Chermayeff, Serge, 1900-1996
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person
Chermayeff, Serge, 1900-1996
Name Components
Name :
Chermayeff, Serge, 1900-1996
Chermayeff, Serge, 1900-
Name Components
Name :
Chermayeff, Serge, 1900-
Chermayeff, Serge
Name Components
Name :
Chermayeff, Serge
Chermayeff, Serge (British architect and painter, 1900-1996)
Name Components
Name :
Chermayeff, Serge (British architect and painter, 1900-1996)
Chermayeff, Sergius Ivan, 1900-
Name Components
Name :
Chermayeff, Sergius Ivan, 1900-
Chermayeff, Sergius Ivan
Name Components
Name :
Chermayeff, Sergius Ivan
Issakovitch, Serge Ivan
Name Components
Name :
Issakovitch, Serge Ivan
Chermayeff Serge Ivan 1900-1996
Name Components
Name :
Chermayeff Serge Ivan 1900-1996
Issakovitch, Serge
Name Components
Name :
Issakovitch, Serge
シャマイエフ, S
Name Components
Name :
シャマイエフ, S
Serge Chermayeff
Name Components
Name :
Serge Chermayeff
Chermayeff, Serge Ivan
Name Components
Name :
Chermayeff, Serge Ivan
Chermayeff Sergius Ivan 1900-1996
Name Components
Name :
Chermayeff Sergius Ivan 1900-1996
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Exist Dates
Biographical History
Chermayeff taught architecture at Harvard.
Architect, educator.
Sergei Ivanovitch Issakovitch was born on October 8, 1900, in Grozny, then in Caucasia. He was educated in England, where he took the name of Serge Chermayeff at the suggestion of his guardian. By age thirty, Chermayeff had already become an established designer with his own architectural firm. He came to the United States in 1940, accepting a teaching position at Brooklyn College two years later. He stayed at Brooklyn College as professor and chairman of the department of design until 1946, when he moved to the Institute of Design in Chicago, where he was president for four years. In 1953, he became professor of architecture at Harvard University. He concluded his career as a professor at Yale University, where he taught between 1962 and 1969, at which time he became professor emeritus. He died on May 8, 1996.
d. May 8, 1996, Wellfleet, Mass.
Serge Ivan Chermayeff was born in 1901 in Groznyy, Azerbaijan, and attended secondary school in England. He began his career as an interior designer for the London firm of Waring & Gillow, creating streamlined modern interiors for various residential and commercial clients. In 1931 he formed his own architectural office and was joined in 1933 by German Erich Mendelsohn, with whom he designed several notable projects in and around London and Southern England, including the De La Warr Pavilion (1934-1935), the R. J. Nimmo residence (1935), and the Dennis Cohen residence (1936), each a notable example of International Style design. Although his partnership with Mendelsohn ended in 1936, both men remained friends for many years. Among Chermayeff's most important designs during this period was that for his own residence, Bentley Wood (1937-1938), in East Sussex, England. A controversial laboratory for his ideas about public and private spaces and modern aesthetics, it received considerable attention from the architectural press. It led, however, to financial difficulties and Chermayeff was forced to sell in 1939, barely a year after completion.
In 1940, Chermayeff immigrated to the United States, settling briefly in San Francisco, California, to collaborate with local architects on several residential and commercial projects, including the Clarence Mayhew residence (1942) and the Walter Horn residence (1942). Chermayeff soon moved to New York City to become professor of art at Brooklyn College, a position he held until Walter Gropius recommended him in 1946 to serve as president of the Institute of Design in Chicago following László Moholy-Nagy's death. Chermayeff left Chicago in 1951 after the Institute of Design merged with the Illinois Institute of Technology. Teaching briefly at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Chermayeff then joined the faculty at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard in 1953, where he was instrumental in developing a rigorous curriculum for urban design and planning and in organizing symposia and collaborative projects around issues of contemporary urbanism. During this period, Chermayeff also maintained a small private architecture practice with Hayward Cutting. In 1962, Chermayeff accepted an appointment in Yale's School of Architecture, where he continued his research and teaching in areas of human interactions with city planning and architecture.
With co-author Christopher Alexander, Chermayeff published "Community and Privacy: Toward a New Architecture of Humanism (Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, 1963), and with co-author Alexander Tzonis he published "Shape of Community: Realization of Human Potential (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1971), both idiosyncratic but widely considered studies of how human biological and social needs intersect with the built environment. Chermayeff's selected lectures and writings were published in "Design and the Public Good," in 1982, which was edited by Richard Plunz, professor in the School of Architecture at Columbia University. A frequent speaker, guest critic, and prolific writer, Chermayeff was also active in numerous professional organizations, including CIAM, MARS, and the American Society of Architects and Planners, and was awarded honorary degrees from several colleges and universities. In addition, he was a life-long artist, industrial designer, and poet, exhibiting at galleries in Chicago and Boston and self-publishing several anthologies of his poetry. Throughout his years in the United States, Chermayeff also sustained close ties to Cape Cod, Massachusetts, maintaining a home and studio near Wellfleet, designing experimental architecture for several clients in the area, and advocating for the establishment of the Cape Cod National Seashore. Chermayeff died in Wellfleet, Massachusetts, in 1996.
