Städel Museum, Schaumainkai 63, 60596 Frankfurt am Main
Öffnungszeiten: Di–So, 10–18 Uhr; Do, 10–21 Uhr
Eröffnung: Dienstag, 15. Juli 2025, 19–22 Uhr
Heute
Ongoing
Sommersemester 2025
Information, 22. April – 25. Juli 2025
Demnächst
Overture – Absolvent*innenausstellung
Ausstellung, 15. Juli – 10. August 2025, 19:00
Ana Janevski: Looping, Relaying and Echoing. Three Curatorial Strategies
Vortrag, 16. Juli 2025, 19:00
Tanya Lukin Linklater: _structural_flex_
Vortrag, 8. Juli 2025, 19:00
Florence Jung: Doing nothing?
Vortrag, 24. Juni 2025, 19:00
Rabih Mroué: Shot/Counter Shot. Rethinking the Reverse
Vortrag, 17. Juni 2025, 19:00
Adir Jan & Emrah Gökmen: An den Ufern des Munzur, an den Ufern des Murat
Konzert, 12. Juni 2025, 20:00
Miloš Trakilović: Love Songs & War Machines
Vortrag, 10. Juni 2025, 19:00
Anna Roberta Goetz: 36. Bienal de São Paulo. Not All Travellers Walk Roads / Of Humanity as Practice
Vortrag, 3. Juni 2025, 19:00
Jimmy Robert
Vortrag, 27. Mai 2025, 19:00
Klein: No Degree, No Budget, No Problem
Vortrag (20.5.) Konzert (21.5.), 20. – 21. Mai 2025
Julian Irlinger: Reanimation and Reconstruction
Vortrag, 13. Mai 2025, 19:00
İmran Ayata & Bülent Kullukçu: Songs of Gastarbeiter
Music Lecture, 8. Mai 2025, 19:00
Enzo Camacho & Ami Lien: Langit Lupa (Heaven Earth)
Filmvorführung (5.5.) Vortrag (6.5.), 5. – 6. Mai 2025, 19:00
Helen Marten: Animal Hours
Vortrag, 29. April 2025, 19:00
Bewerbung: Masterstudiengang Curatorial Studies – Theorie – Geschichte – Kritik
Bewerbung, 10. April – 31. Mai 2025
Vorlesungsfreie Zeit Frühjahr 2025
Information, 14. Februar – 21. April 2025
Water Cooler Talks 2025
Veranstaltung, 8. – 9. Februar 2025
Rundgang 2025
Ausstellung, 7. – 9. Februar 2025, 10:00–20:00
Trisha Donnelly
Vortrag, 30. Januar 2025, 19:00
Kerstin Brätsch: Parasite Painting
Vortrag, 28. Januar 2025, 19:00
Emma Enderby: Curating in and out of Place
Vortrag, 14. Januar 2025, 19:00

Michael Young: Close Attention
Vortrag Architektur Klasse
Michael Young: Close Attention
Donnerstag, 2. Juni 2017, 19 Uhr, Aula
One of the responsibilities of the discipline of architecture concerns the aesthetics of the background of reality. Architecture designs the objects and atmospheres that we typically engaged habitually in a state of distraction. This background of the everyday is typically what an architecture of novelty seeks to destroy through the introduction of a strong formal difference between the new and old. But, what if the more political position was to estrange the background. Such a project would require a different aesthetic focus, less attuned to a "close reading" than to thresholds of interest that spark "close attention". In this lecture, historical examples in art, architecture, and cinema will be discussed in relation to the recent work of his architectural practice.
Michael Young is an architect and educator practicing in New York City where he is a founding partner of the architectural design studio Young & Ayata. Young & Ayata were awarded a Design Vanguard Award from Architectural Record for 2016. In 2015 they received a first place prize to design the new Bauhaus Museum in Dessau, Germany. In 2014 they received the Young Architects Prize from the Architectural League of New York, and were finalists for the MoMA Young Architects Program at the Istanbul Modern.
Michael is currently an Assistant Professor at the Cooper Union. In the Fall of 2016 he was the Louis I. Kahn Visiting Assistant Professor at Yale University. He has previously taught design studios and seminars at Princeton, SCI-Arc, Yale, Columbia, Syracuse, Pratt, Cornell and Innsbruck University. His work has been exhibited recently in New York, Los Angeles, Rotterdam, Istanbul, Milan, Chicago, Barcelona, and Princeton. Michael received his Master's Degree from Princeton University and a Bachelor of Architecture from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo.
Vortrag findet in englischer Sprache statt.