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Maya Lin

 
Who2 Biography: Maya Lin, Architect / Artist
 
Maya Lin
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  • Born: 5 October 1959
  • Birthplace: Athens, Ohio
  • Best Known As: Designer of the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, D.C.

Name at birth: Maya Ying Lin

Maya Lin was still an undergraduate at Yale University when she won the national design competition for a Vietnam War veterans memorial to be built near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. Amid controversy over her untraditional design (and, remarkably, complaints that it had been created by a young woman of Chinese descent), the memorial was completed in 1982. It became the most visited monument in Washington, D.C. Maya Lin has gone on to design other memorials, landscape sculptures and private residences.

The film Maya Lin: A Strong, Clear Vision won the 1995 Oscar for best feature documentary.

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Art Encyclopedia: Maya Lin
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(b Athens, OH, 5 Oct 1959). American sculptor and architect. She studied at Yale University (1977-81), New Haven, CT, graduating with an MFA in Architecture. Her best-known work is the Vietnam Veterans' Memorial (1981-83) on the National Mall in Washington, DC. While she was still a student (in 1981), her design was selected from 1421 final entries to a competition initiated by the Vietnam Veterans' Memorial Fund for a memorial to be built in the capital. Its purpose was to commemorate those who fought and died in the War and to help reconcile some of the differences that the War had provoked among the American public, government leaders and war veterans. Lin's design created a new paradigm for memorials. The monument both serves its complex and particular purpose and re-evaluates completely the traditional form of the public monument. It is a low V-shaped black granite wall partially submerged in the manner of ancient burial sites; the names of all those who died or went missing are inscribed on it. Its reflective surface means that those who view it and read the roll-call of names become immediate participants in the experience of remembering the dead. Names of servicemen and women are recorded in the order in which they perished, from 1959-1975, giving the memorial a sense of real time in history. The viewer recognizes the singularity of each name, while also having a clear sense of the huge number of names making up the whole list. The memorial's Minimalist design aroused controversy and provoked profound feelings about grief and the Vietnam War in general. On 11 Nov 1984 a more traditional memorial by Frederick Hart, showing three American servicemen, was dedicated near by. Lin also designed the Civil Rights Memorial, a granite fountain, in Montgomery, AL, dedicated in November 1989, and in 1991 worked on an outdoor sculpture for Yale University, New Haven, CT, honouring the women of that institution.

See the Abbreviations for further details.



 
Biography: Maya Ying Lin
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Maya Ying Lin (born 1959) was an American architect whose two most important works in the 1980s were the Vietnam Veterans' Memorial in Washington, D.C., and the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Alabama.

Maya Ying Lin was born in 1959 in Athens, Ohio, a manufacturing and agricultural town 75 miles southeast of Columbus. Athens is also the home of Ohio University, where both Lin's mother, a poet, and her late father, a ceramicist, taught. The couple fled China just before the Communist Revolution of 1949, leaving behind a prominent family which had included a well-known lawyer and, perhaps significantly, an architect. Lin's family in America includes her mother and an older brother, Tan, who, like his mother, is a poet.

During her childhood Maya Lin found it easy to keep herself entertained, whether by reading or by building miniature towns. From an early age she excelled in mathematics, which led her toward a career in architecture. While in high school Lin took college level courses and worked at McDonalds. She considered herself a typical mid-westerner in that she grew up with little sense of ethnic identity, but admits to having been somewhat "nerdy," since she didn't date or wear make-up and found it enjoyable to be constantly thinking and solving problems.

After graduating from high school, Lin enrolled at Yale to study architecture. Her best-known work, the design for the Vietnam Veterans' Memorial in Washington, D.C., grew out of a class project during her senior year at Yale. In 1981 her entry was chosen out of a field of 1,421 unlabelled submissions in a design competition which was open to all Americans, not just professional architects. Lin was just 21 years old at the time and admits she worried that her professional life had peaked before it had properly started.

