Presence and weight in European architecture
Philip Ryan writes about how architecture can reinforce a sense of place looking at specific buildings in Europe.
The Deborah J. Norden Fund, a program of The Architectural League of New York, was established in 1995 in memory of architect and arts administrator Deborah Norden. The competition awards up to $5,000 annually in travel grants to students and recent graduates in the fields of architecture, architectural history, and urban studies.
In 1997 the Architectural League awarded one grant to Philip Ryan, who traveled to Italy, Switzerland, France, and the United Kingdom to explore how buildings can reinforce a sense of place. Through his travels he came to a definition of architectural presence: the intrinsic connections of a construction to its historical and physical context. Ryan explored this concept by photographing and sketching buildings that exhibited a “definitive response to their place through construction, scale, site, and material selection.”
Philip Ryan now works for Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects in New York and is a general partner at the Brooklyn Digital Foundry, a web and graphic design firm based in Brooklyn. He has taught graduate studio design at the City College of New York and has served as an architectural critic at the Rhode Island School of Design, University of Texas at Austin, and Yale University.
Spanish architect Josep Lluís Mateo discusses recent projects as part of the Current Work series.
Medina Lasansky writes about the impact of a fabricated festival on the small Venetian town of Marostica.
British architect Amanda Levete explores recent cultural projects in Lisbon and London.