Amanda on Architecture.
Zaha Hadid the Iconic Woman Architect of our Time.
I cannot remember when I first became aware of Zaha Hadid, but I will always remember the shock of hearing of her untimely death in March 2016. An indomitable creative force smashing all the glass ceilings, she was a true pioneer and role model for women architects. I felt crushed for weeks following her death, and after reading all the obituaries written by her close friends, I understood the enormous stress she endured in paving the way for women architects, and the terrible toll it took on her health.
Zaha
Hadid was born in Bagdad in 1950 and graduated from the famous Architectural
Association School of Architecture in 1977.
Yasmin Shariff’s description of her in an article following her death
brought home to me how strong Zaha’s spirit was from the start:-
“I
will never forget the day I sat outside the principal’s office hearing raised
voices. Zaha appeared, tears streaming down her face, angry and shaking. Her
work wasn’t considered good enough and she stormed out of that office
determined to “show them”, and show them she did – winning the coveted AA Diploma
prize in 1977; the Pritzker prize in 2004; the Royal Institute of British
Architects’ Stirling prize in 2010 and 2011, and last year the Riba royal gold
medal.”
Zaha’s buildings
redefined our ideas of what was possible in architecture, yet she faced continual
criticism in the media. Every positive piece written about her seemed to be
countered by many others that cast doubt on her abilities. All women architects
of our generation, I think can empathize with such hostile reactions, having
had to face the same ourselves, albeit on smaller scale. Sadly, even other
women gave her negative reviews. I found Lucy Kellaway‘s interview in November
1995 for “Lunch With the FT” particularly acerbic. Perhaps that is the time I
really took notice of Zaha Hadid for the first time, working myself at that
moment on a large hotel design and facing continual obstacles from all sides.
Kellaway focused on the
way Zaha was dressed “Zaha Hadid looked all wrong”, and the fact that most of
her work had not been built- not true- she had few buildings in the UK- but she
had projects all over the world at the time. Kellaway did at least write one
small paragraph that struck a chord. “She started to explain that what matters
about a building is not what it is made of, or any of the details, but the
space itself. “Good space transcends taste and values. It’s a weird, mystical
thing. It‘s very difficult to achieve, but you know when you‘ve got it.””
Hallelujah to that!
To understand the
genius of Zaha Hadid‘s buildings is to move through them. Technology was unable
to convey the true quality of her work early in her career, but as CAD
developed she was able to take us on journeys through her buildings. Since that
is the best way to experience them, I have included some walk-through‘s for
your contemplation.
Bee‘ah Headquaters in Sharjah. UAE
The Dubai Lighthouse
and Pier Project
Changsha Meixihu, China
….and one from the
practice itself in 2014 that reflects on their design philosophy in their own
words.
In closing I include a
quote from Hugh Pearmanarticle
from the Sunday Times on 4 June 2006, titled “Iraquitect: Zaha Hadid commands
the Guggenheim, but remembers her roots”
“Whatever you think an architect looks
like, whatever you think an architect does, wherever you think an architect
comes from, disabuse yourselves of those notions. And consider instead Zaha
Hadid, the most extraordinary success story that this notoriously volatile
profession has ever produced.
Women traditionally don’t rise to the top in
architecture – not on an international level. Not in the stratosphere where
Zaha now exotically moves, where a handful of global superstar architects is
constantly airborne like some design equivalent of a nuclear deterrent. Women
don’t get invited into that club. And as for a notoriously short-fused,
allegedly tyrannical, hugely imaginative and sometimes sweetly charming woman
from Baghdad of all places – no, that script would be turned down by Hollywood
as just too inherently implausible. Besides, no actor on earth could play the
mercurial Zaha.”