A conversation with design thinker Frank O. Gehry
An intimate conversation with the great architect and design thinker Frank O. Gehry that explores the way thinkers see, work and relate with design projects. He speaks about his design processes and says that what motivates him is the world of possibilities rather finding the right solution.
Specially interesting is his take on how museums deal with art, what he calls the white cube syndrome, how by clearing the space around a piece of art and putting it in a perfectly white space it becomes precious and separates it from the viewer. "If you put a great painting in a garage [...] it is still a great painting", this draws a parallel with the perception of design as a precious thing that occurs in a separate dimension from the viewers/users while in reality they are inherent to the processes and thinking of design.
