
The D-Crit Conference is just a memory, so I shouldn’t even be posting this, right? Except, if there’s anything the conference should have taught its participants and audience members, it is that design and criticism take time. As a tribute to the afternoon presentations I saw (really, never been less bored at a conference) I offer terse tribute. I hope the new MFAs will take it in proper spirit: not as a reduction but a first set of tangents.
I missed both keynotes, Peter Hall and John Thackara, but have been told I will hate the latter. If that’s not enough of a challenge to get me to watch a video on the computer, I don’t know what is. The whole afternoon seemed like a celebration of the wide world as design, and that world is one in which critics definitely disagree.
Sarah Froelich: The buffet server was an accessory to women’s liberation
Emily Leibin: Modernists tried to put tradition in the closet, but it always popped out
Laura Forde: Maybe Godard was so good because he only knew the French, rather than the English, meaning of amateur
Angela Riechers: You would be wise to consider how your memorial will age
Katie Henderson: Wes Anderson’s movies can be read as warnings to design obsessives: get out of the house while you can
Alan Rapp: Trespassing is the only way to escape the mall (even if it is a mall)
Chappell Ellison: Next time you are at the movies, pay attention to the carpet
John Cantwell: Car sharing may be against North American nature
Mike Neal: Life on Mars = no space vacation, no Dwell spread
Alexandra Lange is an architecture and design critic, and author of Writing about Architecture: Mastering the Language of Buildings and Cities. (Princeton Architectural Press, 2012). Her work has appeared in The Architect's Newspaper, Architectural Record, Dwell, Metropolis, Print, New York Magazine and The New York Times.
Writing About Architecture: Mastering the Language of Buildings and Cities
Design Research