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Michael Meredith Associate Professor Department of Architecture |
Profile
Michael Meredith is Associate Professor of Architecture at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design. He teaches in the architecture core design studio sequence. His professional practice engages interdisciplinary discourses, ranging from art to technology, producing a spectrum of design work which includes furniture, products, sound, exhibition design, speculative architecture projects and residences in New York, Massachusetts, Ontario, Texas, and California. He was a finalist for the design of the Pentagon 9-11 memorial and the PS1/MoMA Young Architects competition. Recent projects include the Le Corbusier Puppet Theater in collaboration with Pierre Huyghe, artist studio in Upstate NY, a proposal for the PS1/MoMA Young Architects Program invited competition, the Ballroom Marfa Drive-In , and the UTEC non-profit Teen Center in Lowell , MA. In 1998, he was a winner of the Young Architects Competition at the Architectural League of New York. His design work has been published in numerous periodicals including A+U, Architecture, Architectural Record, Azure, Casa Brutus, Competitions, Mark, McSweeney's, the New York Times, Oculus, Wallpaper, and Surface, books including Weaving (ed. Toshiko Mori), VERB: Natures, and featured in exhibitions at Cooper Hewitt, Columbia University, and Henry Urbach Architecture. His writings have appeared in A+U, Artforum, Domus, Perspecta (upcoming), and Praxis. He has produced two DVDs about architecture, Beyond the Harvard Box: Interviews and Notes for Those Beginning the Discipline of Architecture. Meredith previously taught architecture at the University of Michigan, where he was awarded the Muschenheim Fellowship, and the University of Toronto, where he was the co-recipient of a Canadian Foundation for Innovation grant. He received his BArch from Syracuse University, and his MArch with distinction from the Harvard Graduate School of Design, where he was also awarded the Frederick Sheldon Traveling Fellowship. In 2003, he was a resident at the Atlantic Center for the Arts, and in 2000, he completed a residency at the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas. |