Lin's design, in keeping with the competition criteria of sensitivity to the nearby Lincoln Memorial and Washington Monument, the inclusion of the names of all the dead and missing of the war, and the avoidance of political statements about the war, was simple. She proposed two 200-foot-long polished black granite walls, which plunged ten feet below grade to meet at an obtuse angle of 130 degrees. The two arms were to point to the Lincoln Memorial and Washington Monument and to be inscribed with the names of the approximately 58,000 men and women killed or missing in Vietnam. These names were to be listed chronologically, according to the dates killed or reported missing, instead of alphabetically, so they would read, in Lin's words, "like an epic Greek poem." The memorial was dedicated in November of 1982.

The story of the politics surrounding the choice of Lin's design reads like an epic in itself. For the jury, the choice of her proposal was unanimous. Jury chairman Grady Clay described it as "an eloquent place where the simple setting of earth, sky, and remembered names contains messages" for everyone who will visit. The proposal was generally accepted by veterans, but early on a small but vocal minority of veterans and others appeared who attacked the design as "a tribute to Jane Fonda," a "wailing wall for draft dodgers," and "a black gash of shame." Lin's galvanizing design was perhaps best described by one veteran who likened it to a Rorschach test for what each American thinks of the Vietnam War. Such a description suggests that Lin was successful in her intentions to create "a very psychological memorial … that brings out in people the realization of loss and a cathartic healing process."

Maya Lin cited Edwin Lutyens' Memorial to the Missing of the Somme Offensive at Thiepval, France, of 1927-1932, as an influence on her concept of the Vietnam Memorial. This huge, abstract geometric form consists of a central arch flanked by two barrel-vaulted tunnels on which over 70,000 names are inscribed. In addition to Lutyens, Lin has expressed interest in the works of Minimalist artists Dan Flavin, Robert Irwin, and James Turrell, who all experimented with light as an art medium and were pioneers in the anti-object, anti-gallery movement of the 1960s. Turrell's definition of art as a "part of the realm of experience," where each viewer bears responsibility for finding meaning in a work and where each viewer's reaction becomes part of the work itself, could equally be applied to Lin's memorial, with its lack of traditional forms and highly polished black granite surface, which reflects each visitor's unique response to the memorial.

After the Vietnam Memorial project, Lin returned to Yale for a Master's degree. Her later projects included designs for a Philadelphia stage set; a corporate logo; an outdoor gathering place at Juniata College in Huntington, Pennsylvania; a park near the Charlotte, North Carolina, coliseum; and a ceiling for the Long Island Railroad section of Pennsylvania Station. In addition, her lead and glass sculptures have been exhibited at New York's Sidney Janis Gallery.

Maya Lin's second nationally recognized project was the design of the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Alabama, commissioned by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Lin's conception of the memorial grew out of her admiration of a line in Martin Luther King's "I have a dream" speech, which proclaims that the struggle for civil rights will not be complete "until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream." Water, along with this key phrase from the King years, became her theme. King's words stand out boldly on a convex, water-covered wall which overlooks an inverted cone-shaped table with an off-center base. The surface of this table is inscribed with the names of 40 who died in the struggle for civil rights between 1955 and 1968, as well as with landmark events of the period. This element is also bathed in a film of moving water, which serves to involve the viewer sensually - through sound, touch, and the sight of his or her reflection - while the words engage the intellect.

The two geometric elements of the Civil Rights Memorial, although Minimalist in nature, are not completely devoid of symbolic meaning. Lin has noted that the asymmetrical, cone-shaped table looks different from every angle, a quality which implies equality without sameness - an appropriate sentiment in a memorial to civil rights. Lin says this memorial will be her last and notes that she began and ended the 1980s with memorial projects. She feels fortunate and satisfied to have had the opportunity.

In 1993, Lin created a sculptural landscape work called Groundswell at Ohio State University - a three level garden of crushed green glass. The glass used in the effort reveal Lin's environmentalist nature. Lin remains an active sculptor and architect. In 1997 she began work on a 20,000 square foot recycling plant. Lin currently lives in Vermont. She stays out of the public eye as much as possible. Still, so much of her work is so public and so innovative that publicity is hard to avoid.

