
Juan
O'Gorman
Mexico City, Mexico 1905
The first
son of an Irish father and Mexican mother, Juan O'Gorman was born in
Mexico City in 1905. After graduating from the Architecture School of
the National University of Mexico, O'Gorman worked in the offices of
various architects.
O'Gorman
adhered to a philosophy of progressive socialism which ultimately affected
both his writings and buildings. Influenced by Le Corbusier and other
European Modernists, O'Gorman produced some of the first examples of
functionalist architecture in Mexico.
By World
War II, O'Gorman had started to move away from his original architectural
philosophy in favour of a more regional architecture. Disenchanted with
functionalism, he temporarily abandoned architectural practice and devoted
himself to mural painting.
In the early 1950s, O'Gorman returned to architecture. Inspired by the
works of Frank Lloyd Wright, he advocated a form of organic architecture.
He integrated vernacular forms and detailing with modern structural
and spatial arrangements to achieve a culturally, socially, and environmentally
significant architecture.