2007-08 Architecture Education Awards

Page 11

ACSA/AIA Topaz Medallion

Tigerman McCurry Architects

Stanley Tigerman, FAIA

A Chicago native, Tigerman served in the Korean War before working for a number of firms, including Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, where he was a junior designer on the much loved and honored U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo. In 1957, he became a registered architect. He received his BArch (1960) and MArch (1961) from Yale before returning to Chicago, where he became Harry Weese’s chief of design. In 1962, he went into private practice, which he continues today at Tigerman McCurry Architects with his wife Margaret McCurry, FAIA. In 1963, Tigerman began his career in architecture education as a visiting critic at Cornell University’s architecture school. In 1964, he served as a visiting critic at Washington University and secured an appointment to the permanent faculty at the University of Illinois, Chicago (UIC), where he taught from 1964–1971. From 1971–1980, Tigerman was a visiting lecturer and critic at a number of architecture schools, and in 1980 returned to UIC as the director of the “Option One” program, a one-year post-professional program. In 1985, Tigerman was appointed director of UIC’s architecture school, which he directed and taught full-time until 1993. In 1994, together with Eva Maddox, he co-founded ARCHEWORKS, a one-year post-professional design school grounded in social causes, which continues today with Tigerman as its director. Tigerman’s work over a half-century has continuously blended practice and education. His numerous buildings and installations traverse the globe and grace the U.S., Bangladesh, Canada, Great Britain, Italy, Japan, Portugal, Spain, West Germany, Yugoslavia, and Puerto Rico. From his 400 projects, 185 built works embrace virtually every building type, including Chicago’s proposal for the 2016 Olympics. He has been a visiting chaired professor at numerous universities, including Yale and Harvard, and served on advisory committees of the Yale and Princeton schools of architecture, the Chicago Art Institute Department of Architecture, and Chicago Latin School’s “High Jump” program. He is the author of five books, editor of four books, and has written numerous papers and articles. His work has been exhibited in museums and galleries worldwide. Tigerman’s myriad accolades include Yale University’s first alumni Arts Award; the Dean of Architecture Award; the Illinois Academy of Fine Arts Award; the American Jewish Committee’s Cultural Achievement Award; the Louis Sullivan Award by the International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers; an honorary bachelor of fine arts from the Harrington Institute of Design; and more than 140 design awards from the national AIA, AIA Chicago, Progressive Architecture Design Awards, and Record Houses and Interiors. In 2002, he was named Chicagoan of the Year by Chicago Magazine. He is the founding member of the Chicago Seven and The Chicago Architectural Club and, in 1990, was inducted into the Interior Design Hall of Fame.


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