23. de gener 2024
Photo: Elman Studio; all images courtesy of National Building Museum
The National Building Museum in Washington, DC, opened Building Stories on January 21. Six years in the making, the ambitious multigenerational exhibition curated by Leonard Marcus, an expert on children's literature, will be on display for ten years.
Back in 2009, Urban Center Books, the now-defunct bookstore of the Municipal Art Society in New York City, hosted the exhibition Unpacking My Library, featuring displays of book lists compiled by notable architects, including Peter Eisenman, Steven Holl, Michael Sorkin, Bernard Tschumi, and Tod Williams and Billie Tsien. The top-ten lists featured books that inspired the architects across their lives, so many of them tended to be dense books of architectural theory, philosophy, urbanism, and the like. But Billie Tsien, refreshingly, included a children's book: Harold and the Purple Crayon, the 1955 picture book by Crockett Johnson that follows a young boy, Harold, as he goes on a nighttime adventure enabled by the purple crayon he wields. The inclusion of that book led me, a new father at the time, to get the book and start reading it to my daughter. The simple premise and imaginative storytelling express to kids how the world around them is made up of objects but also how they can imagine and create those objects and, in turn, shape the world around them. Logically, given its premise, Harold and the Purple Crayon is one of the 150 books included in Building Stories at the National Building Museum. Below is a short visual tour through Building Stories — an exhibition meant to be enjoyed by children and parents and other grown-ups alike.