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{{Short description|American architect (born 1949)}} |
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'''Anthony Alofsin''' is an Anthony Alofsin is an architect, artist, art historian, writer, and professor. Educated at Andover, Harvard, and Columbia University, he has been named a Fellow, Bogliasco Foundation, Liguria Study Center for the Arts and Humanities; Ailsa Mellon Bruce Senior Fellow, Center for Advanced Studies in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C; Fellow, MacDowell Colony; Fellow, the Internationales Forschungszentrum Kulturwissenschaften, Vienna; Visiting Scholar at the American Academy at Rome; Visiting Scholar, the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation; Visiting Fellow, Harvard Graduate School of Design; and Fulbright Professor, Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna. |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2015}} |
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{{infobox writer |
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|name=Anthony Alofsin |
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|birth_date={{birth date and age|1949|6|22}} |
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|birth_place=[[Memphis, Tennessee]], U.S. |
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|occupation={{flatlist| |
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*Architect |
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*artist |
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*art historian |
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*writer |
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*professor |
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}} |
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|education={{plainlist| |
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* [[Memphis College of Art|Memphis Academy of Art]] |
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* [[Phillips Academy]] |
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* [[Harvard College]] ([[Bachelor of Arts|BA]]) |
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* [[Harvard Graduate School of Design]] ([[Master of Architecture|MArch]]) |
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* [[Columbia University]] ([[Doctor of Philosophy|PhD]])}} |
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}} |
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'''Anthony Alofsin''' (born June 22, 1949 in [[Memphis, Tennessee|Memphis]], [[Tennessee]]) is an American [[architect]], [[artist]], [[Art history|art historian]], [[writer]], and [[professor]].<ref name="search.marquiswhoswho.com">{{cite web |title=Who's Who in America 2012 |edition=66th |year=2011 |work=Marquis Biographies on Line |url=http://search.marquiswhoswho.com/profile/100023439524}}</ref> |
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His recent book ''When Buildings Speak: Architecture as Language in the Habsburg Empire and its Aftermath, 1867-1933'' won the Vasari Award from the Dallas Museum of Art; a German language edition will be published by the Verlag Anton Pustet in 2011. He is editor of ''A Modernist Museum in Perspective: The East Building, National Gallery of Art.'' He is the author The Struggle for ''Modernism: Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and City Planning at Harvard,'' the history of the Harvard Graduate School of Design from its beginnings through the 1960s. His book reviews and essays have appeared in the ''Times Literary Supplement'', ''The Burlington Magazine'', and ''The New Criterion''. His first work of fiction, ''Halflife'' was published in January, 2009. |
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Educated at [[Memphis Academy of Art]] and [[Phillips Academy, Andover]], he received from [[Harvard College]] and the [[Harvard Graduate School of Design]], respectively, a Bachelor of Arts (1971) and Master of Architecture (1981). From Columbia University, he obtained a Ph.D. in Art History and Archaeology (1987). |
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Alofsin has written books on modern architecture and published numerous essays on architecture, art, and culture that have appeared in a variety of journals and reviews including ''The Times Literary Supplement'', the ''Burlington Magazine'', the ''New Criterion'', and ''American Art''. He was named Roland Gommel Roessner Centennial Professor Emeritus in Architecture in 2020 in recognition of his scholarship and teaching over thirty-three years at the University of Texas at Austin where he founded and directed the Ph.D. program in [[architectural history]].<ref name="UTSOA">{{cite web|url=https://soa.utexas.edu/people/anthony-alofsin |title=Anthony Alofsin |website=soa.utexas.edu |date= |accessdate=2020-11-14}}</ref> |
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⚫ | Much of his scholarly writing has focused on issues of influence, how ideas are transmitted and transformed, |
