Globalization: Perspectives: Road Stories, panel discussion with Sunil Bald, Audrey Matlock, Joel Sa
Friday, May 8, 20093:29 AMEDT
| New York, NY
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Even in today’s constrained economic climate, many New York City architects are continuing to work internationally—including a number of small and mid-sized firms. Projects underway represent varied modes of practices and relationships, including partnerships with foreign firms or developers, or linking with an international firm. A diverse group of architects building across the globe will explore, through their work, contemporary questions about the ethics, form, and meaning of designing abroad. This program is the third of three evenings the League will present to consider the intersection of contemporary architectural practice and globalization.
Sunil Bald is a partner of Studio SUMO, a Long Island City based practice Bald co-founded with Yolande Daniels. SUMO’s projects range in scale, from small installations to large institutional buildings, and site, with projects in New York and as far a field as Japan. Bald currently teaches at Yale and is an adjunct professor at Josai University in Japan.
Audrey Matlock is principal of Audrey Matlock Architect, a firm organized as a studio. Founded in 1993, the firm’s recent and current work includes building, landscape, and interior design, including projects in Trinidad and Kazakhstan.
Joel Sanders is principal of Joel Sanders, Architect, an office with work ranging from residential and commercial interiors to housing and public parks. Current work includes a number of projects in Korea. Sanders is an Associate Professor of Architecture at Yale University.
Calvin Tsao co-founded Tsao & McKown Architects in 1985. His body of work spans a broad range of scales and typologies from domestic, civic, and commercial architecture to product, furniture, and exhibition design. Tsao is currently president of The Architectural League of New York and has taught at Harvard and Parsons The New School of Design. Current and past work includes projects in China, Singapore, Germany, Japan, and Malaysia.
Sarah Williams Goldhagen, a historian and theorist of modern architecture, is architecture critic for The New Republic. She was a professor at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design. Her articles have also appeared in The New York Times, The American Prospect, and Art In America, and she has contributed scholarly essays to many publications. Goldhagen is a co-founder and co-editor of a new scholarly journal, Positions: On Modern Architecture and Urbanism/ Histories and Theories.
Tickets are required for admission to League programs. Tickets are free for League members; $10 for non-members. Members may reserve a ticket by e-mailing: [email protected]. Member tickets will be held at the check-in desk; unclaimed tickets will be released fifteen minutes after the start of the program. Non-members may purchase tickets online at www.archleague.org > lectures > globalization, beginning Thursday, April 30 until six hours before the program start. Purchased tickets are available for pick-up at the check-in desk and are non-refundable. For more information on our ticketing policy, go to www.archleague.org > information; for general information, email [email protected] or call 212.753.1722 x13. AIA and New York State continuing education credits are available. The Urban Center, 457 Madison Avenue
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