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Eisenman, Peter D.
(b Newark, NJ, 12 Aug 1932). American architect, theorist, writer and teacher. He graduated from Cornell University, Ithaca, NY (BArch 1955), and worked for Percival Goodman in New York (19578) and the Architects Collaborative in Cambridge, MA (1959). He then went to Columbia University, New York (March 1960), and the University of Cambridge, England, where he completed his PhD in the theory of design (1963) and also taught (196063). Back in the USA, he was involved in several unexecuted competition entries and projects (19635) with Michael Graves and began to teach (19637) at Princeton University, NJ, moving to Cooper Union, New York, in 1967. In that year he became the founding director of the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies, New York, which became a major centre for exhibition and debate in the architectural profession; he also established and edited its influential journal Oppositions (197382), to which he contributed many writings.
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