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In 2017 he began donating material to establish the Anthony Alofsin Archive at the University of Texas in Austin. The vast collection contains research materials, his teaching collection, and professional papers.<ref>{{cite web |date=April 11, 2017 |
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In recent years he has turned his attention to fiction and narrative drawings based on ritual practices as well as designs for private clients. He is currently writing a memoir, Memphis Stories, preparing a folio of drawings, Places of Refuge, planning a book on the American home, which explores the practices of the high end housing industry, and continuing research for a new introduction to the work and life of Frank Lloyd Wright. |
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|url=http://www.architectmagazine.com/design/architect-anthony-alofsin-donates-his-archives-to-university-of-texas-libraries_c |website=Architect Magazine |title=Architect Anthony Alofsin Donates His Archives to University of Texas Libraries |access-date=2017-09-04}}</ref> |
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==Publications== |
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Alofsin is internationally recognized as one of the world's leading authorities on the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright and as an expert on modern architecture. In 2006, he received the Wright Spirit Award from the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy. The award honors an individual who, through artistic, architectural, scholarly, professional or other endeavors embodies the spirit of Frank Lloyd Wright. He is editor of ''Prairie Skyscraper: Frank Lloyd Wright’s Price Tower'' and ''Frank Lloyd Wright: Europe and Beyond'', and he has written a new introduction to Frank Lloyd Wright's famous Wasmuth folios, ''Ausgeführte Bauten und Entwürfe'', which appeared in English, German, and Italian editions. His published works include the introduction to ''Frank Lloyd Wright's Fifty Views of Japan: the 1905 Photograph Album.'' His pioneering study, ''Frank Lloyd Wright: the Lost Years, 1910-1922'', is acknowledged to be one of the most important books on Wright in the last forty years; the book was a winner in the monograph category in the American Institute of Architects International Book Awards. Alofsin’s other publications include the five-volume reference work, ''Frank Lloyd Wright: An Index to the Taliesin Correspondence'', which won the Vasari Award of the Dallas Museum of Art; it has become an invaluable reference tool for Wright scholars and researchers the world over. |
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He is the author of ''Wright and New York: the Making of America's Architect.'' ''The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians'' described it “as an exciting story, a cultural drama about power and intrigue, featuring Wright’s ambiguous love/hate relationship with New York City."<ref>“Review: Frank Lloyd Wright and New York and Frank Lloyd Wright and San Francisco” web |url=https://online.ucpress.edu/jsah/article/81/2/243/185502/Review-Wright-and-New-York-The-Making-of-America-s_c June-2022 | website=https://www.sah.org//publications-and-research/jsah-online. Retrieved July 13, 2022</ref> He wrote ''Dream Home, What You Need to Know Before You Buy,'' a guide for consumers buying a home in the suburbs. His ''Frank Lloyd Wright, Art Collector,'' is the first publication of Wright's unknown collection of German and Austrian art prints. His book ''When Buildings Speak: Architecture as Language in the Habsburg Empire and its Aftermath, 1867-1933'' won the Vasari Award from the [[Dallas Museum of Art]] .;<ref>{{cite web|title=Two Receive Vasari Awards in 2007: Anthony Alofsin and Randall C. Griffin|url=http://smu.edu/newsinfo/stories/randall-griffin-26sept2007.asp|accessdate=2012-09-09|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://archive.today/20121211105626/http://smu.edu/newsinfo/stories/randall-griffin-26sept2007.asp|archivedate=December 11, 2012|df=mdy-all}}</ref> a German language edition was published by the Verlag Anton Pustet in 2011. He is editor of ''A Modernist Museum in Perspective: The East Building, National Gallery of Art.'' He is the author of ''The Struggle for Modernism: Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and City Planning at Harvard,'' the history of the Harvard Graduate School of Design from its beginnings through the 1960s. |
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⚫ | Much of his scholarly writing has focused on issues of influence, how ideas are transmitted and transformed, on the concept of artistic transition as well as reception as an index of cultural and social meaning. He conducts a broad range of research activities including [[American modernism]], Central European modern architecture, the history of [[ornament (architecture)|ornament]], the history of design education in architecture, [[landscape architecture]], and [[urban planning|city planning]] as well as ongoing research on [[Frank Lloyd Wright]]. He has written on the role of [[narrative]] in architecture and on the origins of [[critical regionalism|regionalism]] in modern architecture.<ref name="UTSOA" /> |
