Checkerboard  
  Contact Information
 
Welcome Our Films Ordering
 
 
Our Films

Daniel Libeskind: Denver Art Museum, Frederic C. Hamilton Building

Architect Daniel Libeskind first gained world-wide attention when his haunting, zig-zag-shaped Jewish Museum opened in Berlin in 1999. After his dramatic urban design plan for Ground Zero was selected by city and state officials in 2002, Libeskind became a household name in America. Now with his first work of architecture to be realized in the U.S., an addition to the Denver Art Museum, the American public has a chance to examine his unconventional talents. In this filmed tour of the Denver Art Museum's Hamilton Building, Libeskind explains his unusual, titanium-clad, shard-like building. The dazzling geometry we see on the exterior is reflected inside to provide spectacular spaces and arresting angles for viewing contemporary art. The sculptural building of fractured planes insouciantly claims its status as a major landmark in American museum architecture.

P R O D U C E R : Edgar B. Howard
D I R E C T O R : Muffie Dunn
C O L O R ,  3 0   M I N U T E S

 
Next Film:
Thom Mayne: U.S. Federal Office Building, San Francisco
 
 
 
 
$45.00 -- DVD
 
Copyright © 1999, Checkerboard Film Foundation, Inc.