Cedric Gibbons (born March 23, 1890, New York City, New York, U.S.—died July 26, 1960, Westwood, California) was an Irish American art director for the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) motion-picture studio; his name appears on nearly 1,500 films produced by that studio during the 32 years (1924–56) that he worked there. Credit is usually given to Gibbons for designing the Oscar statuette that is awarded to Academy Award winners.
While sources differ on the year and location of Gibbons’s birth, a number of documents indicate that he was born in New York City in 1890 and was of Irish descent; however, Dublin is sometimes listed as his birthplace, and other years, most notably 1893, are also given.
His earliest work was for the Thomas A. Edison and Goldwyn studios. While negotiating with MGM in 1924, he had a clause inserted in his contract that said his name would be listed as art director on every MGM film made in the United States, but, from 1925 on, almost all the studio’s productions were designed by a group of artists. Gibbons was nominated by the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences for 37 Academy Awards and won 11, but only one was for a film that he had designed alone—The Bridge of San Luis Rey (1929).
Gibbons was among the first to replace painted scenery with three-dimensional furnishings. His lighting innovations gave MGM films of the era a characteristic look, and his Art Deco sets for Our Dancing Daughters (1928) and other films set interior decorating trends across America.
Gibbons directed one film, Tarzan and His Mate (1934), highly praised for its visual qualities, and in 1950 the Academy gave him a special award for his “consistent excellence” in production design.