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Presentaci ó n Jeanine Carr. BILBAO. El Pa í s Vasco. La Bandera del Pais Vasco. EL PAÍS VASCO. (Éuskadi). Bilbao, an industrial city, is the capital of the Basque Region of Guip ú zcoa and the home of the new Guggenheim Museum by American architect Frank Gehry.
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Presentación Jeanine Carr BILBAO El País Vasco
EL PAÍS VASCO. (Éuskadi) • Bilbao, an industrial city, is the capital of the Basque Region of Guipúzcoa and the home of the new Guggenheim Museum by American architect Frank Gehry. • Unique ethnic group, with own local language, Éuskara (Basque language). • Strong independent autonomous Comunidad. • 2/3 of the Basques live in Spain (Basque Region and Navarra), 1/3 live in the SW of France. • Home of E.T.A., Basqueviolent terrorist group fighting for independence from Spain • The game Jai-Alai originated from this region. • Iñaki Urdangarin, handball player, husband of the Infanta Cristina, was born in that Comunidad.
The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao opened in the Basque city of Bilbao, Spain, in October 1997. Located on the city’s waterfront, the modern art museum offers a dramatic contrast to Bilbao’s industrial setting
Frank Owen Gehry Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureate1989
Frank O. Gehry • American Architect • The Guggenheim Heart of Titanium/Glass/Limestone • Complementing the works from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Bilbao Museum’s own collection comprises creations by leading artists of the second half of the 20th century, others specifically commissioned for the Museum, and works by contemporary Basque and Spanish artists. • Eduardo Chillida Sp. • Antoni Tapies Sp. • Richard Serra US • Jenny Holzer US
The Puppy Jeff Koons, Belgium
Frank Gehry at the Los Angeles Music Center October 2003 Designed by internationally renowned architect, Frank Gehry, the 293,000-square-foot Concert Hall features a wavy, steel exterior designed to look like a ship with its sail at full mast. Gehry wanted to create the feeling of traveling along a ceremonial barge to music.
F 0 S T E R I T O On June 7, 1999 Sir NormanFoster received the Pritzker Architecture Prize Sir Norman Foster Arquitecto británico
CAMPO VOLANTIN FOOTBRIDGEBilbao, Spain 1994 – 1997River Pedestrian crossingTotal length and maximum span 75 m (246 ft)Depth of arch 15.3 m (50 ft)Concrete abutments and ramps with inclined steel arch and cradle deckThe tilted steel arch of the bridge with its sweeping parabolic form appears graceful and slim.
http://www.calatrava.com/ BIOGRAPHY Architect, artist, and engineer Santiago Calatrava was born on July 28, 1951, in Valencia, Spain. His background was eclectic. Calatrava is an aristocratic name, passed down from a medieval order of knights. The family on both sides was engaged in the agricultural export business, which gave them an international outlook that was rare during the Franco dictatorship.Calatrava attended primary and secondary school in Valencia. From the age of eight, he also attended the Arts and Crafts School, where he began his formal instruction in drawing and painting. When he was thirteen, his family took advantage of the recent opening of the borders and sent him to Paris as an exchange student. He later traveled and studied in Switzerland as well. Upon completing high school in Valencia, he went to Paris with the intention of enrolling in the Ecole des Beaux-Arts; but since he arrived in June 1968, he found his plan was unworkable. He returned to Valencia and enrolled in the Escuela Tecnica Superior de Arquitectura, a relatively new institution, where he earned a degree in architecture and took a post-graduate course in urbanism. While at the school, he also undertook independent projects with a group of fellow students, bringing out two books on the vernacular architecture of Valencia and Ibiza.Attracted by the mathematical rigor of certain great works of historic architecture, and feeling that his training in Valencia had given him no clear direction, Calatrava decided to pursue post-graduate studies in civil engineering and enrolled in 1975 at the ETH (Federal Institute of Technology) in Zurich. He received his Ph.D. in 1979. It was during this period that he met and married his wife, who was a law student in Zurich.After completing his studies, Calatrava took a position as an assistant at the ETH and began to accept small engineering commissions, such as designing the roof for a library or the balcony of a private residence. He also began to enter competitions, believing this was his most likely way to secure commissions. His first winning competition proposal, in 1983, was for the design and construction of Stadelhofen Railway Station in Zurich, the city in which he established his office.In 1984, Calatrava, designed and build the Bach de Roda Bridge, commissioned for the Olympic Games in Barcelona. This was the beginning of the bridge projects that established his international reputation. Among the other notable bridges that followed were the Alamillo Bridge and viaduct, commissioned for the World’s Fair in Seville (1987-92); Campo Volantin Footbridge in Bilbao (1990-97); and Alameda Bridge and underground station in Valencia (1991-95).
