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MODERATOR
Reed Kroloff
Reed Kroloff is Editor-in-Chief of Architecture.
He has been with the magazine since 1995. Previously, Mr. Kroloff
was Assistant Professor of Architecture and the Humanities at Arizona
State University in Tempe, Arizona. At ASU, he also served as assistant
dean of the College of Architecture and Environmental Design, and
was granted the Arizona Chapter of the American Institute of Architects'
first Outstanding Educator Award. While in Arizona, Mr. Kroloff
was the architecture critic at the Arizona Republic, the state's
largest newspaper. He has also written for other regional and national
publications, ranging from Metropolis to Places. Reed Kroloff has
worked for Architecture firms in Arizona and Texas, and holds degrees
from Yale University and the University of Texas at Austin.
ARCHITECTURE
AWARDS - JURORS
Ricardo Legorreta
Born in Mexico City, Mr. Legorreta studied architecture
at the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico and established his
firm, Legoretta Arquitectos, in 1959. During his 45-year career,
Mr. Legorreta has successfully integrated interior design, landscape
architecture, and architecture into a single discipline. His architecture,
attuned to the land and respectful of Latin American traditions
of privacy and simplicity, has won widespread and international
acclaim. Throughout his career, Legorreta has earned numerous honors
and awards, including the prestigious Premio Nacional de las Artes,
awarded by the President of Mexico, the Gold Medal of the International
Union of Architects and most recently the 2000 AIA Gold Medal.
Margaret
McCurry
A principal at Tigerman McCurry and a Fellow of
the AIA, Ms. McCurry received her Bachelor's degree in Art History
from Vassar College in 1964 and her Loeb Fellowship in Advanced
Environmental Studies from the Graduate School of Design at Harvard
University in 1987. She is the recipient of many Honor Awards from
the National AIA, numerous Distinguished Building and Interior Architecture
Awards from the Chicago Chapter, and both National and Local ASID
Interior Design Project Awards. In 1989 she was awarded the Dean
of Architecture Award and in 1990 was inducted into the Interior
Design Hall of Fame. Her work has been published widely in architectural
and interior magazines and exhibited at museums and galleries here
and abroad.
Maryann
Thompson
Maryann Thompson received her bachelor's degree
from Princeton, and her Masters of Architecture degree from the
Harvard University Graduate School of Design, where she also received
a Master in Landscape Architecture. She is currently a design principal
at Thompson and Rose Architects Inc. In 1998 Thompson and Rose received
an AIA National Young Architects Citation, which praised them "as
a team and as a firm, (for) having made significant contribution
to architecture. Their work reconnects architecture with the landscape
and celebrates tectonics, materials, and a poetic approach to design."
INTERIOR
ARCHITECTURE AWARDS - JURORS
Stephanie Mallis
Stephanie Mallis received a Bachelor of Fine Arts
degree from Pratt Institute and a Masters of Architecture from the
Harvard Graduate School of Design. She was a Fulbright scholar in
Architecture to India. With Kallmann McKinnell & Wood Architects,
designs include; the O.P.C.W .in The Hague, the U.S. Federal Courthouse
in Cleveland Ohio, The U.S. Embassy in Bangkok Thailand, The Loudoun
County Courts Complex in Leesburg Virginia, The Gateway Visitors
Center in Independence National Historical Park, in Philadelphia.
Interiors include; Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes New Jersey,
Arrow International Corporate Headquarters in Bern County PA, The
Miller Residence, Reading PA., The William T. Young Library at The
University of Kentucky in Lexington KY, The Harvard Business Schools'
Shad Hall and The Harvard Law Schools' Hauser Hall, The Hynes Convention
Center, Boston MA. Awards include; the AIA Honor award for Interiors
for Arrow International, The BSA and "Interiors" award for the Hynes
Convention Center. Previous professional experience was with I.M.
