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Hall of Fame 2002: Deborah Berke by Jen Renzi
Despite her lofty achievements, architect Deborah Berke remains
grounded and, above all, genuine. Humility and a lack of pretension
infuse her stylistically varied work. "It's about economy of gesture.
I aspire to understatement—it must be my Yankee roots," jokes the
New York–born Rhode Island School of Design graduate. "Rather than
designs that can be assimilated at once, I try to evoke a sense
of mystery, compelling you to take a second look."
The design community has certainly been looking closely, as Berke's
lengthy and varied list of professional benchmarks demonstrates.
Since founding her namesake practice in 1982, she has been the subject
of museum exhibitions and the recipient of industry awards. Her
high-profile commissions include a library for the modern-architecture
mecca of Hope, Indiana. She's also the chairman of the board of
advisers for Columbia University's Temple Hoyne Buell Center for
the Study of American Architecture, a trustee of the Design Trust
for Public Space, and coeditor of a 1997 manifesto, Architecture
of the Everyday.
A champion of subtlety, Berke ironically owes some of her renown
to the flamboyant world of fashion. Besides being the vision behind
Manhattan's Industria Superstudio and retail schemes for Club Monaco,
she enjoys a long-standing collaboration with former Harper's Bazaar
creative director Fabien Baron. She handled the New York office
of his design and advertising firm, Baron & Baron, in 1993; in 1999,
she completed his loft.
Her restrained architectural statements perhaps seem better suited
to the realms of fine art and academia, and she's accomplished much
in those categories, too: from lofts for artists William Wegman
and Roni Horn to Yale University's School of Art and New Theatre.
While teaching at Yale and elsewhere, Berke says, she has continued
to juggle a mix of residential, commercial, and "creative institutional"
projects.
Designing a total of 19 austere commercial and residential buildings
for the not-so-austere new-urbanist community of Seaside, Florida,
was her early break. "Seaside was an important opportunity to actually
build and to establish a voice through building—articulated in a
vernacular style," says Berke.
She's now participating in another planned development boasting
big-name architects: For the Houses at Sagaponac on Long Island,
she's designed a modest cedar-clad, U-shape residence that references
the area's beach-modernist traditions. Other residences on the East
End of Long Island, an arts facility for Vermont's Marlboro College,
and her hospitality debut, a 90-room boutique hotel in Kentucky,
are on the boards as well.
Berke often leaves her work a little bit raw and open-ended, allowing
the client to bring a project to life—and often accounting for last-minute
surprises. Her career trajectory, it seems, is one of them. Asked
if she ever envisioned where she'd be in 2002, she responds with
appreciation: "I had no idea 20 years ago what I'd be doing today,
and it's even better than I imagined. I feel unbelievably fortunate.
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