• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join
Tagged: the met

Paul Rudolph's first major American exhibition comes to the Met this fall

By Josh Niland|

Wednesday, Aug 28, 2024

Temple Street Parking Garage, New Haven, Connecticut (1962). Photograph by Ezra Stoller. Photograph: © Ezra Stoller/Esto, Yossi Milo Gallery

The first major American exhibition dedicated to late modernist pioneer Paul Rudolph is coming to New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art this fall. Organized by curator Abraham Thomas in collaboration with the Library of Congress’s Rudolph Archive, the show will trace the architect’s development through 80 artifacts beginning with his first experimental houses in Florida and continuing through to his Lower Manhattan Expressway and other unbuilt megastructures and utopian visions. 

Paul Rudolph (American, 1918-1997) Architectural model for the proposed Sino Tower (unbuilt), Hong Kong (1989). Balsa wood and plastic 48 x 34 1/4 x 25 in. (131.7 x 63.2 cm) Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. Photograph by Eileen Travell

What will be the Met’s first major exhibition of modern architecture in nearly fifty years will show how Rudolph responded to the prevailing social and economic currents of his time. Many of his other New York area projects are included, along with examples of his legendary drawing practice and a question into the divisiveness of the Brutalist style he pursued steadfastly (and to his detriment) in the 1960s and 70s. 

Paul Rudolph (American, 1918-1997) Perspective section drawing of the Art and Architecture Building, Yale University, New Haven (1958). Pen and ink, graphite, and plastic film with halftone pattern, on illustration board 36 7/8 x 53 5/8 x 2 in. (93.6 x 136.2 x 5.1 cm) School of Architecture, Yale University, Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library

"The refusal to be categorized makes Rudolph a challenging architect to summarize, but this same quality also makes him a fascinating topic for research, driving new audiences to discover, or rediscover, his work every day," Thomas said in a preview. "Rudolph’s intricate, visionary drawings and dramatic completed buildings represent a singular voice within the crowded, variable terrain of architectural late modernism — one that will continue to prove both spellbinding and confounding for many years to come."

The dates for Materialized Space: The Architecture of Paul Rudolph are September 30, 2024, to March 16, 2025. 

RELATED EVENT Materialized Space: The Architecture of Paul Rudolph

Related

paul rudolph ● metropolitan museum of art ● exhibition ● the met ● event ● brutalism ● new york city ● usa
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Paul Rudolph's first major American exhibition comes to the Met this fall

Tadao Ando-designed tribute to Karl Lagerfeld opens in style at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

High fashion meets high church in The Met's “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination”

The Met celebrates “Manus x Machina”, another blockbuster exhibition

WOHA's The Met Building in Bangkok Wins RIBA Lubetkin Prize 2011

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Next page » Loading

Paul Rudolph's first major American exhibition comes to the Met this fall

By Josh Niland|

Wednesday, Aug 28, 2024

Share

Temple Street Parking Garage, New Haven, Connecticut (1962). Photograph by Ezra Stoller. Photograph: © Ezra Stoller/Esto, Yossi Milo Gallery

Related

paul rudolph ● metropolitan museum of art ● exhibition ● the met ● event ● brutalism ● new york city ● usa
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The first major American exhibition dedicated to late modernist pioneer Paul Rudolph is coming to New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art this fall. Organized by curator Abraham Thomas in collaboration with the Library of Congress’s Rudolph Archive, the show will trace the architect’s development through 80 artifacts beginning with his first experimental houses in Florida and continuing through to his Lower Manhattan Expressway and other unbuilt megastructures and utopian visions. 

Paul Rudolph (American, 1918-1997) Architectural model for the proposed Sino Tower (unbuilt), Hong Kong (1989). Balsa wood and plastic 48 x 34 1/4 x 25 in. (131.7 x 63.2 cm) Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. Photograph by Eileen Travell

What will be the Met’s first major exhibition of modern architecture in nearly fifty years will show how Rudolph responded to the prevailing social and economic currents of his time. Many of his other New York area projects are included, along with examples of his legendary drawing practice and a question into the divisiveness of the Brutalist style he pursued steadfastly (and to his detriment) in the 1960s and 70s. 

Paul Rudolph (American, 1918-1997) Perspective section drawing of the Art and Architecture Building, Yale University, New Haven (1958). Pen and ink, graphite, and plastic film with halftone pattern, on illustration board 36 7/8 x 53 5/8 x 2 in. (93.6 x 136.2 x 5.1 cm) School of Architecture, Yale University, Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library

"The refusal to be categorized makes Rudolph a challenging architect to summarize, but this same quality also makes him a fascinating topic for research, driving new audiences to discover, or rediscover, his work every day," Thomas said in a preview. "Rudolph’s intricate, visionary drawings and dramatic completed buildings represent a singular voice within the crowded, variable terrain of architectural late modernism — one that will continue to prove both spellbinding and confounding for many years to come."

The dates for Materialized Space: The Architecture of Paul Rudolph are September 30, 2024, to March 16, 2025. 

RELATED EVENT Materialized Space: The Architecture of Paul Rudolph

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Architectural/Structural Drafter

New Beginnings Engineering

Architectural/Structural Drafter

Irvine, CA, US

Architectural Designer Level 2

Arthur Chabon Architect

Architectural Designer Level 2

New York, NY, US

Architect / Project Architect - Remote (U.S. Based)

Joseph David Associates

Architect / Project Architect - Remote (U.S. Based)

Project Manager/Designer

BOTO Design Architects

Project Manager/Designer

Santa Monica, CA, US

Junior/Intermediate Architect

Archimaera Architecture

Junior/Intermediate Architect

New York, NY, US

Assistant Professor Architecture

California State Polytechnic University, Pomona

Assistant Professor Architecture

Pomona, CA, US

Architectural Designer II

Studio AR&D Architects

Architectural Designer II

Los Angeles, CA, US

Designer (Level 3)

KPMB

Designer (Level 3)

Cambridge, MA, US

Project Manager

Payette

Project Manager

Boston, MA, US

Junior Architect in nyc

Lara Apelian Studio

Junior Architect in nyc

New York, NY, US

Next page » Loading