Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Gregory Dreicer

American historian From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Gregory Dreicer is an American curatorial strategist, historian, experience designer, exhibition developer, and museum manager. Dreicer's multidisciplinary projects, which engage audiences in discovering and exploring everyday environments, have led public discussion on issues including infrastructure, landscape, architecture, city planning, community identity, preservation, design, and sustainability. Dreicer's work is known for innovative strategies in project conception and design that create memorable experiences.[1]

Quick Facts Nationality, Occupation(s) ...
Remove ads

Public history and museums

Summarize
Perspective

Dreicer's projects, through a transdisciplinary focus on story, identity, and place, emphasize the indivisible nature of natural, designed, and social environments. Embedding inclusivity, questioning myths, and exploring multiple perspectives characterize pathbreaking projects aimed at engaging broad audiences. Dreicer has developed exhibitions and programs for organizations including the Vancouver Public Library, Museum of Vancouver, National Building Museum, Museum of the City of New York, and the Smithsonian Institution Museum on Main Street program.[2] Dreicer's projects have featured communities including Black Americans, Latinx, Indigenous peoples, and Jews. At the Museum of Vancouver, Dreicer developed an institutional vision based on social connection. At the Chicago Architecture Foundation, Dreicer developed the institutional thematic framework, was responsible for the creation of the master plan for a new facility, and developed a large-scale model of Chicago that made the CAF facility a destination.[3] His projects have focused on issues including fences and land use; water supply systems; lighting and city life; preservation; livable communities; energy efficiency; and skyscraper engineering and architecture.[citation needed]

Remove ads

Scholarship

Summarize
Perspective

Dreicer's scholarly research and publications investigate ongoing processes of change, rather than landscapes and buildings as static objects. His work, focused on the reinvention of construction, demonstrates the fundamental role of building in industrialization and nation-building. This transnational investigation of design in action demonstrates how evolutionism and nationalism, which have shaped common understandings of technology, are entwined in the process of invention itself. In articles such as "Nouvelles inventions: l’interchangeabilité et le génie national" in Culture Technique[4] and "Influence and Intercultural Exchange: the Case of Engineering Schools and Civil Engineering Works in the Nineteenth Century" in History and Technology,[5] Dreicer explores invention as a process of exchange among individuals while emphasizing the thinking behind the history of building, landscape, and architecture. In articles such as "Building Myths: The ‘Evolution’ from Wood to Iron in the Construction of Bridges and Nations" in Perspecta,[6] Dreicer explores the myths and metaphors that still form understandings of history and technology. In "Building Bridges and Boundaries: The Lattice and the Tube, 1820-1860" in Technology and Culture[7] he analyzes the relationship between the construction of engineering infrastructure and national identity.

Remove ads

Education and academic career

Dreicer completed a PhD in Science and Technology Studies at Cornell University and a Masters in Historic Preservation at the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. Dreicer's post-doctoral academic positions include a Senior Fellowship at the Smithsonian Institution's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation,[8] a Loeb Fellowship[9] at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, and a fellowship at the Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers[10] at the New York Public Library. Dreicer has taught at the Parsons School of Design and MIT School of Architecture and Planning. He previously worked in New York City as an architectural conservator specializing in the restoration and repair of high-rise building facades.[citation needed]

Selected projects

Summarize
Perspective

Dreicer has developed several institutional visitor plans and curated more than 25 humanities-based exhibition projects.

Museum of Vancouver

  • Unbelievable (2017)
  • Your Future Home: Creating the New Vancouver (2016)
  • makesmehappy (2016)

Chicago Architecture Foundation

  • Loop Value: The How Much Does It Cost? Shop (2012–13)
  • Chicago Model City (2009–10)[11]
  • Green With Desire: Can We Live Sustainably in Our Homes? (2008)
  • Do We Dare Squander Chicago’s Great Architectural Heritage? Preserving Chicago, Making History (2008)
  • Chicago: You Are Here (2007–2012)

Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service - Museum on Main Street (national travel)

  • Between Fences (2005–2012)[12]
  • Barn Again! (1997–2005)[13]

American Society of Civil Engineers

  • Me, Myself and Infrastructure (New York Historical Society, National Building Museum, One Market [San Francisco], Turtle Bay Exploration Park, 2002–2003, Chicago Architecture Foundation, 2007)[14]

Museum of the City of New York[15]

  • Transformed by Light: The New York Night (2005)
  • New York Comes Back: Mayor Ed Koch and the City (2005)
  • Trade (2004)
  • Perform (2004)

Afikim Foundation (national travel)

  • When Humanity Fails (2006)[16]

New York Public Library Science, Industry and Business Library

  • I on Infrastructure (2002)[17]

National Building Museum

  • Between Fences (1996)
  • Barn Again! (1994)
Remove ads

Selected publications

  • Me, Myself, and Infrastructure: Private Lives and Public Works in America (Washington, DC: ASCE, 2002) ISBN 0-7844-0611-1
  • "Standardization," "Maurice Koechlin," "Alfred Henry Neville," "Wilhelm Nordling," and "Ithiel Town." In Antoine Picon, ed., L’art de l’ingénieur: constructeur, entrepreneur, inventeur (Paris, France: Centre Georges Pompidou, 1997). ISBN 2-85850-911-5
  • "Wired! The Fence Industry and the Invention of Chain Link." In Gregory Dreicer, ed., Between Fences (Washington, D.C./New York: National Building Museum/Princeton Architectural Press, 1996). ISBN 1-56898-080-9
  • La Manufacture des Tabacs de Lyon: Historique, Analyse Architecturale, Reconversion. Report for Ministère de la Culture, Direction Régionale des Affaires Culturelles, Inventaire Général des Monuments et des Richesses Artistiques de la France, Région Rhone-Alpes, Lyon, France, August 1987.
  • "High-Rise Wall Construction 1880-1930." History of Tall Buildings (Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, Committee 29, Third International Conference on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, Chicago, Ill., January 1986), 119–199. ISBN 0-07-012532-5
Remove ads

Selected articles on Dreicer's work

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads