The news report
arrived suddenly on the evening news of 28 March 2014: Robin Gibson had died.
Such news always comes unannounced; such is life. Memories welled up: Gibbo
gone. He was known as ‘Gibbo’ colloquially, never to his face. He called me
‘Spen’ - always wrong, but one could never correct Rob. One addressed him as
‘Rob;’ more formally and less frequently as ‘Robin.’
His early work
was astonishing. While John Dalton was making his name in housing, Robin Gibson
worked in parallel, close to and with his benefactors, his work growing both in
stature, confidence and scale. His commercial work transformed Brisbane's Queen
Street, now the mall, with beautifully designed commercial premises: Mathers
shoe shop; Milano coffee shop/restrauant. I had my first cappuccino there. The
work extended into other memorable commercial projects. (see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Gibson)
For years they were icons of their time. His own home too was remarkable but
less ‘sharp’ than Dalton’s slick designs; yet still impressive.
Robin Gibson (right) with Sir David Muir at the Lyric Theatre construction site 1983
In Brisbane, Rob
spent some time as a student working for Hayes and Scott. He developed a
practice in Brisbane with a dedicated staff after returning from England where
he worked with James Cubitt; Sir Hugh Casson; and Neville Conder. His staff
would work for the master whenever he asked, day, night, weekends. Equally he
was there in anytime of need for all of his staff. Each Friday afternoon had
the staff collection for beer. The cartons were matched by Gibson’s pizzas. In
the office one could observe closely how the myth made magic. It was laborious,
trying at times. Striding through the office, the familiar authoritative,
inquisitorial voice would ask: “What are you doing?” The response on one
occasion was heard to be: “I'm looking for a grid.” Such was the rigour of
Gibbo’s design work. Loved and hated, he came through with quality outcomes.
His work grew in
stature. The Gibson scheme was the chosen design for the new Queensland Art
Gallery, a project that grew into the Queensland Museum, the Performing Arts
Centre and the State Library complex on the south bank of the Brisbane River,
sadly to be renovated and extended by others. His love was architecture. One
can recall the beginnings of this grand inner-city development. The queen was
coming to Brisbane. Something had to be done to allow her to open the gallery
before it had started: some scheme, anything. The riverfront was chosen: a
fountain was needed. She could switch it on with all her regal drama. So the sketches started. Ideas were developed. Rob
carefully observed and guided until he demanded: then it was done - a beautiful
fountain like that in the lake at Canberrra. But this was tidal water. Sadly
the years have seen it and its pump house gone; the ramp and pontoon modified.
The landscape remains, more mature but with fewer paths.
The stories
could go on and on. Gibbo always knew someone. He had a unique self-confidence
that allowed him to survive every challenge with humour. We will miss him: that
open face; the sparkling eyes; the chirpy voice: “How are you Spen?” - his
confident, clever retorts to testing questions. His runs were clearly on the
wall, the walls that he had built. His later works and reworkings seemed to try
just too hard. They lacked the spirit of the inspired beginnings. Mathers
concrete and glass and the pre-cast precision of his high-rise structures on
the corners of George and Queen Streets would make any architect proud if built
today.
‘Rob’ to his
face; ‘Gibbo’ to his back - one might have been critical, but this man made
some of Brisbane’s most enduring and significant architecture. Just the other
day when wandering through the Art Gallery precincts and perusing the design,
one could review details. It was indeed well considered: six risers to the
metre; precise, square concrete joints arrayed to suit diagrams and patterns;
quality concrete formed with the required precision; the use of water to mark old
street alignments and unite interiors and exteriors. It was an impressive display, made more evident to the
appreciative eye only after enduring years of effort in the profession and
knowing how hard it is to achieve outcomes like this. While some might remain
critical of the building and his later works, the status of the profession in
this state, its state, is such that men like Robin Gibson will be greatly
missed. He fought for quality and for his visions: his reshaping of Brisbane
set the example for civic possibilities in what was then a modest country town.
Robin Gibson was one of the few architects who could hold the respect of his profession, his clients and the public.
