Alert icon
We're changing our privacy policy. This stuff matters.  Learn more  Dismiss

Paul Goldberger Booktalk at The Skyscraper Museum 11.23.09

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
241 views
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Dec 2, 2009

SEE THE FULL VIDEO OF THIS BOOKTALK AND DOWNLOAD OUR PODCAST AT WWW.SKYSCRAPER.ORG

http://skyscraper.org/PROGRAMS/LECTURES/GOLDBERGER/lec_goldberger.php

The prolific architectural critic and journalist Paul Goldberger will discuss highlights from two collections of his essays released this fall by Monacelli and Yale University Press. Building Up and Tearing Down brings together more than fifty essays, from Goldberger's writings for the New Yorker, Metropolis, The New York Times, and other publications that range across architectural and urban issues from Havana to Beijing to Bilbao, Chicago to Las Vegas, and beyond. Dissecting projects from skyscrapers by Norman Foster and museums by Tadao Ando to airports, monuments, suburban shopping malls, and white-brick apartment houses, these essays cover a comprehensive account of the best —and the worst— of the age of architecture.

In Why Architecture Matters, Paul Goldberger examines "how things feel to us when we stand before them, with how architecture affects us emotionally as well as intellectually. In examples ranging from a small Cape Cod cottage, the Prairie houses of Frank Lloyd Wright, and the Lincoln Memorial, to Borromini's Church of SantIvo in Rome, Goldberger raises the awareness of fundamentalsproportion, scale, space, texture, materials, shapes, light, and memory engaging the reader to learn a new way of seeing and experiencing the built world.

Paul Goldberger is the architecture critic for The New Yorker, where since 1997 he has written the magazines celebrated Sky Line column. He holds the Joseph Urban Chair in Design and Architecture at The New School in Manhattan. He began his career at The New York Times, where in 1984, he received the Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Criticism.

  • likes, 0 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:
see all

All Comments (1)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • See the video, "tallest organic skyscraper".

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more