In its mood and subject matter, Content reflects recent
shifts in geo-politics, particularly since 9-11. The book’s content
follows Koolhaas’s expanding interests, mixing architecture with
politics, history, technology, and sociology. Its subjects are diverse:
Martha Stewart is interviewed in one section; the history of African communist
radio is charted in another. An anthropological study of subcultures in
Germany’s Ruhr Valley is followed by proposals for the 2010 Shanghai
World Expo. Topics are arranged according to geography: the book begins
in San Francisco and travels eastwards, finally ending in Tokyo. On the
way, time is spent in Brazil, Nigeria, Portugal, Russia, and China, among
other places.
At a time when the profession is growing increasingly
introverted, Content reconnects architecture with the outside world.
The editors:
Rem Koolhaas is a co-founder of the Office for Metropolitan Architecture.
Having worked as a journalist and script writer before becoming an architect,
in 1978 he published Delirious New York, a retroactive Manifesto for Manhattan.
In 1995, his book S,M,L,XL summarized the work of OMA and established
connections of contemporary society and architecture. Amongst many international
awards and exhibitions he received the Pritzker Prize (2000) and the Praemium
Imperiale (2003).
Brendan McGetrick is a writer and editor from the United
States. Before starting Content, he collaborated with Rem Koolhaas and
AMO on a special issue of Wired magazine. He is a regular contributor
to several magazines and is currently working on a new book about record
collecting.