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⚫ | He has |
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==International recognition== |
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⚫ | Alofsin maintains an architectural practice and his projects, which range in scale and style, have been frequently published. The sites of his projects include New Mexico, New York, and Texas. He also lectures internationally |
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Alofsin is internationally recognized as one of the world's leading authorities on the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright and as an expert on modern architecture.<ref name="utexas2006">{{cite web |url=http://www.utexas.edu/news/2006/10/03/architecture/ |title="Frank Lloyd Wright scholar wins Wright Spirit Award" Oct. 3, 2006 News release, University of Texas |publisher=Utexas.edu |date=2012-07-24 |accessdate=2012-09-09 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121110115647/http://www.utexas.edu/news/2006/10/03/architecture/ |archive-date=November 10, 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In 2006, he received the Wright Spirit Award from the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy. The award honors an individual who, through artistic, architectural, scholarly, professional or other endeavors embodies the spirit of Frank Lloyd Wright. ' His pioneering study, ''Frank Lloyd Wright: the Lost Years, 1910-1922'', is acknowledged to be one of the most important books on Wright in the last forty years;<ref name="utexas2006"/> the book was a winner in the monograph category in the American Institute of Architects International Book Awards.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aia.org/practicing/awards/index.htm |title=The American Institute of Architects - Awards Program, Awards |publisher=Aia.org |date=2011-12-13 |accessdate=2012-09-09}}</ref> Alofsin's other publications include the five-volume reference work, ''Frank Lloyd Wright: An Index to the Taliesin Correspondence'', which won the Vasari Award of the Dallas Museum of Art.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dm-art.org/Research/dma_223324 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130414191340/http://www.dm-art.org/Research/dma_223324 |url-status=dead |archive-date=2013-04-14 |title=Previous Winners of the Vasari Award - Dallas Museum of Art |publisher=Dm-art.org |accessdate=2012-09-09 }}</ref> |
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Alofsin was ranked “Best of the Best” and in the 90th percentile of research professors, academics, and dons among an international evaluation of schools of architecture by the Key Centre for Architectural Sociology.<ref>Gary Stevens, "Rating the Architecture Academics, Professors, and Dons in Research: 2010-13 Final Report." Key Centre for Architectural |
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Excerpt from a review of his book, ''When Buildings Speak: Architecture as Language in the Habsburg Empire and its Aftermath, 1867-1933'': “…this book marks an undisputable contribution not only to the knowledge of the Central European architecture, but also to the ongoing remapping of modern architecture. Alofsin introduces a new reading of the architecture of the region and supports it with an extremely rich use of illustrations, including many large color photographs of breathtaking quality….Alofsin demonstrates here that modern architecture implies several and different means of expression, all of which are equally worth investigating. While certainly contributing to the continuing shifts of historiography of modern architecture, this book will also open pathways to the study of even more ‘adventurous’ territories that have yet to be considered by mainstream architectural history.” |
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Sociology,2012. http://www.archsoc.com. See also http://www.archsoc.com/kcas/researchschool.html Retrieved 2012-11-19</ref> |
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Alofsin has been named a Fellow, Helen Riaboff Whiteley Center; Fellow, Bogliasco Foundation, Liguria Study Center for the Arts and Humanities; Ailsa Mellon Bruce Senior Fellow, Center for Advanced Studies in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C; Fellow, MacDowell Colony; Fellow, the Internationales Forschungszentrum Kulturwissenschaften, Vienna; Visiting Scholar, the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation; Visiting Fellow, Harvard Graduate School of Design; and Fulbright Professor, [[Academy of Fine Arts Vienna]].<ref name="search.marquiswhoswho.com"/> In 2015 Alfonsin was the recipient of the Wilder Green Fellowship in Architecture,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Wilder Green Fellowship |url=https://www.macdowell.org/sponsored-fellowships/wilder-green-fellowship |access-date=2024-09-28 |website=MacDowell |language=en}}</ref> and in 2017 he was elected a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects, one of the highest honors given by the profession.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://texasarchitects.org/v/article-detail/2017-Texas-Fellows/rr/ |title=2017 Texas Fellows, Texas Society of Architects/AIA |website=texasarchitects.org |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170226133018/https://texasarchitects.org/v/article-detail/2017-Texas-Fellows/rr/ |archive-date=2017-02-26}}</ref> |
