Michael Graves — American Architect born on July 09, 1934,

Michael Graves was an American architect. Identified as one of The New York Five, as well as Memphis Group, Graves was known first for his contemporary building designs and some prominent public commissions that became iconic examples of Postmodern architecture, such as the Portland Building and the Denver Public Library. His recognition grew through designing domestic products sold by premium Italian housewares maker Alessi, and later low-cost new designs at stores such as Target and J. C. Penney in the United States. He was a representative of New Urbanism and New Classical Architecture and formerly designed postmodern buildings, and was recognized as a major influence in all three movements... (wikipedia)

I have no requirements for a style of architecture.
I don't care what people call me, labels have the negative value of making smaller boundaries for people.
If I have a style, I am not aware of it.
In designing hardware to be used every day, it was important to keep both the human aspects and the machine in mind. What looks good also often feels good.
In any architecture, there is an equity between the pragmatic function and the symbolic function.