The Skyscraper Museum is devoted to the study of high-rise building, past, present, and future. The Museum explores tall buildings as objects of design, products of technology, sites of construction, investments in real estate, and places of work and residence. This site will look better in a browser that supports web standards, but it is accessible to any browser or Internet device.
NY MODERN LECTURE SERIES
Museum Director Carol Willis's first love and special focus of her academic research has been American architecture of the 1920s. To expand the themes of the 2007-2008 exhibition and give definition to the concept of New York Modern, she presented a series of five illustrated lectures that examine in detail the development of a new aesthetic in skyscraper design and ideas of urban planning. Countering narratives that explain American modernism as style - Art Deco or International - that evolved from influences by European artists and designers, Willis identifies an American modernism that develops directly from the architects' preoccupations, from the early 1920s, with the conditions and challenges of rationalizing the modern city.
The lectures highlighted careers and contributions of three key figures in the contemporary debates over the future of New York and the shape of the modern metropolis. The 60-90 minute lectures are available here as streaming video and take about 10 minutes to load.
January 15 2008
New York in the Twenties: City of the Future
January 29 2008
Hugh Ferriss: Prophet of Metropolis
February 12 2008
Harvey Wiley Corbett: "New Stones for Old"
March 4 2008
Raymond Hood: The "Brilliant Bad Boy" of New York Architecture
March 11 2008
Rockefeller Center: The Future in Amber
Additionally, the Museum organized a panel discussion on May 8, 2008 of New York scholars and
story-tellers to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the opening of Rockefeller Center and its
70-story signature tower, the RCA Building/30 Rockefeller Plaza.
Rockefeller Center @ 75: Tribute to a Miraculous Mega-Project