two spaces: one for the museum's public functions and the other for its study center. Source: National Gallery of Art [website]; http://www.nga.gov/ (accessed 11/4/2007)
Type of Work
art museumSubject
architectural exteriors, Art museums, Modernist
Rights
Rights Statement
Licensed for educational and research use by the MIT community only