Elizabeth Diller was born in 1958 in Łódź, Poland, to Jewish parents. The family emigrated to the United States in 1960 when she was two years old.[4]
Diller earned her B.Arch in 1979 from the Cooper Union School of Architecture.[1] She met Ricardo Scofidio during her studies; he was her teacher then her tutor. After earning her degree and working as an assistant professor, they later married in the 1980s. Since the 2000s, she has become well-known for her work with conceptual architecture, museums and other cultural institutions.[4][5]
Awards and honors
Diller is considered among the most influential designers of cultural spaces[6] and in 1999 received the first MacArthur Foundation fellowship in architecture.[7] In 2002, Diller designed the Blur Building for the Swiss Expo with this money.[8]
In 2000 she was awarded the James Beard Award for Outstanding Restaurant Design.[9]
The studio that Diller co-founded was awarded WSJ. magazine's 2017 Architecture Innovator of the Year Award. It also received the Smithsonian Institution National Design Award.[10]
In 2018 she was named to the Time magazine most-influential list for the second time, and was the only architect on that list.[11][3]
In 2019, Diller became the winner of the Jane Drew Prize, and the eighth winner of the annual Women in Architecture award. She was also awarded the Second Royal Academy Architecture Prize.[12][13][14][15]
"Architecture Is a Technology That Has Not Yet Discovered Its Agency", by Elizabeth Diller and Anthony Vidler addresses the underlying reliance modern architects have on technology and the effects of this technology on architecture itself. In this work she explains the problems associated with technology and its use in architecture, yet also defines architecture as a certain type of technology that applies various systems in the world as a whole.[20]
"Elizabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio: 'The city is a public resource'" was written by London architect and designer Edwin Heathcote in May 2019. Heathcote interviewed Diller and Scofidio about some of their larger works, projects before they became known in the architectural sphere, and explains their experimental process when designing buildings-specifically in New York City and Manhattan.[21]
^Diller, Elizabeth; Vidler, Anthony (2013). "Architecture is a technology that has not yet discovered its agency". Log (28): 21–26. ISSN1547-4690. JSTOR43630864.