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  1. Ada Louise Huxtable (née Landman; March 14, 1921 – January 7, 2013) was an American architecture critic and writer on architecture. Huxtable established architecture and urban design journalism in North America and raised the public's awareness of the urban environment. [1]

  2. Mar 13, 2019 · Ada Louise Huxtable made history as the first full-time architecture critic at a US newspaper when she joined the New York Times, and was later awarded the first Pulitzer Prize for Criticism in 1970

  3. Jan 8, 2013 · Ada Louise Huxtable, who pioneered modern architectural criticism in the pages of The New York Times, celebrating buildings that respected human dignity and civic history — and memorably ...

  4. Documenting the long and distinguished career of Ada Louise Huxtable (1921–2013), this archive is an essential addition to the Getty Research Institute's collections in the areas of modern architecture, urbanism, and related critical writing.

  5. Jan 18, 2013 · Huxtable, who died of cancer on January 7 at 91, brought architecture criticism visibility and influence at a crucial time. In the boom years after World War II, the banality of commercial Modernism, the demolition

  6. Jan 8, 2013 · Ada Louise Huxtable, the architecture critic whose work shaped both The New York Times and New York City, has died at 91. The Wall Street Journal, where Huxtable wrote her final article in December, reports that she died at Manhattan's Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.

  7. Mar 8, 2018 · Ada Louise Huxtable pioneered architectural criticism as we know it, helping to shape the way the public thought about and discussed architecture in the 20 th Century. Huxtable believed that people were “entitled to good architecture,” an entitlement for which she proudly fought.

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