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Building Culture: Sixteen Architects on How Museums Are Shaping the Future of Art, Architecture, and Public Space

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An insider's look at art museums and how they shape the ways we view art, through the eyes of the architects who design them.

Architects and art lovers everywhere will enjoy this remarkable collection of interviews from sixteen of the world's most celebrated, thoughtful, and innovative architects who have designed many of the world’s greatest museums. Spanning generations, geographies, and methods of architectural practice, these architects share the complex and fascinating process of creating spaces for art. Building Culture includes interviews with:​​

Frank Gehry, who reveals how a half-century of dialogue with the visual arts influenced his revolutionary Guggenheim Bilbao​.
Kulapat Yantrasast, who describes his rethinking of exhibition design and how it expands the presentation of work in venerable institutions like the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where he is currently redesigning the galleries for the arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas​.
Walter Hood, whose long interest in improvisational techniques in music informed his design for outdoor performance spaces in the Oakland Museum​.
Elizabeth Diller, whose conception of the Shed in New York City's Hudson Yards was influenced by decades of work in conceptual and performance art.
Esteemed architects who have designed, renovated, or created galleries for MoMA, the New Museum, and the American Museum of Natural History in New York; the National Gallery and the Tate Modern in London; the Pérez Art Museum Miami; the CentrePompidou in Paris, the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa in Japan; the Museum of West African Art (currently under construction) in Nigeria; and many others. ​

This lively compendium reveals intensely varied architectural philosophies from a diverse group of established and up-and-coming professionals. Engaging personal recollections of relationships with artists and curators, along with 80 captivating images, provide further insight into the design process and timeless inspiration for architecture students, artists, museum professionals, and anyone fascinated by architectural design, public space, and museum culture.

368 pages, Hardcover

Published September 3, 2024

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About the author

Julian Rose

35 books

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564 reviews26 followers
September 16, 2024
Building Culture gathers a series of interviews initially published in ArtForum by Julian Rose with 16 architects who have designed major museum buildings or renovations. Rose interviewed both the well established and the up-and-coming names, centered usually on their best known project, but conversations also covered working methods, educational and personal backgrounds and their perceptions of what is valuable in a museum or public space. Interviewees include Frank Gehry, Elizabeth Diller, Walter Hood and many others.

It is a diverse group, and Rose is clear in their introduction to mention allegations against one of the interviewees. Alongside each interview, the volume also includes images of the buildings or works mentioned, both those in progress and those completed.

As a group, the projects discussed are from the 1960s to the present, with some projects discussed only now under construction. Despite their brief length, Rose is able to touch on a variety of topics and subjects, giving some ideas of the importance of the architectures background and perspective in the buildings they've designed. There are some common topics across the interviews such as the reaction or move away from the traditional white wall galleries, flexibility in space versus purpose building and museums themselves as community or cultural spaces.

Recommended for collegiate readers in museums studies, art history or architectural design.

I received a free digital version of this book via NetGalley thanks to the publisher.
55 reviews2 followers
April 5, 2025
Pretty low effort "book". Definitely not for a layperson -- a shame, because it's a pretty interesting topic.
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