Calatrava established his firm’s second office, in Paris, in 1989, when he was working on the Lyon Airport Station (1989-94). He opened his third office, in Valencia, in 1991 to facilitate work on a competition, a very large cultural complex and urban intervention, the City of Arts and Sciences, Valencia (ongoing). Other large-scale public projects from the late 1980s through the mid-1990s include the BCE Place mall in Toronto (1987-92); the Oriente railway station in Lisbon (1993-98, commissioned for Expo ’98); and the winning proposal in the design competition to complete the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City (1991), a project that has not been realized. Exhibitions of Calatrava’s work were first mounted in 1985, with a showing of nine sculptures in an art gallery in Zurich. A new stage in recognition was marked by two solo exhibitions: a retrospective at the Royal Institute of British Architects, London, in 1992, and the exhibition Structure and Expression at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1993. The latter exhibition included an installation in the museum’s Sculpture Garden of Shadow Machine, a large-scale sculpture with undulating concrete “fingers.” The most complete exhibition yet mounted of his work was Santiago Calatrava: Artist, Architect, Engineer, presented at the Palazzo Strozzi in Florence, Italy (2000- 2001). Similar exhibitions were mounted in 2001 in Dallas, Texas (to inaugurate the new Meadows Museum) and in Athens, at the National Gallery, Alexandro Soutzos Museum. Major projects that were recently inaugurated include Sondica Airport, Bilbao (2000); The Bridge of Europe, Orléans, France (2000); the Bodegas Ysios winery in Laguardia, Spain (2001); and Calatrava’s first building in the United States, the acclaimed expansion of the Milwaukee Art Museum (2001). Among the projects that are currently coming to completion are Blackhall Place Bridge, Dublin, Ireland (early 2003); Tenerife Auditorium, Santa Cruz, Canary Islands (September 2003); Petach Tikvah Bridge, Tel Aviv, Israel (spring 2003); Quatro Ponte sul Canal Grande, Venice, Italy (late 2003/early 2004); Turtle Bay Bridge, Redding, California (summer 2004); the Athens Olympic Sports Complex (summer 2004); and the Valencia Opera House (2004), the last major building in his City of Arts and Sciences.Among his major recent commissions, Calatrava has been selected to design Christ the Light Cathedral for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland, California; and Symphony Center for the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra in Atlanta, Georgia.Honors and awards given to Santiago Calatrava include the Gold Medal of the Institute of Structural Engineers, London; the City of Toronto Urban Design Award; designation as a Global Leader for Tomorrow by the World Economic Forum in Davos; the Creu Sant Jordi, Barcelona; the Gold Medal for Merit in the Fine Arts, Ministry of Culture, Spain; membership in Les Arts et Lettres, Paris; the Algur H. Meadows Award for Excellence in the Arts (Meadows School of the Arts); the Gold Medal of the Circulo de Bellas Artes, Valencia; Time Magazine’s “Best of 2001” designation for the expansion of the Milwaukee Art Museum; the Sir Misha Black Medal, Royal College of Art, London; the Leonardo da Vinci Medal, Société pour la Formation des Ingénieurs; and the Principe de Asturias Art Prize; the High Gold Medal of Architecture of L’ Académie d’Architecture, Paris. In addition, Santiago Calatrava has received 12 honorary doctorates to date.
Santiago Calatrava’s opera house at Santa Cruz de Tenerife in the Canary Island - 2003 New York Times Art & Leisure 10/26/03
Calatrava Wave in Tenerife It was originally intended to be a simple concert hall, but the multifunction building for the city of Santa Cruz, Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, also promises to be a landmark. The distinctive, overhanging "wave" curving out over the white concrete Auditorio de Tenerife is the latest creation of renowned Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava. Photo: Jordi Verdes Padron
The building will serve Santa Cruz, population 250,000, as an opera house and a venue for the Santa Cruz Symphony Orchestra, for chamber music groups, and for performances of dance, theater, and zarzuela (Spanish operetta). International conferences will also be held there. It is Calatrava's first performing arts building. Photo: Jordi Verdes Padron
Grupos de Tuna de la Universidad de Bilbao Resultado de la Consulta • Tuna de Distrito Universitario de Vitoria-Gasteiz • Tuna Universitaria de Vitoria-Gasteiz • Tuna Universitaria del Gran Bilbao 3 grupos en total ( 3 tunas, ):