Open for just three months during the summer, the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion, located in London’s Kensington Gardens, could be a mere blip on the architecture radar. Yet it manages to garner the attention usually reserved for major projects. One can see why. Since its inception four years ago, the Pavilion has showcased work by some of the world’s most heralded architects for its annual architectural commission—Zaha Hadid (2000), Daniel Libeskind (2001), and Toyo Ito (2002). This year’s selection for the project, Oscar Niemeyer, Hon. AIA, is no exception. Ninety-five years old and busy at work, the Pritzker Prize winner continues to engage and excite the public with his designs. Read more…
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An annual magazine dedicated to the cross-section of work, pop culture, and politics. Two issues were circulated. Designed by Project Projects.
Diana Lind lives in Philadelphia where she is the editor of Next American City magazine. She is also a journalist whose writing has regularly appeared in Architectural Record and Art+ Auction. Her book, Brooklyn Modern, is in its second printing and Lind has been featured in a Q&A on NYTimes.com and an interview on Martha Stewart Living Radio, among other media outlets. She writes fiction in her spare time.
2008
Instructor, Drexel University
Brooklyn Modern: Architecture, Interiors & Design, Rizzoli
Editor in Charge, Architectural Record Houses 2008
Winner, ACLU Stand Up for Freedom contest (co-creator, Sarah Kramer)
2007
Resident, Blue Mountain Center
Finalist, Iowa Review Award
2006
Columbia University, M.F.A., Creative Writing
Editor, Designing the Hamptons: Portraits of Interiors, Edizioni Press
2004
Founder, Work Magazine
Instructor, Columbia University Summer Session in Creative Writing
2003
Cornell University, B.A., English
2002
Arthur Lynn Andrews Award for Fiction
Einhorn Discovery Grant
1999
Horace Mann School
1981
Born in Manhattan