Michael Graves, the Princeton-based post-modernist architect famous for designing more than 350 buildings around the world and more than 2,000 everyday consumer products, including the teakettle, died Thursday. He was 80.
His firm, Michael Graves & Associates, announced his death on social media:
In a statement to the The New York Times reflecting on Graves' life and passing, the firm referred to him as an extraordinary designer, teacher, mentor and friend.
“For the countless students that he taught for more than 40 years, Michael was an inspiring professor who encouraged everyone to find their unique design voice.”
Graves, who began a 40-year teaching career at Princeton in 1962, recently helped establish the Michael Graves School of Architecture at Kean University in New Jersey.
"Graves left a large portfolio in Philadelphia. It ranges from the cartoonish Eagles NovaCare practice facility near the sports complex, with its flattened billboard of a facade, to Temple University's bloated Alter Hall. You can also see a flattened pediment on the pavilion he designed for the Sporting Club on Broad Street." - Philadelphia Inquirer architecture critic Inga Saffron
According to The New York Times obituary, he was first associated with the New York Five, a group of architects who achieved cult-like stature by helping to redefine modernism in the 1970s.
He went on to design projects like the headquarters of the health care company Humana in Louisville, Ky., and the Portland Municipal Building in Oregon, which exemplified postmodernism with their reliance on color and ornament and made him a celebrity.
He used his fame as a brand, designing housewares for Target while continuing to run a busy practice, even as postmodernism fell out of fashion.
[Graves] left a large portfolio in Philadelphia. It ranges from the cartoonish Eagles NovaCare practice facility near the sports complex, with its flattened billboard of a facade, to Temple University's bloated Alter Hall. You can also see a flattened pediment on the pavilion he designed for the Sporting Club on Broad Street, writes Philadelphia Inquirer architecture critic Inga Saffron.
He had been paralyzed from the waist down since 2003 as a result of a spinal cord infection and used his personal experience as the catalyst to become an advocate of health care design, including creating the bathtub grab bar.
In this Sept. 11, 2009 file photo, architect and designer Michael Graves sits in his Princeton, N.J. studio holding a bathtub handle he designed to help the handicapped and elderly. (Mel Evans/AP)
Read the entire New York Times obituary here.