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''Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians'', June 2008. |
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==Advice and practice== |
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⚫ | He has been active as a curator and adviser to several architectural exhibitions. He was consulting curator for the major retrospective ''Frank Lloyd Wright, Architect'' at the [[Museum of Modern Art]] in New York. He curated ''Prairie Skyscraper'' on Wright's [[Price Tower]] in [[Bartlesville, Oklahoma]], and the exhibition ''Wright's Wasmuth Folios: Representing the Ideal,'' at the Ross Gallery, Columbia University.<ref name="UTSOA" /> |
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in the History of Art Series). Editor and essayist. New Haven: Yale University Press and National Gallery of Art, 2009. |
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* Alofsin, Anthony ''Wright and New York: The Making of America's Architect,'' New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2019.{{ISBN|9780300238853}}. |
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* Alofsin, Anthony ''Dream Home: What You Need to Know Before You Buy,'' Austin:InnerformsLtd.com, 2013. {{ISBN|978-0982063033}}. |
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* Alofsin, Anthony, editor, ''Frank Lloyd Wright: An Index to the Taliesin Correspondence'', Garland Publishing, New York 1988 [five volumes] |
* Alofsin, Anthony, editor, ''Frank Lloyd Wright: An Index to the Taliesin Correspondence'', Garland Publishing, New York 1988 [five volumes] |
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* Alofsin, Anthony, ''Frank Lloyd Wright--The Lost Years, 1910-1922: A Study of Influence'', [[University of Chicago Press]], Chicago 1993, {{ISBN|0-226-01366-9}} |
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== References == |
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{{reflist}} |
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== External links == |
== External links == |
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* {{Amazon author page}} |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20080526013823/http://www.alofsin.com/ Anthony Alofsin Architect] |
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{{Authority control}} |
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* [http://www.innerformsltd.com] InnerformsLTD] |
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* [http://soa.utexas.edu/people/profile/alofsin University of Texas School of Architecture faculty profile] |
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[[Category:Living people]] |
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[[Category:American architects]] |
[[Category:20th-century American architects]] |
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[[Category:American architecture writers]] |
[[Category:American architecture writers]] |
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[[Category:American architectural historians]] |
[[Category:American architectural historians]] |
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[[Category:American biographers]] |
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[[Category:American male biographers]] |
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[[Category:Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni]] |
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[[Category:University of Texas at Austin faculty]] |
[[Category:University of Texas at Austin faculty]] |
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[[Category:Academic staff of the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna]] |
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[[Category:1949 births]] |
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[[Category:Architecture academics]] |
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[[Category:21st-century American architects]] |
Latest revision as of 02:00, 28 September 2024
Anthony Alofsin | |
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Born | Memphis, Tennessee, U.S. | June 22, 1949
Occupation |
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Education |
Anthony Alofsin (born June 22, 1949 in Memphis, Tennessee) is an American architect, artist, art historian, writer, and professor.[1] Educated at Memphis Academy of Art and Phillips Academy, Andover, he received from Harvard College and the Harvard Graduate School of Design, respectively, a Bachelor of Arts (1971) and Master of Architecture (1981). From Columbia University, he obtained a Ph.D. in Art History and Archaeology (1987).
