Mary McLeod: Eugene J. Mackey Jr. Lecture
Mary McLeod will deliver the Eugene J. Mackey Jr. Lecture as part of the Sam Fox School’s Public Lecture Series at WashU.
About Mary McLeod
Mary McLeod is a professor of architecture at Columbia University, where she teaches architecture history and theory. She has also taught at Yale University, Harvard University, the University of Kentucky, the University of Miami, and the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies. She received earned her undergraduate, master’s and doctoral degrees from Princeton University. Her research and publications have focused on the history of the modern movement and on contemporary architecture theory, examining issues concerning the connections between architecture and ideology. She is co-editor of “Kenneth Frampton: Conversations, Architecture, Criticism, Ideology,” and “Architecture Reproduction,” and is the editor of and contributor to the book “Charlotte Perriand: An Art of Living.” She also initiated and helped curate the exhibition “Charlotte Perriand: Interior Equipment,” held at the Urban Center in New York. Presently, she is co-editing a website on pioneering American women architects for the Beverly Willis Architectural Foundation. Her articles have appeared in journals such as Journal of Architecture, Assemblage, Oppositions, Art Journal, AA Files, JSAH, Casabella, Art Journal, Harvard Design Magazine, and Lotus, as well as other books and anthologies, such as “Women in Scandinavian Landscape Architecture: Building Collaborative and Transnational Feminist Histories,” “An Architectural Exhibition: Case Plečnik,” “Buone Nuove: donne in architettura /Good News: Women in Architecture,” “Denise Scott Brown: In Other Eyes,” “Le Corbusier and Ando: Vol. 2: Le Corbusier,” “Modern Architecture and the Lifeworld: Essays in Honor of Kenneth Frampton,” “Complexity and Contradiction at Fifty,” “Food and the City,” “Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes;” “Architecture School,” “The Sex of Architecture,” “Architecture in Fashion,” “Architecture of the Everyday,” “Architecture and Feminism,” “The Pragmatist Imagination,” “The State of Architecture,” “Fragments: Architecture and the Unfinished,” “Architecture Theory since 1968,” “Oppositions Reader,” “Le Parole dell’Architettura,” and “Modern Women: Women Artists at The Museum of Modern Art.” She has received several fellowships and awards, including a Docomomo USA Advocacy Award of Excellence, Brunner Award, Fulbright Fellowship, NEH award, and grants from New York Council of the Arts and the Graham Foundation. She was named a Fellow of the Society of Architectural Historians in 2020.