Further Reading

While information on the Vietnam Memorial and the controversy surrounding it is legion, Maya Lin's career is young, and thus there is no mass of critical research dealing with her specifically. Most useful in piecing her story together were Jan Scruggs' and Joel Swerdlow's book To Heal a Nation (1985), which briefly discusses Lin and her views, and an article in Time magazine by Jonathan Coleman ("First She Looked Inward," November 6, 1989). On the Vietnam Memorial see Elizabeth Hess, "A Tale of Two Memorials," Art in America (April 1983); Arthur Danto, "The Vietnam Veterans' Memorial," The Nation (August 31, 1985); and Michael Sorkin, "What Happens When a Woman Designs a War Monument?," Vogue (May 1983). On the Civil Rights Memorial see "Civil Rights Memorial Dedicated," in Art in America (December 1989) and David Grogan and Linda Kramer, "Maya Lin Lets Healing Waters Flow Over Her Civil Rights Memorial," People Weekly (November 20, 1989). To read about Lin's current project, the article "The Fifty" appears in Time (December 5, 1994).

 

(born Oct. 5, 1959, Athens, Ohio, U.S.) U.S. architect and sculptor. The daughter of Chinese immigrants, she achieved fame in 1981 when her class assignment at Yale University won the nationwide Vietnam Veterans Memorial competition. Lin's award-winning design consisted of a polished black granite V-shaped wall inscribed with the names of the approximately 58,000 men and women who were killed or missing in action; the abstract nature of the design aroused a great deal of controversy. Her subsequent, vastly different designs include the major commissions for the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Ala. (1989), and the Women's Table at Yale (1993), as well as an earth sculpture for the University of Michigan (1994) and an extraordinary translucent clock, Eclipsed Time, installed in the ceiling of New York City's Pennsylvania Station (1994).

For more information on Maya Lin, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Maya Ying Lin
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Lin, Maya Ying ('ə) , 1959–, American architect and sculptor, b. Athens, Ohio. Lin is known for her visual poetry and sensitive mingling of highly abstract form with meaning. From an artistically distinguished Chinese family that immigrated to the United States in the 1940s, Lin was catapulted to prominence while a Yale undergraduate when her magisterially simple design for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. (completed 1982) won a national competition. She cemented her status as a major figure with her sculptural design for the Civil Rights Memorial, Montgomery, Ala. (1989), and a monument commemorating coeducation at Yale (1991). She also has undertaken other kinds of architectural projects, e.g., several private houses, and the Museum of African Art (1993) and a huge clock at Pennsylvania Station (1994), both in New York City. In 2001 she began the Confluence Project, an ecology-based seven-part installation along the Columbia River in Washington and Oregon that commemorates sites where the Lewis and Clark expedition met with Native American groups. Lin has continued her environmental art with several earthwork projects, notably her Wave Field (2008), an 11-acre (4.5-hectare) work consisting of seven grassy, undulating hills at New York's Storm King Art Center. She also designs furniture, and her sculpture has been widely exhibited.

Bibliography

See her Boundaries (2000); Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision (documentary film, 1995).

 
Wikipedia: Maya Lin
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Maya Lin

Lin at the Museum of Glass
Born October 5, 1959 (1959-10-05) (age 49)
Athens, Ohio
Nationality United States
Field art, architecture, memorials
Training Yale University
Works Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Civil Rights Memorial

Maya Ying Lin (traditional Chinese: ; simplified Chinese: ; pinyin: Lín Yīng; born October 5, 1959) is an American artist and architect who is known for her work in sculpture and landscape art. Her best-known work is the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.[1]

Contents

Personal life

Maya Lin, a Chinese American, was born in Athens, Ohio. Her parents emigrated to the United States from People's Republic of China in 1949 and settled in Ohio in 1958, one year before Maya Lin was born.[2] Her father, Henry Huan Lin, was a ceramist and former dean of the Ohio University College of Fine Arts, and her mother, Julia Ming Lin, was a Professor of Literature at Ohio University.[1] She is the niece of Lin Huiyin, who is said to be the first female architect in China.[3] Lin studied at Yale University, where she received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1981 and a Master of Architecture degree in 1986. She has also been awarded honorary doctorate degrees from Yale, Harvard University, Williams College, and Smith College.[4] She is married to Daniel Wolf, a New York photography dealer. They have two daughters, India and Rachel.[1]