Alofsin has written books on modern architecture and published numerous essays on architecture, art, and culture that have appeared in a variety of journals and reviews including The Times Literary Supplement, the Burlington Magazine, the New Criterion, and American Art. He was named Roland Gommel Roessner Centennial Professor Emeritus in Architecture in 2020 in recognition of his scholarship and teaching over thirty-three years at the University of Texas at Austin where he founded and directed the Ph.D. program in architectural history.[2]
In 2017 he began donating material to establish the Anthony Alofsin Archive at the University of Texas in Austin. The vast collection contains research materials, his teaching collection, and professional papers.[3]
Publications
[edit]He is the author of Wright and New York: the Making of America's Architect. The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians described it “as an exciting story, a cultural drama about power and intrigue, featuring Wright’s ambiguous love/hate relationship with New York City."[4] He wrote Dream Home, What You Need to Know Before You Buy, a guide for consumers buying a home in the suburbs. His Frank Lloyd Wright, Art Collector, is the first publication of Wright's unknown collection of German and Austrian art prints. His book When Buildings Speak: Architecture as Language in the Habsburg Empire and its Aftermath, 1867-1933 won the Vasari Award from the Dallas Museum of Art .;[5] a German language edition was published by the Verlag Anton Pustet in 2011. He is editor of A Modernist Museum in Perspective: The East Building, National Gallery of Art. He is the author of The Struggle for Modernism: Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and City Planning at Harvard, the history of the Harvard Graduate School of Design from its beginnings through the 1960s.
Much of his scholarly writing has focused on issues of influence, how ideas are transmitted and transformed, on the concept of artistic transition as well as reception as an index of cultural and social meaning. He conducts a broad range of research activities including American modernism, Central European modern architecture, the history of ornament, the history of design education in architecture, landscape architecture, and city planning as well as ongoing research on Frank Lloyd Wright. He has written on the role of narrative in architecture and on the origins of regionalism in modern architecture.[2]
International recognition
[edit]Alofsin is internationally recognized as one of the world's leading authorities on the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright and as an expert on modern architecture.[6] In 2006, he received the Wright Spirit Award from the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy. The award honors an individual who, through artistic, architectural, scholarly, professional or other endeavors embodies the spirit of Frank Lloyd Wright. ' His pioneering study, Frank Lloyd Wright: the Lost Years, 1910-1922, is acknowledged to be one of the most important books on Wright in the last forty years;[6] the book was a winner in the monograph category in the American Institute of Architects International Book Awards.[7] Alofsin's other publications include the five-volume reference work, Frank Lloyd Wright: An Index to the Taliesin Correspondence, which won the Vasari Award of the Dallas Museum of Art.[8]
Alofsin was ranked “Best of the Best” and in the 90th percentile of research professors, academics, and dons among an international evaluation of schools of architecture by the Key Centre for Architectural Sociology.[9]
Alofsin has been named a Fellow, Helen Riaboff Whiteley Center; Fellow, Bogliasco Foundation, Liguria Study Center for the Arts and Humanities; Ailsa Mellon Bruce Senior Fellow, Center for Advanced Studies in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C; Fellow, MacDowell Colony; Fellow, the Internationales Forschungszentrum Kulturwissenschaften, Vienna; Visiting Scholar, the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation; Visiting Fellow, Harvard Graduate School of Design; and Fulbright Professor, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna.[1] In 2015 Alfonsin was the recipient of the Wilder Green Fellowship in Architecture,[10] and in 2017 he was elected a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects, one of the highest honors given by the profession.[11]
Advice and practice
[edit]He has been active as a curator and adviser to several architectural exhibitions. He was consulting curator for the major retrospective Frank Lloyd Wright, Architect at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. He curated Prairie Skyscraper on Wright's Price Tower in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, and the exhibition Wright's Wasmuth Folios: Representing the Ideal, at the Ross Gallery, Columbia University.[2]
Alofsin maintains an architectural practice and his projects, which range in scale and style, have been frequently published. The sites of his projects include New Mexico, New York, and Texas. He also lectures internationally.[2]
Books
[edit]- Alofsin, Anthony Wright and New York: The Making of America's Architect, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2019.ISBN 9780300238853.
- Alofsin, Anthony Dream Home: What You Need to Know Before You Buy, Austin:InnerformsLtd.com, 2013. ISBN 978-0982063033.
