Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. Ada Louise Huxtable fue conocida por ser la crítica de arquitectura de The New York Times, ganadora del Pulitzer a la crítica y finalmente también colaboradora en The Wall Street Journal. Inteligente Defensora de la arquitectura habitable, murió este lunes a las 91 años. Además de su puesto en el New York Times, donde trabajó hasta 1982 ...

  2. 9 de jun. de 2013 · Ada Louise Huxtable, photographed in the 1960s by her husband, L. Garth Huxtable. Image via Hyperallergic. Written by Vanessa Quirk; Published on June 09, 2013; Share. Facebook. Twitter.

  3. Ada Louise Huxtable. Summer is the time when one sheds one's tensions with one's clothes, and the right kind of day is jeweled balm for the battered spirit. A few of those days and you can become drunk with the belief that all's right with the world. Ada Louise Huxtable. Washington is an endless series of mock palaces clearly built for clerks.

  4. Other articles where Ada Louise Huxtable is discussed: Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: Ada Louise Huxtable of The New York Times referred to its style as “born-dead, neo-penitentiary modern.” On the other hand, Benjamin Forgey of The Washington Post considered it “the biggest piece of abstract art in town.”

  5. By Ada Louise Huxtable. The one word to describe Washington's Hirshhorn Museum is formidable. It will be marble. It will be round. And it will be 231 feet in diameter or greater in size than a city block. lt will sit on a podium 300 feet wide and 400 feet long - two city blocks - enclosed by an 8-foot high wall.

  6. 18 de oct. de 2021 · xvii, 251 pages ; 18 cm Pulitzer Prize-winning and renowned architecture critic Ada Louise Huxtable's biography of America's greatest architect, Frank Lloyd Wright, looks at the architect and the man, from his tumultuous personal life to his long career as a master builder.

  7. 19 de mar. de 2021 · Ada Louise Huxtable (March 14, 1921 – January 7, 2013) loved architecture, New York and its neighborhoods, preservation, and the gifts to society that built environments shape. It is this love, and her incredible skill as a writer, that earned Huxtable her job at the New York Times as the first-ever architecture critic, her reputation,