Serge Ivan Chermayeff was born on October 8, 1900 near Grozny in the Chechen region of the Northern Caucasus. Chermayeff attended secondary school in England. He began his career as an interior designer for the London firm of Waring & Gillow, creating streamlined modern interiors for various residential and commercial clients. In 1931 he formed his own architectural office and was joined in 1933 by German émigré Erich Mendelsohn, with whom he designed several notable projects in and around London and Southern England, including the De La Warr Pavilion (1934-1935), the R. J. Nimmo residence (1935), and the Dennis Cohen residence (1936), each a notable example of International Style design. Although his partnership with Mendelsohn ended in 1936, both men remained friends for many years. Among Chermayeff’s most important designs during this period was that for his own residence, Bentley Wood (1937-1938), in East Sussex, England. A controversial laboratory for his ideas about public and private spaces and modern aesthetics, it received considerable attention from the architectural press. It led, however, to financial difficulties and Chermayeff was forced to sell in 1939, barely a year after completion.
In 1940, Chermayeff immigrated to the United States, settling briefly in San Francisco, California, to collaborate with local architects on several residential and commercial projects, including the Clarence Mayhew residence (1942) and the Walter Horn residence (1942). Chermayeff soon moved to New York City to become professor of art at Brooklyn College, a position he held until Walter Gropius recommended him in 1946 to serve as president of the Institute of Design in Chicago following László Moholy-Nagy's death. Chermayeff left Chicago in 1951 after the Institute of Design merged with the Illinois Institute of Technology. Teaching briefly at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Chermayeff joined the faculty at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard in 1953, where he was instrumental in developing a rigorous curriculum for urban design and planning and in organizing symposia and collaborative projects around issues of contemporary urbanism. During this period, Chermayeff also maintained a small private architecture practice with Hayward Cutting. In 1962, Chermayeff accepted a position at Yale’s School of Architecture, where he continued his research and teaching in areas of human interactions with city planning and architecture.
With co-author Christopher Alexander, Chermayeff published Community and Privacy: Toward a New Architecture of Humanism (Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, 1963), and with co-author Alexander Tzonis he published Shape of Community: Realization of Human Potential (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1971), both idiosyncratic but widely considered studies of how human biological and social needs intersect with the built environment. Chermayeff’s selected lectures and writings were published in Design and the Public Good, in 1982, which was edited by Richard Plunz, professor in the School of Architecture at Columbia University. A frequent speaker, guest critic, and prolific writer, Chermayeff was also active in numerous professional organizations, including CIAM, MARS, and the American Society of Architects and Planners, and was awarded honorary degrees from several colleges and universities. In addition, he was a life-long artist, industrial designer, and poet, exhibiting at galleries in Chicago and Boston and self-publishing several anthologies of his poetry.
Throughout his years in the United States, Chermayeff also sustained close ties to Cape Cod, Massachusetts, maintaining a home and studio near Wellfleet, designing experimental architecture for several clients in the area, and advocating for the establishment of the Cape Cod National Seashore. Chermayeff died in Wellfleet, Massachusetts, in 1996.
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https://viaf.org/viaf/46808185
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n82091934
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n82091934
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2118101
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
Apartment houses
Apartment houses
Architects
Architects
Architects
Architects
Architects
Architects
Architects
Architecture
Architecture
Architecture
Architecture
Architecture
Architecture
Architecture, Modern
Brooklyn College
Cape Cod National Seashore (Mass.)
City planning
Country homes
Country houses
Dwellings
Exhibition
Furniture
Harvard University. Graduate School of Design
Houses
Houses
Houses
Houses
Industrial designers
Industrial designers United States
Institute of Design (Chicago, Ill.)
International style (Architecture)
Laboratories
Laboratories
London (England). Weingarten Brothers Showrooms
National parks and reserves
National parks and reserves Law and legislation Massachusetts
Newspaper buildings
Newspaper offices
Office buildings
Pavilions
Showrooms
Steel furniture
Urban planning
Vacation homes
Weekend houses
Yale University. School of Art and Architecture
Nationalities
Americans
Activities
Occupations
Architect
Educators
Legal Statuses
Places
Massachusetts--Cape Cod
AssociatedPlace
Great Britain
AssociatedPlace
England
AssociatedPlace
United States
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts--Wellfleet
AssociatedPlace
England--Manchester
AssociatedPlace
Illinois--Chicago
AssociatedPlace
Cape Cod National Seashore (Mass.)
AssociatedPlace
Maine
AssociatedPlace
India
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts--Orleans
AssociatedPlace
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