The two men who controlled the architectural conversation in New York (and hence America and the world) for better than two decades have recently published collections of their criticism. Paul Goldberger and Herbert Muschamp — how different their voices and predilections, and yet how confounding each could be in his own way. Goldberger: the voice of the establishment. Muschamp: the glamour-obsessed cosmopolitan. My
final piece for ID magazine is a review of Building Up and Tearing Down, a collection of Goldberger's recent writings primarily from the New Yorker. Goldberger makes for easy reading, a pleasant companion to the architectural scene, and he's still going strong. Muschamp is gone now — he died of lung cancer in 2007—and it's fair to say the architectural world is reduced by his absence, even if I was never a fan of either his opinions or his prose or his stewardship of the Times's architectural coverage. Certainly, he made you pay attention, even if he set your eyes rolling. It's hard to imagine a critic holding anywhere near the kind of power over the profession he wielded in his prime. The posthumous publication of his collected writings, Hearts of the City, makes for a good opportunity to think about his tenure, as I do in
my review in the Los Angeles Times. Check 'em out.