Mitchell Schwarzer

Mitchell Schwarzer is an architectural historian who writes on the urban and suburban built environment with attention to issues of mobility, perceptual psychology, media, consumerism, and memory. He is Professor of Architectural History and Chair of the Department of Visual Studies at California College of the Arts. His wife Marjorie is a professor of museum studies.

Biography

Mitchell was born in 1957 to Sigmund and Genia Schwarzer, Polish Holocaust survivors, at the Norton Air Force Base hospital in San Bernardino, California, where his father was Chief of Pediatrics. His family then moved to an apartment in Queens, New York, and eventually a ranch house in Manhasset Hills on Long Island. He attended Denton Avenue Elementary School, Shelter Rock Junior High School, and graduated from Herricks High School in 1975. Subsequently, he received his BA from Washington University in 1979 (including a junior year abroad program in Florence, Italy), and his Masters in City Planning from Harvard University in 1981.

Upon graduation, Schwarzer worked for an environmental consulting firm in the San Francisco Bay Area and later the San Francisco Department of City Planning. In 1986, he began doctoral study in the History, Theory and Criticism of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and received his Ph.D. in 1991. While researching his dissertation on Adolf Loos he lived for a year as a Fulbright scholar in Vienna, Austria.

Schwarzer's first academic position was at the University of Illinois at Chicago, where he taught at the art history department from 1991-1995. He began full-time teaching at California College of the Arts in 1996, and co-founded the school's Masters Program in Visual Criticism (now called Visual and Critical Studies) with visual artist, art historian and critic, M. Celeste Connor, Ph.D.. He has taught lecture classes on the history of architecture and art as well as seminars on architectural, urban, and landscape theory, aesthetics, cultural criticism, the avant garde, visual perception, and film and literature of the city. He has lectured widely in the United States and given talks in Austria, China, the Czech Republic, Denmark, and Great Britain.

Books

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