His story of
Brisbane, his home, was always impressive. It included the boyhood image of the
polar bear licking the ice cream in bright, flickering neon that he held in his
vision for South Brisbane, along with the distant hills of Mount Coot-tha. This bear
became the iconic inspiration for his bridge link over Melbourne Street with its
puffy ice-cream top. Like it or loathe it, it held to its ideal and achieved
an outcome. Such was Gibbo’s stamina. It will be missed. His energy was an
anchor for quality outcomes and spirited critiques. Architecture needs both. He
generated both.
I can recall
driving to a project meeting with Rob one morning many years ago. The canons of
the 1812 Overture were blazing away on the car radio: the boom, boom,
boom, boom of the finale. Rob said, “That's Benjamin Britten.” One was always
reluctant, but I had to correct him. “No, that's Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture.”
There was silence. Gibbo was never wrong. The music stopped. The crisp BBC voice
announced after the completion: “That was Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture
played by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by . . . Gibbo’s voice interrupted without any hesitation: “There. I told you it was British.” One can only admire the
certainty; the quick mind; the skill; the cheek; the indefatigable spirit that
changed Brisbane. Lest we forget.
15 May 1930 - 28 March 2014
NEWS
Eminent architect Robin Gibson, designer of
the Queensland Cultural Centre, has died
DOT
WHITTINGTON
THE
COURIER-MAIL
MARCH 29,
2014
Source: News
Limited
THE architect who broke new ground and turned Brisbane
into a world-class city when he came up with the concept for a cultural precinct,
has died aged 84.
Hailed as one of the most significant contributors to
architectural excellence in Queensland in recent history, Robin Gibson was the
mastermind behind converting Queen St into a pedestrian mall as well as
creation of the Queensland Cultural Centre.
He first had to convince government of the value of a Queensland
cultural precinct before designing buildings that were different to, and yet
complementary of, each other.
“Robin won a competition to design the new Queensland art gallery
in 1971. It took another three years for him to convince the government to do
the whole project,” director of the Queensland Cultural Centre Trust and
architect Russell Kerrison, a close associate of Mr Gibson, said.
“At the time, there was no theatre in Brisbane, no opera facility,
the state library was inadequate and there was a separate project for a new
museum on the drawing board.
“Robin recognised this as an opportunity to combine all those
facilities in one location and persuaded the government that an integrated
cultural centre would be better than individual institutions dotted around
town.”
Mr Kerrison said there was no similar combination of integrated
cultural facilities anywhere else in the world at the time and possibly since.
“The Lincoln Centre in New York is wonderful but it is only
performing arts, whereas Brisbane has the performing arts complex plus a
science and natural history museum, a library and a fine art gallery all in the
one place,” Mr Kerrison said.
“Robin was one of the few architects who stood above the crowd and
fought for what he believed in. The job was also to persuade the authorities to
do things out of the ordinary and Robin could do that.”
Mr Gibson graduated from the University of Queensland in 1954 and
moved to London, where he worked with a number of leading architectural firms
for three years before returning to Brisbane to establish his own architectural
practice.
While he worked on a number of projects that changed the face of
Brisbane, including Wintergarden, Anzac Square, St Stephen’s Cathedral
restoration and extension, Brisbane Arcade and various university buildings,
the Queensland Cultural Centre was his crowning achievement.
“It was very innovative for its time as no other combination of
cultural facilities had been designed and built in such an integrated manner,”
Mr Kerrison said.
“Most architects would consider designing the state art gallery or
an opera house or a science museum as a great achievement, but Robin did them
all.
“Each of them is a complex building design and he got across the
lot.”
His philosophy was that a good building respected its users and
accommodated the needs of those outside its walls.
Robin Gibson won the Sir Zelman Cowen Award for public buildings
in 1982 for the Queensland art gallery design, the same year he was named
Queenslander of the Year.
He was awarded the Order of Australia in 1983 and the Advance
Australia Award in 1988.
Funeral arrangements are yet to be announced.
see also : http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-03-31/robin-gibson-brisbane-queensland-architect-designed-qpac-dies/5352028
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