CRITICISM NOW

Graphic with title: Criticism Now and names of speakers.
Event Location

Piper Auditorium

Date & Time
Free and open to the public

This panel discussion brings together five of the most prominent architecture critics and writers from across the US to discuss the evolving role and future direction of criticism today.

Critics of the built environment have become an endangered species. Countless column inches are devoted to film, TV, music, theatre and books, yet the one discipline that no-one can escape goes woefully under-scrutinised. Ever fewer newspapers and magazines employ architecture critics, while the internet is awash with sponsored content and regurgitated press releases. In an underfunded media landscape, PR companies increasingly control the message, blocking probing eyes from access, and dictating who gets to publish, and for whom. Has criticism lost its way? How can we restore its urgency, engage new audiences, hold power to account, and shine a spotlight on the forces that are shaping the built environment, for better and worse?

Speakers

This event is a collaboration between the Loeb Fellowship, GSD, and MIT.

Speaker Bios and Selected Articles

Mark Lamster is the architecture critic of the Dallas Morning News, a Loeb Fellow (2017) at the GSD, and author of the biography of Philip Johnson, “The Man in the Glass House” (Little Brown, 2018). His next book, “Welcome to Paradox City,” a critical examination of Dallas architecture, will be published in August by Deep Vellum. 

Alexandra Lange is a journalist, design critic, author, and Loeb Fellow (2014) at the GSD. She received the 2025 Pulitzer Prize for Criticism and is the author of “Meet Me by the Fountain: An Inside History of the Mall” (Bloomsbury USA, 2022) and “The Design of Childhood: How the Material World Shapes Independent Kids” (Bloomsbury USA, 2018).

Thomas de Monchaux is an architect and writer. He is the architecture critic for n+1, and essayist in residence for The New York Review of Architecture (NYRA). He was the inaugural recipient of the Winterhouse Award for Design Writing and Criticism, among other honors. He has contributed to The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Atlantic, Log, and Vole Prochaine, a journal of animal rights. With Deborah Berke, he is the co-author of “Transform: Promising Places, Second Chances, and the Architecture of Transformational Change” (Monacelli Press, 2023), recording his ministry on behalf of radically adaptive reuse. He teaches at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation, in New York City where he currently lives. 

Anjulie Rao is a journalist and critic. Based in Chicago, much of her work is focused on issues in post-industrial cities, including housing, ‘revitalization’, and political change. Anjulie is a Lecturer at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, an Adjunct faculty member at the University of Illinois Chicago, and previously taught at the Illinois Institute of Technology. She was a columnist at ARCHITECT magazine, and her bylines can be found in Dwell, The Architect’s Newspaper,  The Architectural Review, The New York Review of Architecture, and Landscape Architecture Magazine, among others.

Mimi Zeiger is a Los Angeles-based critic and curator. She’s served as guest editor and editorial advisor to the Los Angeles Review of Architecture, co-curated the U.S. Pavilion at the 2018 Venice Architecture Biennale, is a MacDowell Fellow, and the recipient of L.A. Press Club National Arts & Entertainment Journalism awards for art and design criticism.

Oliver Wainwright is the architecture critic of the Guardian and a Loeb Fellow (2026) at the GSD. He trained as an architect and worked at the Mayor of London’s Architecture and Urbanism Unit, OMA in Rotterdam, and Muf Architecture/Art in London. His first book, “Inside North Korea” (Taschen, 2018), saw his photographs exhibited internationally, from the International Center for Photography in New York, to Seoul City Hall.

Harvard University welcomes individuals with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities. If you would like to request accommodations or have questions about the physical access provided, please contact the Public Programs Office at (617) 496-2414 or [email protected] in advance of your participation or visit. Requests for American Sign Language interpreters and/or CART providers should be made at least two weeks in advance. Please note that the University will make every effort to secure services, but that services are subject to availability.

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