Gail Peter Borden - Matter as the Substance of Everything that Exists

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As an artist, theoretician and practitioner, Professor Borden's research and practice focuses on the role of materiality and architecture in contemporary culture. He is an assistant professor at the USC School of Architecture and a principal in the award winning architecture firm Borden Partnership. Gail Peter Borden attended Rice University for his undergraduate education simultaneously receiving three BA degrees cum laude in Fine Arts, Art History and Architecture, winning upon graduation the prestigious William Ward Watkins Traveling Fellowship, the AIA Certificate for Excellence, the Chillman Prize, elected to the Tau Sigma Delta Architecture Honor Society, and the John Swift Medal in Fine Arts. Receiving a Texas Architectural Foundation Academic Scholarship, Professor Borden returned to Rice University to receive his professional BARCH, also cum laude. Borden completed his M.Arch, with distinction, from the Harvard Graduate School of Design.. Prior to joining the USC School of Architecture faculty, Professor Borden taught at North Carolina State University, Catholic University, The Boston Architectural Center and Harvard University and worked in a host of firms including Gensler and Associates, Frank Harmon Architect, and The Renzo Piano Building Workshop in Paris where he was a designer on the Potzdamerplatz Project and the renovation of the Centre Georges Pompidou. Founded in 1998, Borden Partnership has won recognition in multiple national and international competitions including being a finalist in the 99K House competition, being and alternate for construction in at the Philbrook Museum of Art for his LANDed Blur and receiving a high commendation in the 100% Rubber Competition for his Rubber-Banded House. In May of 2004, Borden was awarded the Architecture League of New York's Young Architect's prize, which was accompanied by an exhibition, lecture, grant and publication entitled "if....then" accompanied by the book, Young Architects 6 (Princeton Architectural Press). In 2007-2008 his work was included in the 21st Century House [Jonathan Bell], The Things They've Done [William Cannady], and Expanding Architecture [Bryan Bell]. In Fall of 2008 he co-chaired the ACSA Fall Conference entitled: Material Matters. His first book Material Precedent: The Typology of Modern Tectonics will arrive in Spring of 2010 from Wiley Press. Borden's work has been included in international exhibitions including: the Architekturforum Oberosterreich in Linz, Austria; the NCSU College of Design Gallery, Raleigh, NC; Duke University Museum of Art, Durham, NC; the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art, Winston-Salem, NC; and numerous exhibits at LUMP Gallery, Raleigh, NC and Galleri Urbane, Marfa, Texas, among others. In winter 2003 he participated in the 37th annual Works on Paper exhibition at the Weatherspoon Art Museum at the University of North Carolina. In 2004 Borden received a prestigious artist-in-residence from The Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas culminating in an exhibition entitled "spaceframes". In 2008 his Chengdu Project was included in the Hong Kong Shenzhen Biennale, he was selected for an Associate Artist-in-Residence at the Atlantic Center for the Arts and recieved the 2009-2010 Borchard Fellowship. Professor Borden has received numerous awards and recognitions for design work, paintings, exhibitions, writings, and teaching including two ACSA Faculty Design and Research Awards in 2008, a 2005 ACSA New Faculty Teaching Award as one of the top emerging architecture faculty, a 2005 ACSA Faculty Design and Research Award, a 2004 Triangle AIA honorable mention, as well as the 2003 College of Design Outstanding Undergraduate Teaching Award, election to the NCSU College of Teaching Fellows, and the 2003 NCSU Alumni University Teaching Award. Borden has published many papers and projects dealing with contemporary architecture and culture in the suburban landscape, materials, and digital media in the design process. He received a prestigious Graham Foundation Grant in 2001 to support the development of his research text suburban®: the potentials for the celebration of inevitabilities. His work has been published in multiple radio interviews on WUNC 91.5 and articles in numerous international publications including: The Independent, Architecture Record, Wallpaper*, and Architecture. Lectures are free and open to the public. They are located in the Gin D. Wong, FAIA Conference Center, Harris Hall, on the University Park campus. No reservations are required. Parking is available on campus at Gate 1 off Exposition Blvd. http://www.bordenpartnership.com/

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