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vidler@humnet.ucla.edu
Anthony
Vidler received his B.A. in Architecture and
Fine Arts, and his Diploma in Architecture from Cambridge University,
England, and his Ph.D. from Delft University of Technology, the
Netherlands. Vidler was a member of the Princeton University School of
Architecture faculty from 1965–93, during which time he served as the
Chair of the Ph.D. Committee, and Director of the Program in European
Cultural Studies. He was appointed the William R. Kenan Jr. Chair of
Architecture in 1990. In 1993 he took up a position as professor and
Chair of the Department of Art History at UCLA, with a joint
appointment in the School of Architecture from 1997.
Dean
Vidler was appointed Acting Dean of the Irwin S. Chanin School of
Architecture of The Cooper Union in 2001, and has served as Dean of the
School since 2002. He is a historian and critic of modern and
contemporary architecture, specializing in French architecture from the
Enlightenment to the present.
He has
received awards from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National
Endowment for the Humanities, and was a Getty Scholar, at the Getty
Center for the History of Art and the Humanities in 1992–93. His
publications include The Writing of
the Walls: Architectural Theory in
the Late Enlightenment (Princeton Architectural Press, 1987), Claude-Nicolas Ledoux:
Architecture and Social Reform at the End of the
Ancien Regime (MIT Press, 1990), The Architectural Uncanny: Essays in
the Modern Unhomely (MIT Press, 1992), Antoine Grumbach (Centre Georges
Pompidou, 1996), and Warped Space:
Architecture and Anxiety in Modern
Culture (MIT Press, 2000).
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