Pei & Partners on projects such as Mobil Research and Development
Facilities in Farmers Branch Texas, several IBM facilities, the
Mount Sinai Hospital and The Bank of China in Hong Kong. Publications
include; Architecture, Architectural Record, Casa Vogue, Domus,
L'Arca, Interiors, Interior Design, Elle Décor, The Who's Who of
Women, Women of Design.
Juan
Miró
Juan Miró was born in Barcelona and studied architecture
in Madrid. He worked as a designer in his native Spain with Antonio
y Juan Miró Arquitectos and was a founding partner at Dietl Miró
Ordoñez Arquitectos Associado, in Madrid. In 1997, Mr. Miró founded
Juan Miró Architects in Austin. As a faculty member at the University
of Texas at Austin's School of Architecture, Mr. Miró teaches design
and construction and is director of the Studio Mexico Program. He
won the Texas Excellence Teaching Award in 1998 and the Association
of Collegiate Schools of Architecture's New Faculty Teaching Award
in 1999.
Andrée
Putman
One of France's most celebrated designers, Andrée
Putman was born in Paris, and intended to pursue a career in music
after winning a first prize at the Conservatory of Paris. She began
her interior design career in 1978 when she formed her agency Ecart.
In 1997 she created a new firm in her own name. Restrained, eclectic
and contemporary, her personal style continues to be immediately
identifiable.
PROJECTS
AWARDS - JURORS
Gae Aulenti
Gae Aulenti, FAIA, graduated in 1953 from the Milan
Polytechnic Faculty of Architecture and entered the editorial staff
of Casabella-Continuità directed by Ernesto Rogers. With her own
practice in Milan since 1956, her activity has been widely ranging
from architecture to interior design, industrial design and theatre
stage design, including internationally renowned museum and exhibition
projects, as the reworking of Musée d'Orsay in Paris (1980-86),
Musée National d'Art Moderne at Centre Pompidou in Paris (1982-85),
Palazzo Grassi in Venice (1986), National Museum of Catalan Art
in Barcelona (1987-2001). Among her major recent and current works,
the Italian Pavilion at EXPO '92 in Seville, Spain (1992); the exhibition
"The Italian Metamorphosis 1943-1968" at the Guggenheim Museum in
New York (1994); the adaptive reuse of Scuderie Papali at Quirinale
in Rome to new exhibition gallery (1999); the redevelopment of Piazzale
Cadorna in Milan (2000); the new Asian Art Museum of S.Francisco
at the Old Main Library, in association with the joint venture HOK/LDA/RWA.
She was appointed "Chevalier de la Legion d'Honneur" (Paris, 1987)
and received international awards including the Praemium Imperiale
for Architecture (Tokyo, 1991) and the Knight Grand Cross of the
Order of Merit of the Italian Republic (Rome, 1995).
Laurinda
Spear
Laurinda Spear is a Fellow of the AIA and has been
a principal at Arquitectonica since its founding in 1977. She received
a Bachelor of Arts in Fine Arts from Brown University in 1973 and
a Master's degree in Architecture from Columbia University in 1975.
Ms. Spear is the recipient of the 1998 AIA Silver Medal for Design
and the Rome Prize in Architecture. She was made a Fellow of the
American Institute of Architects in 1992 and was inducted into the
Interior Design Hall of Fame in 1999.
Brian
Brace Taylor
Brian Brace Taylor received a Bachelor of Arts from
Amherst College, and a Master of Arts and a Ph.D. from Harvard University.
He was a professor at the Ecole d'Architecture de Paris-Belleville
(France), and a visiting professor at Bard College, the Ecole d'Architecture,
Grenoble, and the Universityof Ilinois, Circle Campus. He was the
co-founder and editor of MIMAR, Architecture in Development quarterly,
and the associate editor of l'Architecture d'Aujourd'hui journal.
He presently teaches at the New York Institute of Technology. Books
include: Le Corbusier e Pessac(1973), Le Corbusier The City of Refuge
(1987,1980), Geoffrey Bawa (1986,1995), Raj Rewal: An Architect
in India (1992), Pierre Chareau (1992) and numerous articles.
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