Bustler's editor picks for architecture & design events: New York City, March 20-27
By Bustler Editors|
Monday, Mar 20, 2017
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As always, New York City is abuzz with creative folks expanding the possibilities of how architectural design and practice can be reinterpreted, bringing attention to what in the urban environment is constantly overlooked. Planning for another week in the Big Apple? Bustler has compiled a snappy list of architecture and art events around town that are worth checking out.
Check back regularly at the start of the week to stay up to date. Have a look at the Bustler team's latest recommendations for NYC events.
“Mega” Architecture: An Evening with Moshe Safdie | March 22, recommended by Alexander Walter
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum is hosting a special event with iconic architect and the industry's finest mustache, Moshe Safdie. The great master will reflect on the four design principles guiding his work, the evolution of architecture in the era of globalization, as well as matters of "megascale" and "megastructure" among other topics.
RELATED EVENT “Mega” Architecture: An Evening with Moshe Safdie
Building the Outer Boroughs: Architecture and Urbanism Beyond Manhattan | March 23, recommended by Justine Testado
This day-long symposium will focus on the architectural and urban development outside of Manhattan — the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island. Discussions and presentations will analyze each borough's building types, styles, and urban patterns, and their roles in shaping NYC's identity.
RELATED EVENT Building the Outer Boroughs: Architecture and Urbanism Beyond Manhattan
Self-Interned, 1942: Noguchi in Poston War Relocation Center | Open now until January 7, 2018, recommended by Justine Testado
In light of the 75th anniversary of Executive Order 9066 this past February, The Noguchi Museum is currently exhibiting archival documents and some two dozen works that chronicle the period before, during, and after Isamu Noguchi's voluntary self-internment in Poston, 1942. Open until next January, the exhibition explores the artist's mindset and evolution of his work during that time. It could be worth visiting, considering its timely historical topics.
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Find more events in New York City here.
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