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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Lifestyle
Oliver Wainwright

‘I faked it at the beginning!’: David Chipperfield on his rise from shop designer to starchitect

‘In an era of excessive over-designing and exaggeration, he can always achieve balance’ … the Hepworth Wakefield in West Yorkshire, completed in 2011.
‘In an era of excessive over-designing and exaggeration, he can always achieve balance’ … the Hepworth Wakefield in West Yorkshire, completed in 2011. Photograph: Iwan Baan

Sometimes, it takes a trip abroad to make you realise what you have at home. When David Cameron visited German chancellor Angela Merkel in 2013, she introduced the then British PM to “one of our most famous German architects”. The designer in question? The London-born and -based Sir David Chipperfield, who had built several museums in Germany, as well as law courts in Barcelona and a library in Des Moines, Iowa, all while being relatively overlooked in his native Britain.

Ten years on, Chipperfield has just been announced as the winner of the 2023 Pritzker prize, architecture’s highest international accolade. And he has become a bit better known back home. “It’s a great honour,” he says, speaking from his second home in Galicia, northwest Spain, where he spent much of the pandemic. “And also a slight relief.”

Although Chipperfield is firmly part of the architectural establishment, having won countless international competitions, curated the Venice Biennale and been awarded the Riba gold medal, he has always felt like an outsider. “As a young architect in England in the 1980s, you had no chance,” he says. “We had Margaret Thatcher and Prince Charles, the twin towers of negativity towards the architectural profession. I did my first three buildings in Japan, followed by competitions in Italy and Germany. To be honest, it hasn’t really changed. I’ve been on the road ever since.”

Beguiling … the main staircase hall of the Neues Museum in Berlin.
Beguiling … the main staircase hall of the Neues Museum in Berlin. Photograph: Adam Eastland/Alamy

While recent decades have seen globe-trotting celebrity “starchitects” competing with ever more novel forms and contorted structural gymnastics, Chipperfield has been a voice of sobriety. While others conjured flashy icons, he pursued an austere form of modernism exuding solemn gravitas. As the Pritzker citation puts it, his buildings are “always characterised by elegance, restraint, a sense of permanence and refined detailing”, adding: “in an era of excessive commercialisation, over-designing, and over-exaggeration, he can always achieve balance.”

David Chipperfield: ‘My generation has always been about the product, but I believe more than anything now that we need to focus on the process.’
David Chipperfield: ‘I’m at a different point in my career now. I can leverage my position and privilege to make another kind of value out of it.’ Photograph: courtesy of The Hyatt Foundation: the Pritzker Architecture Prize

Chipperfield’s brand of austerity can be too sterile for some: his projects in Germany have been accused of being too close to the country’s fascist past. But he is at his masterful best when working with existing structures – particularly those with fraught histories. His career-defining project remains the beguiling reconstruction of the Neues Museum in Berlin, which had been bombed by the RAF during the second world war. Completed in 2009, the project eschewed both historical re-enactment and the cliched juxtaposition of ruins with a modern extension. Instead, Chipperfield developed a poetic archaeological approach, with conservation architect Julian Harrap, fusing fragments of the existing fabric with bold new insertions, sometimes making it hard to tell whose hand was at work.

James Simon Gallery – attached to the Pergamon Museum – in Berlin, completed in 2018.
James Simon Gallery – attached to the Pergamon Museum – in Berlin, completed in 2018. Photograph: courtesy of Ute Zscharnt for David Chipperfield Architects

“It was life-changing for me and my team,” says Chipperfield. “It was a PhD in process and how to truly collaborate. My generation has always been about the product, but I believe more than anything now that we need to focus on the process.”

Born in London in 1953, David Alan Chipperfield grew up on a farm in Devon and spent his childhood dreaming of becoming a vet. He attended Wellington boarding school, where he says he was “fairly hopeless academically” but excelled at sports and art. He couldn’t get into university so he went to Kingston School of Art in London, followed by the Architectural Association, a hotbed of avant-garde ideas at the time – which he reacted firmly against. “At Kingston,” he says, “I was quite experimental and tried to break out. But given the freedom of the AA, I became very conservative. They tried to fail me, but thankfully Zaha Hadid stood up for me.”

Turner Contemporary gallery in Margate, completed in 2011.
Turner Contemporary gallery in Margate, completed in 2011. Photograph: courtesy of Simon Menges

Chipperfield spent formative years working with Richard Rogers and Norman Foster, where he “learned to make things more important than they might need to be,” he says. “In both those offices, they were quite obsessive about doing more than you’re asked to do.” Obsessive attention to detail – sometimes in the face of clients’ wishes and the budgets’ limits – would become one of his defining traits.

Launching his own practice in 1985, Chipperfield caught the eye of fashion designer Issey Miyake, whose Sloane Street store would be his first commission, leading to 18 months in Japan doing “some quite mediocre shop fit-outs in department stores”. But Miyake’s connections led to bigger commissions, including a stark concrete museum and a bunker-like office for Toyota. “I fabricated the beginning of my career in a rather fake manner,” Chipperfield admits. “With shop interiors, the projects in Japan and some competition entries, you could magic up the idea – with sleight of hand – that I had a real office.”

America’s Cup building, Valencia, 2006.
America’s Cup building, Valencia, 2006. Photograph: Christian Richters

It was enough to convince the Italian authorities, who awarded him three major public competitions, for a cemetery in Venice, a museum in Milan, and law courts in Salerno – “which we’re still finishing, 22 years later”. It was also enough for Berlin to add him to the shortlist for the Neues Museum (“a competition that was totally set up for Frank Gehry to win,” he says.)

While that 16-year endeavour made him a German national hero, a parallel experience in the UK speaks volumes about the difference in procurement culture. Chipperfield was appointed to design the BBC Scotland HQ in 2001, only to be pushed aside in favour of “executive architects” Keppie, leading to a lumpen, coarser design. Still, he got a chance to further flex his muscles elsewhere in the UK, with more enlightened clients: 2011 saw the opening of his Turner Contemporary in Margate, which stands on the coast like a sharply hewn iceberg, as well as the Hepworth Wakefield, rising from the waters of the River Calder as a chiselled cluster of concrete towers, riffing off the local post-industrial context.

Museums in Missouri and Mexico City followed, along with a gigantic cubic office block in Seoul, while back in London he turned his surgical skills to unpicking the labyrinthine maze of the Royal Academy. Chipperfield now has around 250 staff spread between offices in London, Berlin, Milan and Shanghai, but it seems his heart is really in Corrubedo – a small fishing village in the northwest of Spain where he owns several properties and runs a bar.

Amorepacific headquarters in Seoul, 2017.
Amorepacific headquarters in Seoul, 2017. Photograph: courtesy of Noshe

“I’ve been trying to set up a different kind of public office here,” he tells me, referring to the Fundación RIA, a non-profit he founded in 2017 that was recently appointed by the Galician government to oversee the regional development plan. The foundation is transforming a large building in Santiago de Compostela into a centre for research, exhibitions, events and student accommodation, due to open in October. “I’m at a different point in my career now,” says Chipperfield. “It’s easy for me to leverage my position, and leverage my privilege, to make another kind of value out of it.”

And the local reaction to his latest gong? “I don’t think people in the bar are going to be that excited when I tell them about the Pritzker prize,” he jokes. “I don’t think it’s going to be a wild night. When I was awarded Galician of the Year in 2019 – now that was a different matter!”

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