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Topic: Paul Goldberger


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In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  paul goldberger
Paul Goldberger is the Architecture Critic for The New Yorker, where since 1997 he has written the magazine’s celebrated “Sky Line” column.
Paul Goldberger has also written “The City Observed: New York,” “The Skyscraper,” “On the Rise: Architecture and Design in a Post-Modern Age,” “Above New York,” and “The World Trade Center Remembered.”
He is married to Susan Solomon, and they are the parents of three sons: Adam, a composer for film and television in Los Angeles; Ben, a journalist in Chicago, and Alex, an undergraduate at Yale.
www.paulgoldberger.com /bio.php   (354 words)

  
  VCU News
Paul Goldberger, Pulitzer Prize-winner and architecture critic for the New Yorker.
Pulitzer Prize-winner Paul Goldberger, architecture critic for The New Yorker, shared his architectural expertise with Virginia Commonwealth University students and faculty during the newly established Windmueller Arts Series.
Goldberger also visited a senior seminar interior design class in VCU’s Pollak building, where he entertained students’ questions and spoke about his career as an architecture critic.
www.vcu.edu /uns/news/vcuview/archives/2004/nov/goldberger.html   (301 words)

  
 Clark University - Public Affairs   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Goldberger contributes to Architectural Digest and frequently appears on film and television to discuss art, architecture and cities.
Goldberger was a member of the New York Times staff for over 25 years, and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1984 for his architecture criticism.
Goldberger received the Roger Starr Journalism Award from the Citizens Housing and Planning Council and the Award of Merit of the Lotos Club, presented to writers of distinction.
www.clarku.edu /offices/publicaffairs/press/2004/goldberger.shtml   (448 words)

  
 About Paul Goldberger Connecticut Humanities Day
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, author and lecturer Paul Goldberger is an internationally recognized expert in the fields of architecture, design, and urbanism.
Previously, Goldberger spent 25 years with the The New York Times, where he served as architecture critic, cultural news editor, and chief cultural correspondent.
Goldberger is the author of several books, including the recently published "The World Trade Center Remembered" and "Manhattan Unfurled." His earlier works include "The City Observed: New York: An Architectural Guide to Manhattan," "The Skyscraper" and "Above New York."
www.ctheritage.org /WC2004/AboutPaulGoldberger.htm   (224 words)

  
 Up from Zero : Politics, Architecture, and the Rebuilding of New York - PowerBookSearch!
Paul Goldberger tells the inside story of the quest to rebuild one of the most important symbolic sites in the world, the sixteen acres where the towers of the former World Trade Center stood.
Goldberger puts the full cast on stage, including those who were not well known.
Cooler heads, Goldberger documents, were able to rein in the impulsiveness on both sides and let the mourning play out while fostering public forums and a competition for a replacement structure.
www.powerbooksearch.com /booksearch1400060176.html   (3953 words)

  
 frontline: sacred ground: the limits of architecture | PBS
From Up from Zero: Politics, Architecture and the Rebuilding of New York by Paul Goldberger, copyright © 2004 by Paul Goldberger.
Paul Goldberger is the architecture critic for The New Yorker and the dean of Parsons School of Design.
He previously wrote for The New York Times for more than 25 years, and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for criticism in 1984.
www.pbs.org /wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/sacred/limits   (1865 words)

  
 Paul Goldberger bio   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Paul Goldberger, one of the nation’s most eminent writers in the field of architecture, design and urbanism, has been the architecture critic at The New Yorker magazine since July 1997.
Paul Goldberger was a student of the eminent architectural historian Vincent Scully at Yale University.
He has been awarded honorary doctoral degrees by Pratt Institute in New York, the Center for Creative Studies in Detroit, and the New York School of Interior Design for his work as a critic and cultural commentator on architecture and urban design.
provost.syr.edu /lectures/goldberger.asp   (552 words)

  
 LACMA Institute for Art & Cultures   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Paul Goldberger "fears that we have lost all interest in a viable background architecture.
However, if widespread passion for architecture is not seen as having at least a somewhat positive effect, is it true then that we may no longer believe in architecture as a public art?" Rybczynski & Goldberger, two noted observers of the architecture scene, will discuss competitions, trophy buildings, the "wow factor," and much more.
Paul Goldberger became the architecture critic of the New Yorker in 1997 and was previously architecture critic for the New York Times, where his work won a Pulitzer Prize.
www.lacmainstitute.org /events_03_3.html   (375 words)

  
 frontline: sacred ground: freedom tower: interview - paul goldberger | PBS
Paul Goldberger is the architecture critic for The New Yorker and the author of Up from Zero: Politics, Architecture, and the Rebuilding of New York.
We had what I think is actually an unsuccessful collaboration, because the end result is not as good as either of their buildings were when they had their own separate ideas and visions for them."
An excerpt from Up from Zero, in which Goldberger assesses how power, politics, money and emotion affected the rebuilding of Lower Manhattan.
www.pbs.org /wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/sacred/tower/goldberger.html   (4329 words)

  
 About The World Trade Center Remembered | Abbeville Press
Introducing this extraordinary collection of photographs, Paul Goldberger's text evokes the Towers and the city they came to symbolize.
Paul Goldberger is one of the nation's most respected architecture critics.
The winner of a Pulitzer Prize for his work at The New York Times, he has been the architectural critic at The New Yorker since 1997.
shopcdsbooks.com /Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=ABB&Product_Code=0789207648   (422 words)

  
 paul_goldberger   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Paul Goldberger (left), a Pulitzer-Prize winner and celebrated architecture critic for The New Yorker, gave a guest lecture titled, “Catastrophe and Salvation: The World Trade Center and the Future of New York” at CCSU on April 24.
In a lecture that was both plain spoken and eloquent and that ranged from the design and construction of the towers to their destruction on 9/11, Goldberger said that whatever replaces the World Trade towers should be designed to help “heal” the vacuum left on the New York skyline.
The new structure, he noted, should be “bold” and take in factors such as the subway infrastructure beneath the site and the increasing cultural diversity of the surrounding neighborhood.
www.ccsu.edu /Courier/2002/May/paul_goldberger.htm   (310 words)

  
 PAUL GOLDBERGER, “Tony Imperiale Stands for Law and Order”
In urban areas, local groups channeled their fears and frustrations into organizations aimed at protecting, they believed, their own neighborhoods and achievements-often "taking the law into their own hands.
" In 1968 Paul Goldberger profiled one such group, centered in Newark, New Jersey, and headed by Tony Imperiale.
But maybe when they see 500 of us with guns, maybe then they'll think twice about coming into our town....
www.niu.edu /~td0raf1/history261/nov1904.htm   (1900 words)

  
 Arts & Culture: The New Yorker
Paul Goldberger: Retro opulence on Central Park West.
Paul Goldberger: Steven Holl rethinks the museum-extension genre.
Paul Goldberger: A new home from old roads.
www.newyorker.com /arts   (395 words)

  
 Alumni News -:- New School University
Paul Goldberger, architecture critic at The New Yorker, will become the next dean of Parsons School of Design.
Paul will continue to write for The New Yorker as an architectural critic.
Paul is the author of several books, including The City Observer-New York: An Architectural Guide to Manhattan (1978), The Skyscraper (1981), On the Rise: Architecture and Design in a Post-Modern Age (1983), and coming out this fall, Up From Zero, Politics, Architecture, and Rebuilding of New York (September 2004).
www.newschool.edu /admin/alumninews/spring04/appointments.html   (454 words)

  
 Media Advisory
Richmond, Va. (Oct. 25, 2004) — Pulitzer Prize winner Paul Goldberger will be the inaugural speaker for the newly established Windmueller Arts Series at the Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts.
He will share his expertise in a presentation to students, faculty, and the Richmond community at 5:30 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 10, at the Grace Street Theater.
Paul Goldberger is the Architecture Critic for The New Yorker, where he writes the magazine’s celebrated “Sky Line” column.
www.vcu.edu /govrel/news/Advisories/2004/oct_nov_dec/102504.htm   (308 words)

  
 Salvage Artists: The Sky Line: The New Yorker
It was from a structural engineer named Paul Pedini, who said that he had seen a Single Speed project and liked it so much that he wanted to hire the firm for an unusual project.
He explained that he worked at a contracting company that had spent a decade on the Big Dig, the huge project to replace Boston’s elevated Central Artery with a tunnel, and that he had come up with the idea of using steel and concrete salvaged from the project to put up a building.
Hong and Park, who married in 2000, started off with the kind of work architects usually get at the beginning—loft renovations for friends, a beach house—but the year they opened their office, in 2001, a Cambridge developer asked them to design a three-unit condominium building on Valentine Street.
www.newyorker.com /arts/critics/skyline/2007/03/19/070319crsk_skyline_goldberger   (1392 words)

  
 Gothamist: Paul Goldberger's Up From Zero   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Paul Steely White, Executive Director of Transportation Alternatives
New Yorker architecture critic and Pulitzer Prize winner Paul Goldberger speaks tonight about his new book, Up from Zero: Politics, Architecture, and the Rebuilding of New York, about the reconstruction of lower Manhattan and the World Trade Center.
This lecture is part of the New York Historical Society's Distinguished Speakers Series, and takes place tonight, September 8 at 6:30 p.m.
www.gothamist.com /archives/2004/09/08/paul_goldbergers_up_from_zero.php   (298 words)

  
 Chiasmus in the New Yorker
In a "A Helluva Town," architecture critic Paul Goldberger reviewed Gotham: A History of New York to 1898, by historians Edwin G. Burrows and Mike Wallace.
Goldberger writes that NYC has thrived during the technological revolution, despite dire predictions that computers and the internet would make cities obsolete.
Times have changed, though, and Goldberger writes that "The new measure of success is size." He chiastically contrasts the past and the present: (p.
www.chiasmus.com /chiasmusinny.shtml   (1736 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Architects on Architects: Books: Susan Gray,Paul Goldberger   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Many of these influential experiences happened during the architects formative years as students or interns and the impact of how these influences changed the direction of a life are revealed for the first time in these later career recollections.
While Paul Rudolphs reputation suffered greatly during the Postmodern period, we see his lasting impact through his students who studied at Yale ranging from Norman Foster to current dean Robert A. Stern.
The foreword by Paul Goldberger is candid and refreshing.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/007137583X?v=glance   (1676 words)

  
 Architectural Record | Daily News | Critic Paul Goldberger to Become Dean of Parsons School of Design
Renowned architecture critic Paul Goldberger has announced he will become the dean of Parsons School of Design at New School University in New York City.
Goldberger was a longtime architecture critic for the New York Times, where he won a Pulitzer Prize for Architectural Criticism in 1984, and he joined the New Yorker as a staff writer in 1997.
Goldberger will begin his new duties on July 1.
www.architecturalrecord.com /news/daily/archives/040331goldberger.asp   (179 words)

  
 village voice > books > Art Spiegelman's In the Shadow of No Towers; Paul Goldberger's Up From Zero: Politics, ...
Of the many strands in Goldberger's account, time figures with special subtlety.
How a memorial got chosen, who would build the actual buildings, enmities and concessions, people at each other but trying: Goldberger tells it in chastening detail.
Yet it supports curiously more than it undermines his implicit theme that democracy, like architecture, may prove an open process of competing thoughts.
www.villagevoice.com /issues/0436/mcelroy.php   (578 words)

  
 About Mediterranean Color | Abbeville Press
If you choose to order this item now, your credit card will not be charged until the order ships.
His work--this book--has two missions: the documentation of a disappearing architectural culture and the creation of beautiful works of art."--Paul Goldberger, from the Foreword
He is also the author of Maya Color published by Abbeville Press.
shopcdsbooks.com /Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Product_Code=0896599256&Store_Code=ABB   (345 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Manhattan Unfurled: Books: Matteo Pericoli,Paul Goldberger   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
As critic Paul Goldberger writes in the accompanying booklet, "Pericoli has given us the Manhattan skyline in all its awesome chaos, but he has rendered it readable and manageable."
An introduction by distinguished New Yorker architecture critic Paul Goldberger, who first wrote bout Matteo’s project in The New Yorker’s “Talk of the Town,” will accompany the drawing in a separate pamphlet.
Also included in a quite nice heavy cardboard slipcase is an essay by Paul Goldberger (an architecture critic for The New Yorker) and a handy guide pointing out famous (and not so famous) landmarks for those who may not be intimately familiar with one of the world's great skylines.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0375504915?v=glance   (1422 words)

  
 Parsons - News, Paul Goldberger named Parsons Dean
Paul Goldberger, whose appointment will begin on July 1, 2004, has been the architecture critic for The New Yorker since 1997.
He is the author of several books, most recently his chronicle of the process of rebuilding Ground Zero, entitled UP FROM ZERO: Architecture, Politics and the Rebuilding of New York, to be published by Random House in the fall of 2004.
The Design Trust for Public Space, in cooperation with Parsons, presents an exhibition of innovative designs for the New York City taxi.
www.parsons.edu /news/detail.aspx?nID=56   (219 words)

  
 Workhouse Underground: Books
Through the brilliant photography of Richard Schulman and an insightful introduction by New Yorker critic Paul Goldberger, Portraits of the New Architecture celebrates the 50 architects who have reinvented architecture in the 20th and 21st centuries.
Paul Goldberger, a Pulitzer Prize-winning architecture critic, was recently named dean of the Parson’s School of Design.
He has worked for The New York Times and Architectural Digest, and is currently on staff at The New Yorker.
www.workhousepr.com /assouline/portraitsofthenewarchitecture   (632 words)

  
 Lenses on the Lawn: The Sky Line: The New Yorker
The Sky Line: Past Perfect by Paul Goldberger
The Sky Line: Towers of Babble by Paul Goldberger
Hendrik Hertzberg on a letter from the White House.
www.newyorker.com /arts/critics/skyline/2007/04/30/070430crsk_skyline_goldberger   (1287 words)

  
 The Comfort Zone - 20/10/01: Conflict
This week the Comfort Zone examines how people respond to conflict in their homeland.
Paul Goldberger, architectural journalist for the New Yorker magazine, reflects on how the events of September 11 have changed our view of the city forever.
In Bougainville, Marcelline Tunim tells her personal story of fleeing from village to village and reflects on the importance of planting gardens.
www.abc.net.au /rn/czone/stories/s394907.htm   (143 words)

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