Chicago
Thursday, May 1: Barbara Geiger, design consultant for heritage landscapes, traces the history of the sustainable design movement in Chicago using landscape architects Frederick Law Olmsted, O.C. Simonds, and Jens Jensen’s work to illustrate. 6 p.m.; Millennium Park, 201 E Randolph St.
Los Angeles
Tuesday, May 6: The Hammer Museum hosts this forum on energy independence with David Freeman, considered the country’s premiere authority on energy use, and Robert Bryce, managing editor of Houston-based newsletter Energy Tribune. 7 p.m.; Hammer Museum, 10899 Wilshire Blvd.; (310) 443-7000.
Miami
Friday, May 2: Mikhail Baryshnikov, Johnny Depp and Isabella Rossellini are among the 25 video portraits by avant-garde artist Robert Wilson, now on display at The Bass Museum. For a more traditional take, the museum also dusts off its extensive collection of Flemish, Italian, and Dutch portraiture from the 16th to early 19th centuries. The Bass Museum, 2121 Park Ave.; (305) 673-7530.
New York
Tuesday, May 6: For Masterpieces of Modern Design, the Met shows selections from its extensive 20th century collection, including works by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Marcel Breuer, Eliel Saarinen, Charles and Ray Eames, Isamu Noguchi, Verner Panton, Michael Graves, and others. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1000 Fifth Ave. at 82nd St.; (212) 535-7710.
San Francisco
Friday, May 2: Before the Industrial Revolution turned us onto synthetic blue pigments, artists and alchemists concocted the color using the woad plant. In this new exhibition at The Hive Gallery, four artists—-Ellen Fader, Judi Pettite, Miriam Fagan, and Jessica Serran—return to the source, exploring natural blue hues in their multi-media work with woad. The Hive Gallery, 301 Jefferson St., Oakland.
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What is Phase One of VERB? It's a collaborative pedagogy model. That means that architects, interns, designers, builders, students, professors, people considering architecture, and yes, even bored housewives can and should participate.
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Know of some others I can add here? Let me know. Have you already visited some of these places...or planning on it? Let me know and I will feature your story and your photos here!
I am starting a new kind of architecture school. Unlike most architecture schools, you wouldn't have to submit GRE scores or good grades or letters of recommendation. You wouldn't have to put the rest of your life on hold for 3 to 5 years. You wouldn't have to accrue tens of thousands of dollars in debt. At my architecture school, anyone could come for a few weeks and learn how to build a house with their own two hands. My teachers would take skills and concepts from some of these other workshops I've listed above... except classes would be held year-round to make it easy to fit into your schedule. I would have a number of different campuses around the country that would teach building designs appropriate to the local climate. And I need your help. Can you donate land for a campus? Can you dotate books for a library? Can you teach a workshop? Can you provide start-up capital? Let me know.
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