Dan Kiley has made a substantial contribution to the field of design as a landscape architect. Influential architects such Louis Kahn, I.M. Pei, and Eero Saarinen collaborated with the designer.
André Le Nôtre’s classic landscapes had a great influence on him. His designs are renowned for the way they use grids and allées to create a harmonious blend of natural and structured beauty.
The travelling photographic show “The Landscape Architecture Legacy of Dan Kiley” honours one of the most influential Modernist landscape architects and opens on January 18. The display, which is being curated by The Cultural Landscape Foundation, intends to examine and raise awareness of the architect’s significant influence.
Exhibited in Brooklyn’s The Exhibition Space @ ABC Stone, the display takes viewers on an engrossing journey through 27 of Dan Kiley’s meticulously selected works.
The show, which runs through April 30, 2024, takes visitors on a tour through 27 of the renowned Dan Kiley’s designs. These include well-known sites like the Ford Foundation Atrium at Rockefeller University in New York, Kenjockety in Westport, the South Garden of the Art Institute of Chicago, and Patterns, a garden designed for Governor and Mrs. Pierre S. “Pete” du Pont IV in Wilmington, DE.
Through a series of photos by famous artists like Marion Benner, Todd Eberle, and Alan Ward, Kiley’s imaginative style and philosophy are told. The exhibition also offers insights into Kiley’s teamwork, including accounts from colleagues and information on the architect’s creative process.
Throughout his career, Dan Kiley worked on a number of noteworthy projects, but one of his most well-known and recognisable designs is the Miller House and Garden in Columbus, Indiana. This completed project from 1957 is often considered “a masterwork of modernist landscape architecture.” The design, which blends indoor and outdoor areas, is praised for its use of geometric shapes and vegetation pools.
The South Garden at the Art Institute of Chicago is another project that has left the architect famous. The South Garden, created in partnership with architect Eero Saarinen, is a prime example of the designer’s modernist methodology and mindset. The garden, which was finished in 1962, is notable for its precise planting placement, geometric patterns, and clean lines. A grid layout is used in the design along with other incorporated symmetry and order components.
Our surroundings are shaped by landscape architecture, which also strengthens ties between individuals and their surrounds. This week, MASU Planning’s H.C. Andersen Garden received the Danish Landscape Award 2023. BIG revealed “Gelephu,” a master plan inspired by Bhutanese culture, last month.
The design is replete with green areas that follow the sustainability guidelines of Bhutan, the first declared carbon-negative nation in the world. Furthermore, the masterplan change for the Hangzhou Asian Games Park 2022 has been finished by Archi-Tectonics NYX. The project, which covers 116 acres and consists of seven buildings and a sizable Eco-Park, is a new direction for the city’s environmental future.
ARCHDAILY