Born Ada Louise Landman in NYC, an only child in a middle-class Jewish family. Growing up in Manhattan, Huxtable loved strolling along the streets, fascinated by its building, such as the Grand Central Terminal, the Metropolitan Museum, and the Museum of Natural History. She studied art at Hunter College, graduating magna cum laude, and then architectural history at NYU Institute of Fine Arts. At the time, she worked in Bloomingdale’s furnishings department, where she met her soon-to-be husband, Garth Huxtable.
In 1946, at 25, Huxtable landed a job as an assistant curator of architecture and design at the Museum of Modern Art. After five years, she left her job to study Italian architecture in Italy for a year. Upon her return, she began writing as a contributing editor for various art and architectural journals. At the age of 37, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship, in which she examined the structural and design advances of American architecture.
In 1963, 42 years old Huxtable was hired as the first architecture critic at The New York Times, a position she held for almost 20 years. In her column, she wrote about new and old buildings, threatened buildings, and bad-designed buildings. She also mentioned emerging architects, architectural trends, movements, and exhibitions. Huxtable encouraged the everyday readers to look at buildings from a new perspective, not as an assembly of bricks and pilasters but as a public statement with history and meaning. Raising awareness of the city’s heritage, the urban environment, and civic engagement, she set the tone for modern architecture criticism, for which, at the age of 49, she was the first-ever to be awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism.
In 1981, at the age of 60, Huxtable received a MacArthur grant that allowed her in-depth research on subjects she was interested in, such as the development of the skyscraper, the negative impact of postmodernism building, and preservation vs. modernity. At 76, she returned to writing for the public as an architecture critic for The Wall Street Journal, publishing columns for the next 15 years.
Throughout her career, Huxtable was involved in various committees, serving as a fellow at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a member of the Architectural Selection and Building Design Committees for the Getty Center, Getty Villa, and as a Jury member for The Pritzker Architecture Prize. She published more than 10 books on architecture, including “Kicked a Building Lately?,” “Goodbye History,” “Hello Hamburger,” and a biography of Frank Lloyd Wright. Huxtable died in NYC at 91.
Ada Louise Huxtable | Charlie Rose
Architecture critic Ada Louise Huxtable
SUBSCRIBE to get the latest from Charlie Rose: http://bit.ly/CharlieRoseSUBSCRIBE
Connect with Charlie Rose Online:
Visit the Charlie Rose WEBSITE: http://bit.ly/CharlieRoseDotCom
Like Charlie Rose on FACEBOOK: http://bit.ly/CharlieRoseFacebook
Follow Charlie Rose on TWITTER: http://bit.ly/CharlieRoseTwitter
Follow Charlie Rose on INSTAGRAM: http://bit.ly/CharlieRoseInstagram
About Charlie Rose:
Emmy award winning journalist Charlie Rose has been praised as "one of America's premier interviewers." He is the host of Charlie Rose, the nightly PBS program that engages America's best thinkers, writers, politicians, athletes, entertainers, business leaders, scientists and other newsmakers. USA Today calls Charlie Rose, "TV's most addictive talk show." New York Newsday says, "Charlie's show is the place to get engaging, literate conversation... Bluntly, he is the best interviewer around today."
Ada Louise Huxtable | Charlie Rose
http://www.youtube.com/user/CharlieRose
This post is also available in:
Español
“I like old buildings that are intriguing and quite wonderful but don’t make the history books. What you discover is there’s a little group of people that have been admiring them quietly by themselves all along.”
“I like old buildings that are intriguing and quite wonderful but don’t make the history books. What you discover is there’s a little group of people that have been admiring them quietly by themselves all along.”
Fun Facts
- In 1959, she and her husband designed tableware for the new Four Seasons restaurant.
- In the late 1960-early 1970s, she was commemorated in several New Yorker cartoons.
- She was a leading figure in founding the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1965.
- Her oral biography is included in Lynn Gilbert's Particular Passions: Talk With Women Who Shaped Our Times.
- Her archive, which contains 93 boxes and 19 file drawers of manuscripts, documents, correspondence, and reports, was purchased by the Getty Research Institute.
- The Ada Louise Huxtable Prize for Contribution to Architecture is named in her honor.
Visit Her Landmark
Sorry, no records were found. Please adjust your search criteria and try again.
Sorry, unable to load the Maps API.
Ada Louise Huxtable | Charlie Rose
Architecture critic Ada Louise HuxtableSUBSCRIBE to get the latest from Charlie Rose: http://bit.ly/CharlieRoseSUBSCRIBE
Connect with Charlie Rose Online:
Visit the Charlie Rose WEBSITE: http://bit.ly/CharlieRoseDotCom
Like Charlie Rose on FACEBOOK: http://bit.ly/CharlieRoseFacebook
Follow Charlie Rose on TWITTER: http://bit.ly/CharlieRoseTwitter
Follow Charlie Rose on INSTAGRAM: http://bit.ly/CharlieRoseInstagram
About Charlie Rose:
Emmy award winning journalist Charlie Rose has been praised as "one of America's premier interviewers." He is the host of Charlie Rose, the nightly PBS program that engages America's best thinkers, writers, politicians, athletes, entertainers, business leaders, scientists and other newsmakers. USA Today calls Charlie Rose, "TV's most addictive talk show." New York Newsday says, "Charlie's show is the place to get engaging, literate conversation... Bluntly, he is the best interviewer around today."
Ada Louise Huxtable | Charlie Rose
http://www.youtube.com/user/CharlieRose
This post is also available in:
Español