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David Macaulay relives the winding and sometimes surreal journey toward the completion of Rome Antics, his illustrated homage to the historic city.
21m 34s |
a year ago
TED: Ideas worth spreading
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Library of Congress
David Macaulay’s early interest in how objects are constructed led to experiments in creating books. As author of the international best-seller 'The Way Things Work: From Levers to Lasers, Cars ...
28m 30s |
5 years ago
RESEARCH CHANNEL
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Only On The Web: Steve Hartman talks with David Macaulay, author of "The Way Things Work," about how he makes simple things fascinating and complicated concepts understandable.
2m 25s |
3 years ago
CBS News
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...Empire ...e "Sunshine State" features world famous attractions including Disney World , Sea World , Busch Gardens and the Kennedy Space Center , Miami, St. Petersburg , and Key West are also ...
4 years ago
TravelVideoStore
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http://www.ted.com Despite a love and fascination for Rome dating to his days as an architecture student, David Macaulay found the path to his book Rome Antics took some unusual (and frustrating) ...
21m 35s |
a year ago
YouTube
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This presentation feels akin to a new Disney ride: During your tour inside David Macaulay’s imagination, prepare to soar over Rome’s great monuments, raft within the human body’s circulatory system, and dismantle and rebuild the Empire State Building. Don’t expect much in the way of explanation or background, but simply sit back and enjoy as this master illustrator rolls out sketches and storylines from some of his greatest published and unpublished hits. Macaulay delves into the structure beneath the built and the biological. But as detailed and accurate as his examinations may be, he embraces the whimsical and fantastic. He admits to loving ruins, so creates his own – “It makes one almost nostalgic.” He imagines an archaeologist 2000 years hence exploring the ruins of a motel, exhuming a pair of skeletons on a bed watching a dead TV, described by Macaulay as “deceased on a platform facing the sacred altar.” These flights of fancy come whizzing at us so fast, it’s hard to keep up. Macaulay takes us on a tour of an alphabet book constructed of landscapes-- cows in a field and railway tracks, shadows and reflections. Ducks flying are arrayed as a melody from Handel’s Water Music . The book “died at F…More than anything, the world needs another alphabet book!” Asked to do drawings for a book on the brain, Macaulay decided to build a giant brain that would be fun “to wander through.” He recounts, “Hippocampuses are nice and shiny and smooth, it would be fun to slide down a few times, enlivening the brain experience.” Macaulay never loses sight of his goals, though. “Making things big seemed an ideal way of reacquainting people with the mundane and familiar.” His drawings help him, and his readers, understand the structure, properties, and forces underlying organic and inorganic things in the world, whether zippers or can openers, ancient sailing vessels, digestive systems, or entire cities. His ongoing fascination with Rome has led to multiple attempts to unpeel its historic and architectural layers. A pigeon swoops through the city, revealing perspectives of the Pantheon and Rome’s treasures only a bird could see. Macaulay likes “twisting and distorting to reinforce a sense of movement.” Another approach employs a man on a scooter, providing a street-level view, fragmentary, and yet another uses a television repair man, who shows us details in buildings, “the way stones are cut, old and new.” Next stop for Macaulay: a book on the Earth and how it works. ABOUT THE SPEAKER: David Macaulay is the author of many books, including the architectural series, Cathedral (1973), Pyramid (1975), Castle (1977), and Mosque (2003). His celebrated book, The Way Things Work (1988), shows the reader how things are made, but conveys complex technical information as to how and why they function. He has also produced many picture books, including Black and White (1990.) Other books include City: A Story of Roman Planning and Construction (1974), Underground (1976), Unbuilding (1980), Mill (1983), Ship (1993), Building Big (2000), and Angelo (2002), among many others. His work has been featured in a PBS mini-series as well as in museum exhibitions in the U.S. and Europe. Macaulay received a B.Arch. (1969) from the Rhode Island School of Design. He worked as an interior designer, high school art teacher and instructor in RISD's Department of Illustration. Macaulay has earned a host of awards: the Caldecott Medal and Honor Awards, the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, the Christopher Award, an American Institute of Architects Medal, the Washington Children's Book Guild Nonfiction Award, the Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis, and a Dutch Silver Slate Pencil Award. He was a two-time nominee for the Hans Christian Andersen Award and is the recipient of the Bradford Washburn Award, presented by the Museum of Science in Boston to an outstanding contributor to science. Macaulay's MacArthur profile NOTES ON THE VIDEO (Time Index): Video length is 1:23:22. Tom Levenson , Professor of Science Writing, introduces the event and David Macaulay . At 4:25, Macaulay b
1h 23m 22s |
a year ago
MIT World
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