Stephen H. Kanner, FAIA
A Retrospective Exhibition
November 4, 2010 - January 18, 2011
This exhibition presents over fifty projects by Los Angeles architect Stephen Kanner, FAIA. Arranged in reverse chronology, the show focuses on the last ten years of his work, tracing a trajectory back to the architecture of his father Charles Kanner, FAIA, and his grandfather, I. Herman Kanner, AIA who founded Kanner Architects in 1946.
Stephen Kanner’s architectural works included over three hundred commercial, institutional and residential projects, most of which were in the Los Angeles area. He also designed homes in the Bay Area, Tennessee, New York, and Ghana, as well as 130 stores for PUMA in every major city in North America, Europe and Asia.
Having grown up in post-war Southern California consumer car culture as the son of visually-sophisticated parents (his mother Judith is a writer and designer), Kanner had an innate understanding of the way form, writ large, can affect mood and quality of life. Buildings, billboards, Disney’s Tomorrowland, the 1964 New York World’s Fair, Hollywood and its movies—all this—filtered through his grandfather’s legacy and his father’s daily work, helped develop Kanner’s sensitive eye for design, form, spectacle and structure.
Over the course of his twenty-five year practice Stephen Kanner explored various modes of architecture-as-visual-pleasure. Chuck Kanner was a second-generation modernist whose work adhered to the principle of “form follows function.” When Stephen became a partner at Kanner Architects in 1983, he introduced the exuberant building designs that became known as Pop Architecture, i.e. building-as-sign. The best example of this is In-N-Out Burger in Westwood, an interpretation of their red and yellow logo. Over time Kanner’s work moved away from image-based architecture towards making buildings that stressed materiality, visual rhythm, and color, but still had the humor and playfulness of his earlier work. This evolution can be clearly seen in the progression from his own 511 House to the Ross Snyder Recreation Center, 26th Street Affordable Housing, and the United Oil Gasoline Station which was completed in 2009.
Exhibition Design: Lincoln Tobier, Reuben Herzl and Danielle Cornwell




