Alastair Gordon is an award-winning critic and author who has written regularly about the built environment for the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. His critically acclaimed books include Naked Airport, Weekend Utopia and Spaced Out. He teaches critical writing at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design, and is Editorial Director of Gordon de Vries Studio, an imprint that publishes books about the human environment.
Born an orphan, Bartholomew Voorsanger became a celebrated architect. After years of practice, he only recently set out to publish a monograph. Through the process, he came to the realization that his body of work represents resolutions to his life's struggles. AP spoke to Voorsanger about his turbulent life as a pivotal infl uence on the work featured in the riveting architectural monograph: Unfolded How Architecture Saved My Life by Alistair Gordon. The monograph was presumed fi wished when author Alistair Gordon called Voorsanger asking for something to write on the back cover. That was far from the case, as both author and subject were stunned to discover this mini bio would become the heart of the book. I didn't interlink these pieces, but Alistair did, says Voorsanger, who provided details of his life in context of where he was at in completing notable projects. Gordon immediately wished to integrate these life stories. You could have sunk without it through all these storms, Voorsanger recalls Gordon saying. The narrative enriches the context of the monograph as when good design is set o by a simple, powerful gesture. For me, at a certain level, I don't care about my life's narrative, because it's basically past. What I do care about is architecture: the projects that came of my various personal disasters. --rchitecture of an Optimist