All Review articles – Page 78
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Review
Adolf Loos seen through the keyhole
This comprehensive book celebrates the mesmerising work of Adolf Loos and documents the vicissitudes of his profoundly unhappy life.
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Review
Clip, Stamp, Fold:The Radical Architecture of Little Magazines, 196X-197X - until December 7
The AA celebrates the contribution of the glut of small, independent and often short-lived architectural publications that sprung up in the 60s and 70s in a new exhibition, Clip, Stamp, Fold
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Review
RCA talk series, sponsored by BD: Jonathan Glancey and Zaha Hadid - from November 2007
In the first of a series of talks and lectures at the Royal College of Art, Zaha Hadid, arguably one of the best-known architects on the planet, joins Jonathan Glancey, fresh from his weekly page in the Independent and subsequent pieces for The Guardian.
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Review
London’s Learning: -until January 5 2008
London’s Learning, sponsored by Allford Hall Monaghan Morris, BCSE and Open House is an exhibition being held at the Building Centre.
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Review
Shrinking Cities - until 26 January 2008
This new exhibition Shrinking Cities at Manchester's Cube explores the current trend in Europe of de-industrialisation, which causes the rapid shrinkage of once large cities such as Manchester and Liverpool despite the success of urban renewal.
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Review
Pavillon Seroussi: The architecture of collections - Friday November 16
A lecture by Hernan Diaz Alonso, George L. Legendre and Philippe Morel.
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Review
Peter Cook: Architecture is Enough - Wednesday November 14
As part of the open Seminar Series held at the AA, Cook will delve around the world of 20th and 21st century architecture, touching on architectural values, architectural gossip, the culture of the process of design, tricks of the trade, the relation between pedagogic architecture and cause-and-effect design and ...
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Review
Collaborators: UK Design for Performance 2003-7 - November 1 to November 18
The V&A's new exhibition focuses on collaborations involving 100 theatre designers in productions from the past four years.
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Review
Still voices, distant lives
How does a building speak to us of its past, asks Catherine Croft
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Review
Gillespie, Kidd & Coia show: Stars by any name
The magnificent Gillespie, Kidd & Coia exhibition at the Lighthouse gives Andy MacMillan and Isi Metzstein their rightful place in history
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Review
Thomas Schütte's Fourth Plinth sculpture unveiled
The latest sculpture for the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square, Model for a Hotel 2007 by German artist Thomas Schütte, was unveiled today. The glass sculpture is an architectural model of a twenty-one storey building, constructed in specially engineered red, yellow and blue glass and weighing over 8 tonnes. London ...
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Review
RMJM London Green Works exhibition: Design entries – until December 6
New London Architecture is hosting the Green Works exhibition, designed to promote the Mayor of Hackney Jules Pipe’s vision for a cleaner, greener and safer borough.
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Latest book releases
New titles out this month include Gavin Stamp on Britain's Lost Cities, Graham Bizley's collection of detail drawings and a new volume on Adolf Loos
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Review
Beyond BAWA. Modern Masterworks of Monsoon Asia by David Robson
A follow up to Thames & Hudson’s successful Bawa monograph
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Review
Excerpt from Gillespie Kidd & Coia: Architecture 1956-87
In his introduction to a new book on the work of Gillespie Kidd & Coia, Johnny Rodgers marks the arrival of Isi Metzstein and Andy MacMillan at the practice
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Review
Gillespie Kidd & Coia retrospective - images from the show
A selection of work by Gillespie Kidd and Coia on show at the Lighthouse, Glasgow
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Review
Win a copy of Gillespie Kidd & Coia: Architecture 1956-87
Win a copy of Gillespie Kidd & Coia, edited by Johnny Rodger, published to accompany the Lighthouse retrospective
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Review
Oscar Niemeyer :The Curves of Time By Oscar Niemeyer.
New in paperback to mark the occasion of his 100th birthday, the first English-language edition of Niemeyer’s memoirs
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Review
Peter Zumthor exhibition presents a reality check
The main lesson of this show is that with Zumthor, nothing matches the real thing, says Tim Wolfe-Murray
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Review
The Buildings of Elizabethan and Jacobean England by Maurice Howard.
Howard reveals that changes of style in architecture emerged from the practical needs of construction and the self-image of major patrons in the revolutionary century between Reformation and Civil War.