These women prove that the future of architecture is female.
The world of professional architecture was exclusively an all-boys club until the 17th century when a British socialite named Lady Elizabeth Wilbraham quietly designed about 400 buildings. Historians believe that she also tutored the renowned architect Sir Christopher Wren, whose work would later include Kensington Palace and St. Paul’s Cathedral. Because of Wilbraham’s sex, though, she wasn’t allowed to visit the construction sites of her projects, so she would send men to supervise the progress. Unfortunately, as a result, these men were often credited with her work.
It wouldn’t be until a couple of centuries later when women such as Sophia Hayden and Marion Mahony Griffin would finally break the status quo.
Chile-born Hayden was the first alumna of MIT’s architecture program, while Mahony Griffin was one of the first licensed female architects in the world. She was also Frank Lloyd Wright’s first employee, known for significantly influencing his famous prairie style.
And while, since then, many women would follow in their footsteps, currently only about 17 percent of all registered architects are women, according to the AAA (American Institute of Architects). However, that doesn’t mean their achievements are overshadowed by projects led by their male counterparts. The late Zaha Hadid, for example, became a household name with her futuristic and instantly recognizable structures present in all four corners of the globe.
Here, we take a look at nine of the most prominent female architects whose work is changing city skylines around the globe and reinventing how we think about art and the future of architecture.
Neri Oxman
Oxman’s work can be described in one word: revolutionary. The Israeli American professor founded the Mediated Matter group at MIT, where she focuses on “biologically inspired and engineered design.” Her work lies at the intersection between biology, computational design, and architecture. Some of her projects include a 3D silk dome built by thousands of live silkworms and the development of the first glass 3D printing technique.
Elizabeth Diller
Diller co-founded the renowned architecture firm Diller Scofidio + Renfro, behind some of the most talked-about projects in recent memory. From the High Line and the Shed in New York City to Los Angeles’ Broad Museum and the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Museum in Colorado, Diller’s work impacts the lives of millions of people. In 2018, she was the only architect—male or female—to be included in Time magazine’s annual list of the Most Influential People.
Annabelle Selldorf
German-born Selldorf founded her eponymous firm in New York City in 1988 and has since become “the art world’s go-to architect.” With institutional clients such as the Frick Collection, the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, and the Rubell Museum in Miami, as well as many big-name galleries (David Zwirner, Hauser & Wirth, and Gladstone Gallery), Selldorf has left a permanent mark not only on architecture but on art history, too. Earlier this year, her firm was awarded another major project: the renovation of London’s National Gallery.
Kazuyo Sejima
Pritzker Prize winner Kazuyo Sejima is one of Japan’s and the world’s most respected and influential architects. Her modernist work includes geometric references and sleek materials such as glass, marble, and metals. Sejima and her firm, the famous Tokyo-based SANAA architectural studio, have contributed to significant projects like the New Museum in New York City and the award-winning Grace Farms cultural complex in Connecticut.
Sheila Sri Prakash
As the first woman to open her practice in India in 1979, Prakash is an inspiration and a true pioneer of architecture. She has over 1,200 projects to her name, including the ongoing Shirdi Sai Baba Temple in Chennai—a futuristic-looking tree-like structure inspired by the ‘Gode’ Neem tree of Shirdi, incorporating the number 11, which holds significance in numerology.
Jeanne Gang
Chicago has no shortage of impressive buildings, but the residential Aqua Tower definitely stands out with its topography-inspired façade conceived by Jeanne Gang of Gang Studio. The architect is also behind the Windy City’s Nature Boardwalk at Lincoln Park Zoo, featuring a semi-open pavilion inspired by a tortoise shell.
Odile Decq
Architecture’s enfant terrible Odile Decq is known for her distinct style inspired by punk and goth, a result of her experiences in London during the early 1980s. Her non-traditional approach quickly established her as a prominent architect in France and across Europe, with notable projects including the Museum of Contemporary Art in Rome and the Phantom restaurant inside Paris’ Opera Garnier.
Amanda Levete
The RIBA Stirling Prize winner is no stranger to her futuristic buildings making headlines. The curvilinear Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology in Lisbon, also known as the MAAT, famously attracted 80,000 visitors on its first day alone. Levete is also known for developing the contemporary wing of London’s V&A’s Exhibition Road Quarter, where she incorporated 11,000 handmade porcelain tiles in the courtyard.
Gabrielle Bullock
As the second African American woman to graduate from the prestigious Rhode Island School of Design and the first African American woman to become managing director at her firm, Perkins and Will, Bullock has been a fierce advocate for diversity in architecture. A perfect example of her socially responsible approach is Destination Crenshaw, LA’s open-air museum, located along Crenshaw Boulevard. It features works from over a hundred Black artists and stands as the largest African American public art project in the U.S.