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Paul Goldberger (born December 4, 1950) [2][3] is an American author, architecture critic and lecturer — widely known as contributing editor at Vanity Fair, [4] architectural critic for the New York Times (1997-) and columnist of Sky Line for The New Yorker. [5]
Paul Goldberger, who the Huffington Post has called “the leading figure in architecture criticism,” is now a Contributing Editor at Vanity Fair. From 1997 through 2011 he served as the Architecture Critic for The New Yorker, where he wrote the magazine’s celebrated “Sky Line” column.
Nov 7, 2012 · National Building Museum and Metropolis Magazine contributor Andrew Caruso takes you “inside the design mind” of Pulitzer Prize-winning architecture critic Paul Goldberger. It’s rare to...
- Karissa Rosenfield
May 1, 2024 · Pulitzer Prize-winner Goldberger served as the in-house architecture critic for The New York Times in the 1970s and '80s during the zenith of postmodernism. He spoke to Dezeen about the changing...
Paul Goldberger is the New School's Joseph Urban Professor of Design and the former Architecture Critic for both The New Yorker and The New York Times, where in 1984 his architecture criticism was awarded the Pulitzer Prize.
Jun 6, 2023 · The sociological description of 1970s Soviet activist life that Paul Goldberg layers onto his new novel, “The Dissident,” is as thick, gleaming and rich as a slab of fatback on rye.
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Jul 11, 2023 · Introducing Paul Goldberg at Politics and Prose in Washington, DC, recently during the launch of Goldberg’s latest novel, The Dissident, moderator Andrew Weiss described the book as being “like a Coen Brothers directing of a Bond film.” He was serious.