Victoria Meyers

Architect / United States / Hanrahan Meyers Architects (hMa)

Victoria Meyers’s Book List

I selected my books for many reasons. Some books have followed me around for a very long time (I started reading Frank Lloyd Wright’s writings when I was seven or eight.). Some books on the list were given to me by relatives whom I was close to (The Poetry of Robert Frost, given to me by my aunt). Complete Poems and Selected Letters of Michelangelo catalogues a life that I can relate to—suffering because of the design process! Some books got me through dark times with good advice, others with their amazing humor (John Cage and Andy Warhol).

5 books
Michelangelo Buonarroti
Creighton Gilbert Translator
Robert N. Linscott Editor

Not that I see myself as anywhere near his equal, but I can relate to his struggles. I know how it feels to ruin dinner with your family because you’re struggling with clients who have not paid, or who demand too much. I know how it feels to write notes to clients, asking to be paid, or asking for more time. It all makes perfect sense to me, and is somehow very reassuring to think that Michelangelo struggled with so many of the mundane aspects of design that plague me as well.

Frank Lloyd Wright
Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer Editor
Introduction by Kenneth Frampton

I followed many of the bits of advice given by Wright in the five volumes of his collected writings and elsewhere, including getting an undergraduate degree in civil engineering (Wright never studied architecture. Instead, he took courses in engineering.)

John Pawson

I see this as a perfect architectural monograph. It uses few words, and very clearly describes a series of attitudes toward form, materiality, and space.

Robin Evans

A great set of essays. A must to have on your shelf if you plan to teach architecture. Each essay renews your vision about the true basics of design. What is a dome? What is proportion? Robin Evans lays it all out, with engaging prose, and doesn’t miss any of the relevant points. He’s a genius.

Le Corbusier

What can I say? Le Corbusier is “the man.” I regard this book as a primer for the future architect. There is one part of the book that has always stood out for me. Le Corbusier advises young architects to travel to Rome, and to get a “‘letter of permission” to pass through the Vatican Gates, in order to see the back of St. Peters (“the only place where you can see Michelangelo’s handiwork”). I did so, and it blew me away. The book gives a lot of great advice that you can’t get anywhere else.

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