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Architecture critic Goldberger at Forum

SALISBURY — Architecture is the art that is around us and with us every day. We live in and with the built environment. It has the power to perplex, anger, enthrall, delight, even awe us; its effects set the tone of cities across the globe, the way their people live, and reflects what matters to them and their cultures.

On Dec. 11, The Salisbury Forum will present Paul Goldberger, the country’s most influential writer on architecture, explaining “Why Architecture Matters.” Goldberger was only 34 in 1984 when he won the annual Pulitzer Prize for Criticism. The award was created in 1970, and its first winner was another architecture critic, the great Ada Louise Huxtable of The New York Times. Huxtable, as Goldberger has pointed out, made architecture — good, bad, indifferent — “part of the public dialogue.”

Goldberger, a Yale graduate, began his career at The Times, following in Huxtable’s footprints. But he is a quite different writer, who recognizes that the quality of buildings and projects can be somewhere between good and bad. He renders his views in clear, poetic, often witty prose, trenchant rather than mordant. His opinions are founded on his near encyclopedic knowledge of facts and history.

After leaving The Times, he was the architecture critic of The New Yorker from 1997 to 2011. He served as dean of Parsons, The New School of Design, from 2004 to 2006, and continues to hold a chaired professorship at The New School. He is currently a contributing editor of Vanity Fair. 

Goldberger’s love of cities, particularly New York, is evident in his many books, which range from a consideration of the Hamptons in “Beyond the Dunes,” vertical buildings in “On the Rise” and the rebuilding of Ground Zero in “Up From Zero,” a bestseller in both hardcover and paperback. Among his many awards and prizes is the Medal of Honor from the New York Landmarks Preservation Foundation, which called his writing “the nation’s most balanced, penetrating and poetic analyses of architecture and design.”

Goldberger is also a believer in the power of great architects to make buildings that expand possibilities and allow us to see architecture in new ways. He is the author of the only authorized biography and critical study of Frank Gehry, the country’s most famous living architect. (One of his amazing titanium and glass buildings serves as Bard College’s performance hall in Annandale-on-Hudson.) The book, “Building Art: The Life and Work of Frank Gehry,” was published in late September in conjunction with a Gehry retrospective at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and received highly favorable reviews. 

Paul Goldberger will speak at The Hotchkiss School, Walker Auditorium, on Friday, Dec. 11, at 7:30 p.m. After his talk and a Q and A, he will sign copies of “Frank Gehry,” which Oblong Books will offer for sale, at a post-talk reception in the lobby. As with all Salisbury Forum events, the presentation is free and open to all.

Leon Graham is president of The Salisbury Forum.

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