Elizabeth Diller’s fellow honorees comprise representatives from the worlds of politics, sports, show business, journalism, and medicine including Jimmy Kimmel, Cardi B, Xi Jinping, Sadiq Khan, Jennifer Lopez, Guillermo del Toro, Shinzō Abe, and Roger Federer.
Elizabeth Diller is a visionary. She imagines things the rest of us have to see to believe. She can turn a metaphor into brick and mortar.
The award has been accepted by Diller as a representative of the collective efforts of Diller Scofidio + Renfro (DS+R), which is led by four partners: Elizabeth Diller, Ricardo Scofidio, Charles Renfro, and Benjamin Gilmartin. DS+R is the only design firm to be featured on the 2018 TIME 100 list.
For the Broad, Liz had a tricky assignment: build a museum that is iconic, but that doesn’t clash with Disney Hall across the street. Liz called her design “the veil and the vault.” The veil—a white, porous overlay—brings diffused light in to meet the art. And the vault, hovering within the building, its contents visible through plate-glass windows, shows visitors the great potential of our collection to keep offering more art and ideas. We thought this was a brilliant concept.
Maybe it’s because she’s a woman in a male-dominated field, or because she was originally a conceptual artist—along with her partner in art, architecture and life, Ric Scofidio—but whatever the reason, Liz sees opportunities where others see challenges. She can do the impossible.
Maybe it’s because she’s a woman in a male-dominated field, or because she was originally a conceptual artist—along with her partner in art, architecture and life, Ric Scofidio—but whatever the reason, Liz sees opportunities where others see challenges. She can do the impossible.
Her firm is responsible for two of the largest recent architecture and planning initiatives in New York City: the High Line and the Roy and Diana Vagelos Education Center at Columbia University. Other notable projects include the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive at UC Berkeley; and the Broad Museum in Los Angeles. The studio’s international work includes the recently-completed 34-acre Zaryadye Park adjacent to the Kremlin in Moscow, exhibitions in Paris as Musings on a Glass Box and the Museum of Image and Sound currently in construction in Rio de Janeiro. DS+R was recently selected to design a new home for the London Symphony Orchestra.
Architects who have received the honor in past years include David Adjaye and Bjarke Ingels.