Lin, having grown up surrounded by white people, has said that she "didn't even realize" she was Chinese until later in life, and that it was not until her 30s that she had a desire to understand her cultural background.[5] Commenting on her design of a new home for the Museum of Chinese in America near New York City's Chinatown, Lin attached a personal significance to the project being a Chinese-related project because she wanted her two daughters to "know that part of their heritage."[2]

Vietnam Veterans Memorial

Vietnam War Memorial original design submission by Maya Lin

In 1981, at age 21 and while still an undergraduate, Lin won a public design competition for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, beating out 1,420 other competition submissions.[6] The black cut-stone masonry wall, with the names of 58,253 fallen soldiers carved into its face,[7] was completed in late October 1982 and dedicated on November 13, 1982.[8] The wall is granite and V-shaped, with one side pointing to the Lincoln Memorial and the other to the Washington Monument.[7]

Lin's conception was to create an opening or a wound in the earth to symbolize the gravity of the loss of the soldiers. The design was initially controversial for what was an unconventional and non-traditional design for a war memorial. Opponents of the design also voiced objection because of Lin's Asian heritage.[5][9][10] However, the memorial has since become an important pilgrimage site for relatives and friends of the American military casualties in Vietnam, and personal tokens and mementos are left at the wall daily in their memory.[11][12]

Lin believes that if the competition had not been "blind", with designs submitted by number instead of name, she "never would have won." She received harassment after her ethnicity was revealed - prominent businessman and later 3rd party presidential candidate Ross Perot was known to have called her an "egg roll"[13] after it was revealed that she was Asian. Lin defended her design in front of the United States Congress, and eventually a compromise was reached. A bronze statue of a group of soldiers and an American flag was placed off to one side of the monument as a result.

Work after the Vietnam Veterans Memorial

Sculpture of 2x4 on display at the De Young Museum in San Francisco, 2009

Lin, who now owns and operates Maya Lin Studio in New York City, went on to design other structures, including the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Alabama (1989) and the Wave Field at the University of Michigan (1995).[14]

In 1994, she was the subject of the Academy Award-winning documentary Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision. The title comes from an address she gave at Yale in which she spoke of the monument design process.

In 2000, Lin re-emerged in the public life with a book Boundaries.[15] Also in 2000, she agreed to act as the artist and architect for the Confluence Project, a series of outdoor installations at historical points along the Columbia River and Snake River in the state of Washington. This is the largest and longest project that she has undertaken so far.[16]

In 2002, Lin was elected Alumni Fellow of the Yale Corporation, the governing body of Yale University (Upon whose campus sits another of Lin's designs: the Women's Table - designed to commemorate the role of women at Yale University.), in an unusually public contest. Her opponent was W. David Lee, a local New Haven minister and graduate of the Yale Divinity School who was running on a platform to build ties to the community with the support of Yale's unionized employees. Lin was supported by Yale's President Richard Levin, other members of the Yale Corporation, and was the officially endorsed candidate of the Association of Yale Alumni.

In 2003, Lin served on the selection jury of the World Trade Center Site Memorial Competition. A trend toward minimalism and abstraction was noted among the entrants, finalists, and current World Trade Center Memorial.

In 2005, Lin was elected to The American Academy of Arts and Letters, as well as the National Women's Hall of Fame in Seneca Falls, New York.

