All Review articles – Page 88
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Review
The Mapping Project – Until September 8
The result of four years' work by Leeds Civic Architect John Thorp will be displayed for the first time at a new exhibition. The show will raise questions about how Leeds was and is planned and designed.
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Review
10% off books about Zaha Hadid
As a major exhibition of Zaha Hadid opens at the Design Museum, the RIBA Bookshop picks the best books about her work
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Review
Andy Goldsworthy - Until January 6 2008
Impressive Goldsworthy retrospective marking 30 years of Yorkshire Sculpture Park
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Review
Hélio Oiticica - Until September 23
Tate Modern's show features more than 150 works by the Brazilian artist including several key series from 1955 onwards, some of which have not been seen publicly for more than thirty years.
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Review
Zaha at the Design Museum - images
The Design Museum's blockbuster show on Zaha Hadid opens today. Zoë Blackler was at last night's private view to gauge the first reactions
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Review
Student shows: The Mac and the RCA
BD's reviewers are impressed by stunning work at the RCA and a strong endeavour at the Mac
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Review
Mind-expanding trip to the frontier
Cecil Balmond has made hugely complex ideas rewardingly accessible
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Review
Beyond the city limits
Tate Modern’s entertaining show raises complex and urgent issues, but it leaves out more than it covers
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Review
Sketches of Frank Gehry (12A)
Sydney Pollack's acclaimed documentary on the life and work of Frank Gehry.
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Review
Global Cities - until August 27
Ricky Burdett's Global Cities exhibition created for the Venice biennale is transformed for the Tate Modern's Turbine Hall
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Review
A strange Architecture Week brief
Architecture Week's odd invitation to design an "urban picnic" was an offer many found they could refuse
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Review
A 19th century classic from Louis Henry Sullivan
Shaun Murray's drivel has pointed us in the direction of some classic archibabble from Louis Henry Sullivan from 1896
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Review
Fear and loathing on the streets of London
RCA graduates and tutors tackle compelling but elusive concepts of the human condition imaginatively and with humour.
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Review
Keeping the faith
This useful history overestimates the status of churches for society and architects.