Exhibition celebrates Iraqi architect behind Baghdad's iconic post-revolution buildings

Exhibition celebrates Iraqi architect behind Baghdad's iconic post-revolution buildings
Iraqi architect Rifat Chadirji, the man behind Baghdad's first high-rise building, is considered to be Iraq's most influential modernist architect.
2 min read
26 November, 2016
The 1955 Abboud building, designed by Chadirji, was Baghdad's very first high rise [twitter.com/IraqiPic]

An exhibition in Chicago is celebrating the work of the Iraqi architect who rebuilt Baghdad following Iraq's 1958 revolution.

After deposing its British mandated monarchy, post-colonial Iraq faced building a modern nation which stayed true to its national identity.

Rifat Chadirji became the pivotal cultural figure in consolidating Baghdad's postwar image from the 1950s through to the 1970s.

With nearly 100 buildings, Chadirji, now 90 and living in London, contributed to the design and construction of factories, colleges, communication structures and monopoly headquarters through his architectural office, Iraq Consult.

His iconic works include the 1955 Abboud Building, Baghdad's very first high-rise.

It comprised a white cylindrical tower punctuated by the Morse code of his dot-and dash-shaped windows, which sat on top of a rectangular base.

He also designed the Tobacco Building in 1965 and the 1966 Federation of Industries building.

By 1970 Chadirji had offices throughout the Middle East, one employing a young Zaha Hadid.

He was also an amateur photographer, with his archives providing a vivid comparison between the secular Iraqi street life of the 70s to the Saddam-era widespread demolition of buildings, of veiled women sorting through rubble, and new archways erected in celebration of the Ba'ath party.

Chadirji was born in Baghdad in 1926. He left to study architecture in London at the Hammersmith School of Arts and Crafts and returned to Iraq in 1952 to found Iraq Consult.

Chadirji's practice came to a halt in 1978 when he was jailed by Ahmed Hassan Al-Bakr. Two years later, he was released by Saddam Hussein to plan modifications to Baghdad for the Conference of Non-aligned Countries.

In 1983 Chadirji fled Baghdad for Harvard, where he remained through the 1980s.

Recently, Chadirji has received renewed attention as an important architect whose buildings have suffered damage from the war in Iraq. He now lives in London with his wife, Balkis Shararah.

Every Building in Baghdad: The Rifat Chadirji Archives at the Arab Image Foundation is open until December 31 at the Graham Foundation in Chicago.