Toshiko mori biography of albert einstein

  • Later, Albert Einstein combined these two by proving that light acts with both particle and wave characteristics, launching the field of.
  • Looking for books by Toshiko Mori?
  • Toshiko Mori, FAIA, founder and principal of Toshiko Mori Architect, discusses her work, including the Darwin D. Martin House Visitors Center.
  • Architects: The Latest Architecture and News

    Video: Bjarke Ingels Exposes His Roots

    As we have shared with you earlier, CNN’s The Next List has profiled the young, Danish architect Bjarke Ingels. Originally aspired to be a cartoonist or graphic novelist, Ingels quickly became fascinated with architecture when a Fall storm rolled through his hometown in North Copenhagen, knocking over trees and leaving him a surplus of lumber. It was then that he was inspired to design his first project, the ultimate childhood “fantasy fort” with a moat, drawbridge and all. In Ingels first experience with value engineering, he quickly learned that “unless you really begin with the perimeters of reality you’ll end up sort of amputating your ambitions quite quickly.” Enjoy the video and be sure to kontroll out CNN’s recent film focusing on the djärv ideas behind BIG.

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    AD Interviews: Winy Maas / MVRDV

    We had the incredible opportunity to interview Winy Maas, the M in

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  • Noteworthy

     

    Poetry
     

    Margaret Atwood (Toronto, Ontario, Canada). Dearly: New Poems. Ecco, November

    Henri Cole (Claremont Mc­-Kenna College). Blizzard: Poems. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, September

    Jorie Graham (Harvard University). Runaway: New Poems. Ecco, September

    John Lithgow (Los Angeles, CA). Trumpty Dumpty Wanted a Crown: Verses for a Despotic Age. Chronicle Prism, September

    Rosanna Warren (University of Chicago). So Forth. W.W. Norton, May

    Kevin Young (Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York Public Library), ed. African American Poetry: Years of Struggle & Song. Library of America, October
     

    Fiction
     

    Martin Amis (New York, NY). Inside Story: A Novel. Knopf, October

    Russell Banks (Saratoga Springs, NY). Foregone: A Novel. Ecco, March

    Sanford Levinson (University of Texas at Austin School of Law) and Cynthia Levinson (Austin, TX). Fault Lines in the Constitution: The Graphic No

    Domus is on newsstands with an issue dedicated to the planet

    The January issue of Domus, the first edited by new Guest Editors Steven Holl and Toshiko Mori, focuses on a broader view of life on Earth. Holl, in his Editorial, explains the goal of developing theories that address our current condition through a “theory of action” that embodies ideas into new creations, a challenge for all architects, artists, and designers. “Wilson’s concept of ‘half the Earth’ places biodiversity at the center of any future urban theory of landscape development,” writes the architect. “In this perspective, human-centric theory is overturned, as the migratory routes of biodiverse species are considered more important than horizontally expanding city patterns.”

    This is followed in Essays by Stephen Zacks, according to whom the technical triumph embodied by the James Webb Space Telescope evokes the current movement back to a design practice more respectful of the planet’s resources. Emma En