Rafael Moneo to deliver Wallenberg Lecture
Rafael Moneo to deliver Wallenberg Lecture ANN ARBOR—Rafael Moneo, internationally renowned architect, will deliver the 2001Raoul Wallenberg Lecture at 6 p.m., Monday (
[North campus map, Art & Architecture Building lower center]
Moneo is the Josp Lluis Sert Professor of Architecture at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. His lecture is free and open to the public.
A practicing architect, Moneo’s projects include the Logrono Town Hall, Museum of Roman Art in Merida, the transformation of the Villahermosa Palace in Madrid, the Pilar & Joan Miro Foundation in Palma de Mallorca, and the Davis Art Museum at Wellesley College. Moneo has received the Gold Medal from the Spanish government, the Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the Swedish Schock Prize on the Visual Arts. In 1996, he received the Pritzker Prize and the UIA Gold Medal.
The Wallenberg Lecture Series honors Raoul Wallenberg for his legendary acts of compassion and celebrates architecture and urban planning as a human social art. A 1935 graduate of the U-M College of Architecture and Urban Planning, Wallenberg has been called one of the century’s most outstanding heroes. As first secretary of the Swedish delegation in Budapest in 1944, he is credited with saving more than 100,000 Jews from death at the hands of the Nazis. The following year, Wallenberg was captured by the Russians. Although his fate is unknown, rumors persist that he is held in Russia even today.
For directions and more information, call (734) 764-1300.
Rafael MoneoNorth campus mapJosp Lluis Sert Professor of ArchitectureMuseum of Roman Art