Рет қаралды 361
This event was co-sponsored by the Columbia Alumni Association | France and Columbia GSAPP.
This event explored why Rose Valland, one of the most decorated women of World War II and one of the greatest spies in the Resistance against Nazi art looting, has been mostly forgotten. In a forthcoming narrative non-fiction book from HarperOne (Harper Collins), Columbia University GSAPP graduate and professor, Michelle Young, examines the life and career of Valland as well as the role played by her gender and sexual orientation. Michelle, in discussion with Professor Ariela Katz, also shared how architecture and the built environment played a key part in the writing of this book and in Rose’s story.
Michelle Young
Author and journalist Michelle Young ('12 GSAPP) is an Adjunct Professor of Architecture at the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation. She is also the Founder of Untapped New York, an online publication and experience company which highlights New York’s hidden gems, as well as an author of a number of books including Broadway, Secret Brooklyn: An Unusual Guide, and New York: Hidden Bars and Restaurants. Michelle is a frequent speaker on the subjects of architecture, urbanism, and preservation. She has appeared on PBS, The History Channel, Netflix, The New York Times, National Geographic and Huffington Post and her writing and photography has appeared in publications such as the Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, Hyperallergic, The Forward, Business Insider, Travel + Leisure, and The Wilson Quarterly.
Ariela Katz
Architect and architectural historian Ariela Katz ('91 GSAPP) is an Associate Professor at the École nationale supérieure d’architecture Paris-Malaquais, where she teaches both architectural history and design and is a researcher in the ACS group of the UMR AUSser, CNRS. Her research and teaching focus on ideology and aesthetics in interwar European architecture, Modernisms beyond Europe and critical reevaluations of recent theory and practice.After practicing architecture in New York City, Professor Katz taught in the Columbia GSAPP’s New York/Paris Program, which she co-directed from 2003 to 2007. Dr. Katz has also taught at the American University of Paris, the ENSA Paris-Belleville, ENSA Versailles and the ENSAP Lille. She has received fellowships from NYU, the SAH and the Graham Foundation, and has participated in conferences, juries, workshops and guest lectures across the US and Europe.