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Unpacking My Library: Architects and Their Books »

Book cover image of Unpacking My Library: Architects and Their Books by Jo Steffens

Authors: Jo Steffens (Editor), Walter Benjamin
ISBN-13: 9780300158939, ISBN-10: 0300158939
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Yale University Press
Date Published: November 2009
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Jo Steffens

Jo Steffens is director of Urban Center Books and editor of Block by Block: Jane Jacobs and the Future of New York City.

Book Synopsis

What does a library say about the mind of its owner? How do books map the intellectual interests, curiosities, tastes, and personalities of their readers? What does the collecting of books have in common with the practice of architecture? Unpacking My Library provides an intimate look at the personal libraries of twelve of the world’s leading architects, alongside conversations about the significance of books to their careers and lives.

 

Photographs of bookshelvesdisplaying well-loved and rare volumes, eclectic organizational schemes, and the individual touches that make a bookshelf one’s ownprovide an evocative glimpse of their owner’s personal life. Each architect also presents a reading list of top ten influential titles, from architectural history to theory to fiction and nonfiction, that serves as a personal philosophy of literature and history, and advice on what every young architect, scholar, and lover of architecture should read.

 

An inspiring cross-section of notable libraries, this beautiful book celebrates the arts of reading and collecting.

 

Unpacking My Library: Architects and Their Books features the libraries of:

 

Stan Allen

Henry Cobb

Liz Diller & Ric Scofidio

Peter Eisenman

Michael Graves

Steven Holl

Toshiko Mori

Michael Sorkin

Bernard Tschumi

Todd Williams & Billie Tsien

 

Peter Eisenman’s Recommended Titles:

 

Robert Musil, The Man Without Qualities

Le Corbusier, Vers une Architecture

Thomas Pynchon, Gravity’s Rainbow

Robert Venturi, Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture

Rem Koolhaas, Delirious New York

Jacques Derrida, Of Grammatology

Andrea Palladio, The Four Books on Architecture

Walter Benjamin, Illuminations

James Joyce, Finnegans Wake

William Faulkner, Light in August

 

The Barnes & Noble Review

In 2008, there was a profile of Louis Auchincloss -- a lion in undeserved winter -- in The New Yorker. While fascinating for devotees of the novelist-critic and of the New York literary life, it was the photo that gripped. Auchincloss was posed in his Upper East Side apartment in front of some bookcases. The bibliophile could thrill to the recognition of certain volumes and just about deduce titles and sets reflecting a lifetime's engagement with James and Wharton and New York City. It was a delicious morsel that brought me as close to Auchincloss as anything in the profile.

Such voyeurism is at the heart of Unpacking My Library, which examines in detailed photos the libraries of 12 contemporary New York–based architects. In 2006, Jo Steffens heard an architectural historian give a talk about packing and unpacking her books upon her first move to New York City. It gave Steffens the idea of idea of discussing books and collecting with architects and shooting pictures of their libraries. Conceived as an exhibition for Urban Center Books -- the architecture and design-oriented bookshop at the Municipal Arts Society of New York -- it has now become a book titled after (and including the text of Walter Benjamin's 1931 lecture about the power of individual volumes over the collector: "Every passion borders on the chaotic, but the collector's passion borders on the chaos of memories."

Steffens documents the libraries of Stan Allen, Henry Cobb, Liz Diller & Ric Scofidio, Peter Eisenman, Michael Graves, Steven Holl, Toshiko Mori, Michael Sorkin, Bernard Tschumi, and Todd Williams & Billie Tsien. Each architect (or pair of partners) is given a chapter featuring pictures of their library, a short interview, tight photographic details of specific shelves, and, most wonderfully surprising, a list of the subject's ten favorite books. Receiving multiple mentions are not, as I expected, works by Sigfried Giedion or Palladio or Robert Venturi, but Finnegans Wake, Moby-Dick, Light in August, and Gravity's Rainbow -- the last being the only book chosen three times.

Each chapter is a deeply personal intrusion -- if in no way an oppressive one -- into the subject's artistic life. The books expose the architects' personalities nearly as much as their built projects. I have never cared for Michael Graves's architecture; its strange mélange of historical elements has struck me as cartoonish far more than elegant. But his taste in books makes me think I should look again. His library is an endless flow of Gombrich, deep and broad selections on Corot and Rome, and seemingly every book about Morandi. On a shelf mostly taken up by catalogs of Graves's own work is a beautiful edition of the Lutyens Memorial -- the three Country Life–produced volumes documenting the architecture of Sir Edwin Lutyens, a most unexpected influence.

It's a typically revealing moment of this book. As Steffens notes in her introduction, "As you browse the books shown in these pages, a familiar title will spark recognition; an idea or conversation may be recalled." At 8 inches by 5.5, the book is marvelously handle-able, and the best stocking stuffer ever for the bibliophile. --Robert Messenger

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