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Step inside NYC's Modulightor, a cross between a design and production store, and a museum designed by prominent, mid-20th century architect Paul Rudolph.
The architect Paul Rudolph was a superstar when he left an academic career and opened a New York studio in 1965, a symbol of all that American inventiveness, might, and optimism could achieve ...
Paul Rudolph (1918-1997) studied architecture under Walter Gropius at Harvard but he learned just as much during World War II, supervising the building of ships at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. His hard ...
The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Paul Rudolph retrospective reveals the architect’s vision and optimism — and his supreme arrogance.
Born in Kentucky in 1918, Rudolph began his professional career after service in World War II, building a series of light-and-breezy houses in and around Sarasota, Fla., that would help define the ...
American architecture’s bright, shining light of the Kennedy era, Paul Rudolph was scrounging for commissions less than a decade later. He may now be best remembered — to the extent his name ...
Paul Rudolph wrote in 1952: ‘One doubts that a poem was ever written to a flat-roofed building silhouetted against the setting sun.' Then 34 years old, the Kentucky native had only just established ...
Materialized Space: The Architecture of Paul Rudolph takes place from 30 September 2024 to 16 March 2025 at The Met Museum, The Met Fifth Avenue, New York City, United States.
Paul Rudolph, Perspective section drawing of the Art and Architecture Building, Yale University, New Haven (1958), 36 7/8 x 53 5/8 x 2 inches (93.7 x 136.2 x 5.1 cm) (all images courtesy the ...