Lin was commissioned by Ohio University to design what is known as punch card park, a landscape literally designed to resemble a punch card, supposedly based on Lin's memories of their early use in universities. The park is a large open space with rectangular mounds and voids on the ground.photo At first the park was criticized for being relatively uninviting (with punchcard pits promoting mosquito infestation and preventing safe active recreation) and lacked trees or structures to shade students from the sun. In addition, from the ground level, it is difficult to tell what the park is supposed to look like, though from an aerial view it does resemble a punch card. Although the university since planted trees around the park's perimeter in an attempt to make it a more popular place for students to gather, this has been unsuccessful.[17][18]

In 2008, Lin completed a 30-ton sculpture called "2 x 4 Landscape," which is on exhibit at the M.H. de Young Memorial Museum in San Francisco, California.[19] Her current projects include an installation at the Storm King Art Center.[20][21]

Bibliography

References

  1. ^ a b c "Maya Lin". The New York Times. http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/l/maya_lin/index.html. Retrieved on 2009-01-02. 
  2. ^ a b Paul Berger (2006-11-05). "Ancient Echoes in a Modern Space". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/05/nyregion/thecity/05maya.html. Retrieved on 2009-01-02. 
  3. ^ Peter G. Rowe and Seng Kuan (2004). Architectural Encounters with Essence and Form in Modern China. MIT Press. ISBN 9780262681513. http://books.google.com/books?id=9irZf11s4NkC. 
  4. ^ "Maya Lin: Systematic Landscapes". Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. http://72.5.117.194/content.asp?key=139. Retrieved on 2009-01-02. 
  5. ^ a b "Between Art and Architecture: The Memory Works of Maya Lin". American Association of Museums. July/August 2008. http://www.aam-us.org/pubs/mn/mayalin.cfm. Retrieved on 2008-12-30. 
  6. ^ "Vietnam Veterans Memorial". Library of Congress. http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/treasures/trm022.html. Retrieved on 2009-01-03. 
  7. ^ a b "Facts and Figures". Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund. http://www.vvmf.org/index.cfm?sectionID=539. Retrieved on 2009-01-03. 
  8. ^ "History". Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund. http://www.vvmf.org/index.cfm?SectionID=76. Retrieved on 2009-01-03. 
  9. ^ Marla Hochman. "Maya Lin, Vietnam Memorial". greenmuseum.org. http://www.greenmuseum.org/c/aen/Issues/lin.php. Retrieved on 2008-12-30. 
  10. ^ Kristal Sands. "Maya Lin's Wall: A Tribute to Americans". Jack Magazine. http://www.jackmagazine.com/issue9/essayksands.html. Retrieved on 2008-12-30. 
  11. ^ Gale - Free Resources - Women's History - Biographies - Maya Lin
  12. ^ Maya Lin - Great Buildings Online
  13. ^ Frank H. Wu (2001). Yellow: Race In America Beyond Black and White. Basic Books. pp. 95. ISBN 0465006396. http://books.google.com/books?id=ybl1AAAAMAAJ. 
  14. ^ Art:21 . Maya Lin's "Wave Field" PBS
  15. ^ Maya Lin emerges from the shadows
  16. ^ "A Meeting Of Minds". The Seattle Times. 2005-06-12. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/pacificnw06122005/coverstory.html. Retrieved on 2006-09-07. 
  17. ^ The Athens NEWS | Money spent on new OU park could have been better spent
  18. ^ Maya Lin's Bicentennial Park at Ohio University in Athens Ohio - IBM Punch Card Art is no Vietnam Veterans Memorial
  19. ^ Maya Lin looks at nature - from the inside
  20. ^ "Once Inspired by a War, Now by the Land". New York Times. November 7, 2008. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/09/arts/design/09kino.html. Retrieved on 2008-11-09. "On a gray, unusually muggy October day the artist and architect Maya Lin was showing a visitor around “Wave Field,” her new earthwork project at the Storm King Art Center here. The 11-acre installation, which will open to the public next spring, consists of seven rows of undulating hills cradled in a gently sloping valley." 
  21. ^ Cotter, Holland (May 7, 2009). "Art Review | 'Storm King Wavefield': Where the Ocean Meets the Catskills". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/08/arts/design/08lin.html. Retrieved on May 8, 2009. 

External links


 
 
Learn More
Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision (1995 History Film)
The Wall: Reading Rainbow (TV Episode) (1992 Children's/Family TV Episode)
Vietnam Veterans War Memorial

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Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Maya Lin biography from Who2.  Read more
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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
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