Faculty Work
-
A Section of Now: Social Norms and Rituals as Sites for Architectural Intervention
Associate Professor Jesse LeCavalier, architecture, adds to a group exhibition at the Canadian Center for Architecture which asks how architecture and urbanism can better understand contemporary conditions and address challenges. Opens Nov. 13.
-
Studio Archive Project: Use Your Words
Associate Professor of art Carl Ostendarp's work is part of an online group exhibition curated by JJ Manford (B.F.A. '06). Includes art alumni Erik den Breejen (M.F.A. '06), Amie Cunat (M.F.A. '12), and former department chair Buzz Spector.
-
CODA: Salt.Inc
An inclusive addition was recently completed by CODA, the design practice of Edgar A. Tafel Professor of Architecture and department chair Caroline O'Donnell for the Saltonstall Foundation artist residency in Ithaca, New York.
-
Hanszen Residential College Houston
Construction has begun at Hanszen Residential College, Rice University in Houston, TX, designed by Barkow Leibinger, the firm of Gensler Visiting Critic Frank Barkow. Construction will continue through November 2022.
-
How Spaces Become Places: Place Makers Tell Their Stories
In a new book edited by community-based planning and development Professor John Forester, CRP, case studies show how place makers build community trust and find possibilities and solutions in empty, contested, or unsafe spaces.
-
Roberto Bertoia: Reflections 2020
Reflections 2020, by Associate Professor of art Roberto Bertoia on display at the Bibliowicz Family Gallery, Milstein Hall.
-
Lost in a Thousand Leaves with Luca Padroni
Italian artist and long-time Cornell in Rome visiting critic Luca Padroni reflects on his depiction of the human condition in relation to time and the natural world.
-
Stories Last Longer Than Symbols
With Who is Afraid of Natasha?, Art Professor of the Practice Joanna Malinowska and collaborator C.T. Jasper bring a monument (back) to life.
-
Oil, Gas, Dust: From the Sahara to Europe
History of Architecture Assistant Professor Samia Henni examines how petroleum and gas pipeline export under African and Sharan aquifers to Europe resulted in "a new world (dis)order." In e-Flux Coloniality of Infrastructure.
-
Carl Ostendarp: Greatest Hits Exhibition Catalogue Kunstverein Heilbronn
The exhibition catalog from Associate Professor Carl Ostendarp's 2017 solo exhibition at Kunstverein Heilbronn, edited by Matthia Löbke with German/English text by Matthia Löbke and Lane Releya. Published by the Heilbronn Art Association (2021).
-
Political Partisanship in Transportation Overshadows Strong Overall Support for Reform
An op-ed in The Hill coauthored by CRP's Nicholas Klein explains his research showing that while the nation is divided by partisanship, most Americans agree the transportation system isn't working and want change.
-
Theorizing Global History Symposium Talks
Professor Esra Ackan, architecture, presented "A Global History of Architecture for the Age of Reparations" at the symposium hosted by Global Architectural History Teaching Collective in January.
-
Historical Marker To Honor Ithaca Birthplace of Tuskegee Airman Verdelle Louis Payne
A chance connection led CRP's Professor Thomas J. Campanella to tell the story of Verdelle Louis Payne, Ithaca-born and among the first Black pilots from Upstate New York as well as a military pilot in the U.S. Armed Forces.
-
Announcing the 2021 MASterworks Awards
Professor of the Practice in architecture Florian Idenburg and his practice SO-IL have won MASNYC's Best New Building: Recognizing Outstanding Architectural Design award for Amant, an art "campus" in Brooklyn, New York.
-
Husserl and Spatiality A Phenomenological Ethnography of Space
In his new book, Assistant Professor Tao DuFour, architecture, combines in-depth architectural philosophical investigations of Husserl's work with a rich and intimate ethnography, speaking to themes in social and cultural anthropology.
-
The Forest City in Xingu
An article by Visiting Associate Professor in architecture Anna Dietzsch in Select takes as its starting point the urban technology of Amerindian peoples in a Brazilian indigenous territory.
-
States That Prioritized Access to Water at Height of Pandemic Saved Lives
Featured by the Cornell Chronicle, a paper by lead author and public policy expert Professor Mildred Warner, CRP, says states that implemented moratoria on water shutoffs to protect vulnerable citizens reported better public health outcomes.
-
ACHP Chairman Nominee Sara Bronin Takes Step Forward in Confirmation Process
In a Senate committee hearing, CRP Professor Sara Bronin pledged support for disaster recovery response to historic places, private investment in preservation, and the Tribal Historic Preservation Offices and Native Hawaiian organizations.