- Alofsin, Anthony Frank Lloyd Wright, Art Collector, Austin: University of Texas Press, 2012. ISBN 978-0292737211
- Alofsin, Anthony Architektur beim Wort nehmen. Bildhaft sprechende Baukunst des Habsburgerreiches und seiner Nachfolgestaaten 1867-1933, Salzburg: Verlag Anton Pustet, 2011. ISBN 978-3-7025-0630-8.
- Alofsin, Anthony Halflife, A Fictive Memoir. Austin, TX: InnerformsLtd.com, 2009. ISBN 978-0-9820630-0-2.
- Alofsin, Anthony, editor and essayist, A Modernist Museum in Perspective: The East Building, National Gallery of Art (Studies in the History of Art Series). Editor and essayist. New Haven: Yale University Press and National Gallery of Art, 2009.
- Alofsin, Anthony, When Buildings Speak: Architecture As Language in the Habsburg Empire and Its Aftermath, 1867-1933, University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London 2006, ISBN 0-226-01506-8
- Alofsin, Anthony, editor/co-author Prairie skyscraper: Frank Lloyd Wright's Price Tower, Price Tower Arts Center, Bartlesville OK; Rizzoli, New York 2005, ISBN 0-8478-2754-2
- Alofsin, Anthony, The Struggle for Modernism: Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and City Planning at Harvard, W. W. Norton, New York and London 2002, ISBN 0-393-73048-4
- Alofsin, Anthony, editor, Frank Lloyd Wright: An Index to the Taliesin Correspondence, Garland Publishing, New York 1988 [five volumes]
- Alofsin, Anthony, editor, Frank Lloyd Wright: Europe and Beyond, University of California Press, Berkeley CA 1999, ISBN 0-520-21116-2
- Alofsin, Anthony, Frank Lloyd Wright--The Lost Years, 1910-1922: A Study of Influence, University of Chicago Press, Chicago 1993, ISBN 0-226-01366-9
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Who's Who in America 2012". Marquis Biographies on Line (66th ed.). 2011.
- ^ a b c d "Anthony Alofsin". soa.utexas.edu. Retrieved November 14, 2020.
- ^ "Architect Anthony Alofsin Donates His Archives to University of Texas Libraries". Architect Magazine. April 11, 2017. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
- ^ “Review: Frank Lloyd Wright and New York and Frank Lloyd Wright and San Francisco” web |url=https://online.ucpress.edu/jsah/article/81/2/243/185502/Review-Wright-and-New-York-The-Making-of-America-s_c June-2022 | website=https://www.sah.org//publications-and-research/jsah-online. Retrieved July 13, 2022
- ^ "Two Receive Vasari Awards in 2007: Anthony Alofsin and Randall C. Griffin". Archived from the original on December 11, 2012. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
- ^ a b ""Frank Lloyd Wright scholar wins Wright Spirit Award" Oct. 3, 2006 News release, University of Texas". Utexas.edu. July 24, 2012. Archived from the original on November 10, 2012. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
- ^ "The American Institute of Architects - Awards Program, Awards". Aia.org. December 13, 2011. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
- ^ "Previous Winners of the Vasari Award - Dallas Museum of Art". Dm-art.org. Archived from the original on April 14, 2013. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
- ^ Gary Stevens, "Rating the Architecture Academics, Professors, and Dons in Research: 2010-13 Final Report." Key Centre for Architectural Sociology,2012. http://www.archsoc.com. See also http://www.archsoc.com/kcas/researchschool.html Retrieved 2012-11-19
- ^ "Wilder Green Fellowship". MacDowell. Retrieved September 28, 2024.
- ^ "2017 Texas Fellows, Texas Society of Architects/AIA". texasarchitects.org. Archived from the original on February 26, 2017.
External links
[edit]- Living people
- 20th-century American architects
- American architecture writers
- American architectural historians
- American biographers
- American male biographers
- Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni
- University of Texas at Austin faculty
- Academic staff of the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
- 1949 births
- Architecture academics
- Harvard Graduate School of Design alumni
- Harvard College alumni
- Phillips Academy alumni
- 21st-century American architects