"Architecture should speak of its time and place, but yearn for timelessness"
About this Quote
Gehry’s line reads like a truce between two warring clients: the city inspector of history and the museum curator of eternity. “Speak of its time and place” is a demand for honesty. Architecture, he implies, shouldn’t cosplay as some imagined golden age or paste faux-European charm onto a sunbaked Los Angeles block. It should carry the fingerprints of local materials, technologies, politics, and taste - even when those tastes are messy, commercial, or temporary.
Then comes the pivot: “but yearn for timelessness.” That verb matters. He doesn’t claim timelessness is achievable, only that it’s the ambition that keeps a building from collapsing into mere trend-chasing. “Yearn” reframes permanence as a desire, not a guarantee, which is unusually candid for a discipline obsessed with legacy. It’s also a subtle defense of his own practice: Gehry’s most famous works are unmistakably of the late 20th-century moment (digitally enabled curves, spectacle economics, the Bilbao effect), yet they reach for an enduring emotional charge - wonder, disorientation, delight.
The subtext is a rebuke to two lazy extremes. On one side, strict contextualism that can become timid mimicry. On the other, icon-chasing “starchitecture” that treats place as a backdrop. Gehry wants a building to be legible as a product of now, without being trapped by now’s expiration date. In an era when cities are branded like apps and neighborhoods get redesigned for Instagram, the quote argues for something harder: work that belongs, and still aspires beyond belonging.
Then comes the pivot: “but yearn for timelessness.” That verb matters. He doesn’t claim timelessness is achievable, only that it’s the ambition that keeps a building from collapsing into mere trend-chasing. “Yearn” reframes permanence as a desire, not a guarantee, which is unusually candid for a discipline obsessed with legacy. It’s also a subtle defense of his own practice: Gehry’s most famous works are unmistakably of the late 20th-century moment (digitally enabled curves, spectacle economics, the Bilbao effect), yet they reach for an enduring emotional charge - wonder, disorientation, delight.
The subtext is a rebuke to two lazy extremes. On one side, strict contextualism that can become timid mimicry. On the other, icon-chasing “starchitecture” that treats place as a backdrop. Gehry wants a building to be legible as a product of now, without being trapped by now’s expiration date. In an era when cities are branded like apps and neighborhoods get redesigned for Instagram, the quote argues for something harder: work that belongs, and still aspires beyond belonging.
Quote Details
| Topic | Art |
|---|---|
| Source | Quote attributed to Frank Gehry: "Architecture should speak of its time and place, but yearn for timelessness." (attributed; source: Wikiquote entry 'Frank Gehry') |
More Quotes by Frank
Add to List






