Melvin Edwards, Sam Gilliam and William T. Williams: Abstract Artists and Old Friends

The trio first had their work exhibited together at the Studio Museum in Harlem in 1969. Now, Pace Gallery is showing some of the pieces they’ve made since.

Postcard from Carmel

Thinking About Scale Our family’s best times were in Carmel. We put aside our troubles when we went there. When I was in junior high school, my pal Cherie came

A Remarkably Comprehensive New Guide to the Architecture of Sub-Saharan Africa

Compared to that of the West and East, awareness and knowledge of the architecture of sub-Saharan Africa—Africa south of the Sahara Desert—is scant.

Breaking the Mold

We trace the story of Ray and Charles Eames’s partnership and problem-solving back to an almost magical handmade plywood-molding device called “Kazam!”

In Poland, Shigeru Ban Deploys Paper Partitions to Help Ukrainian Refugees

Ban’s modular system was used extensively following Japan’s 2011 earthquake.

Accelerated and Decelerated Landscapes

On the techniques, knowledges, and ethics of bending time.

How a Lifestyle Magazine Became a Form of Everyday Resistance in Post-Stalinist Poland

In 1960s Poland, Ty i Ja offered readers a sense of aspiration previously unimaginable in a country impacted by years of Stalinist scarcity

The Berkeley Art Museum, a Modernist Landmark, is Reengineered and Redesigned

First article for Metropolis!

What’s the Point of Architecture Criticism?

The word “criticism” is derived from the Greek term krinein, meaning to separate, to sift, to make distinctions, to discern, to examine, or to judge.

9 Cities with Medieval Plans Seen from Above

In his book Breve Historia del Urbanismo (Brief History of Urbanism), Fernando Chueca Goitia states that the medieval city appeared at the beginning of the 11th century and flourished only

How Air Pollution Across America Reflects Racist Policy From the 1930s

A new study shows how redlining, a Depression-era housing policy, contributed to inequalities that persist decades later in U.S. cities.

Architectural Responses to Humanitarian Crises Beyond Designing Buildings

Following decades of ongoing socio-cultural and economic crises across the globe, the design community has realized that it is time to “design like they give a damn”.

Ed Fella’s Flyers Blur the Lines Between Design and Art

The designer’s typographic experiments have been praised by designers for thirty years. But they still deserve a bigger audience.

Ten buildings that showcase the beauty of London’s council housing

Jack Young’s book The Council House aims to capture the beauty of London’s council estates, which he photographed to “look like they could be perched on an Italian hillside”.

On Stories: Architecture and Identity

Thanks to my pal Rocky Hanish for finding this article.

Peace, Love, & Protests: The Creative Community Responds to the Ukraine Invasion

Seven illustrators capture the mood following Putin’s attack on Ukraine.

Photographic Neuroses: Alec Soth’s A Pound of Pictures

On his travels across the United States, the photographer Alec Soth likes to visit Buddhist temples, and he sometimes asks the monks if photography, with its “desire to stop and

‘A brutalist hanging gardens of Babylon’ – the maddening, miraculous Barbican hits 40

Conceived as a utopian city within a city, the labyrinthine London landmark had a troubled path on its way to being hailed as an architectural icon.