Sir David Adjaye to Design the Museum’s New Home
Born in Tanzania to Ghanaian parents, Adjaye was educated at London South Bank University and the Royal College of Art in London prior to opening his first office there in 1994. His sculptural ability, rich color palette, and inventive use of eclectic materials quickly established him as an architect with an artist’s sensibility and vision. Today, Adjaye Associates work from offices in London, New York, and Accra and have undertaken projects in Europe, North America, the Middle East, Asia, and Africa. Highlights include Ruby City, a new contemporary art center in San Antonio, Texas; Sugar Hill housing development and museum in Harlem, New York; the Moscow School of Management SKOLKOVO; the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver; The Nobel Peace Center in Oslo; the Idea Stores in Tower Hamlets, London; and the Aïshti Foundation retail and art complex in Beirut. Among projects currently underway are a new home for the Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; the National Cathedral of Ghana in Accra; and the UK Holocaust Memorial and Learning Centre in London. Adjaye’s numerous collaborations with contemporary artists, curators, and gallerists include partnering on the Fifty-Sixth Venice Biennale’s central pavilion and principal exhibition spaces with curator Okwui Enwezor in 2015 and his design for Ghana’s first national pavilion in Venice in 2019.
The recipient of numerous accolades for his global body of work, Adjaye received the AJ100 Contribution to the Profession award in 2018, the Panerai London Design Medal from the London Design Festival in 2016, and the Wall Street Journal’s Innovator Award in 2013. He was named to the Order of the British Empire in 2007 and knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 2017 for services to architecture.
Adjaye is not new to Princeton University—from 2008 through 2010 he was a visiting professor at Princeton’s School of Architecture, making him intimately familiar with the campus vernacular and particularly the collegiate gothic which is the core of that style, with its strong verticality and vista-shaping archways. “Having taught on this campus, he understands fully what the University and the Art Museum are looking to accomplish,” noted Princeton President Christopher L. Eisgruber. “I am thrilled that Adjaye Associates and their skilled collaborators at Cooper Robertson will serve as the architects for this project.”
In making a new home, the Art Museum seeks to reinforce its position as a hub for the arts and humanities on campus, as well as a destination for visitors from around the region and around the world—shaping what Adjaye has termed “a new synthesis of art, learning, and social opportunities.” As he has described it, “The reimagined museum will be the cultural gateway between Princeton University, its students, faculty, and the world, a place of mind-opening encounter with art and ideas ‘in the service of humanity.’” The Museum and the University look forward to sharing the design for this reimagined institution early in 2020.