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Kim Williams (architect)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kim Williams is an American architect, an independent scholar on the connections between architecture and mathematics, and a book publisher. She is the founder of the Nexus: Architecture and Mathematics conference series, the founder and co-editor-in-chief of Nexus Network Journal, and the author of several books on mathematics and architecture.[1][2]

Williams has a degree in architectural studies from the University of Texas at Austin, and is a licensed architect in New York.[1]

Books

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Williams is the author of:

  • Italian Pavements: Patterns in Space (Anchorage Press, 1997)
  • The Villas of Palladio (illustrated by Giovanni Giaconi, Princeton Architectural Press, 2003)

She is an editor, translator, and commentator of older works on architecture and mathematics including:

  • The Mathematical Works of Leon Battista Alberti (with Lionel March and Stephen R. Wassell, Birkhäuser, 2010)[3]
  • Daniele Barbaro's Vitruvius of 1567 (Birkhäuser, 2019)[4]

She is also the editor or co-editor of several collections of papers on architecture and mathematics, including several volumes of the Nexus conference proceedings[2] and:

  • Two Cultures: Essays in Honour of David Speiser (Birkhäuser, 2006)[5]
  • Crossroads: History of Science, History of Art: Essays by David Speiser (Birkhäuser, 2011)
  • Architecture and Mathematics from Antiquity to the Future, Volume I: Antiquity to the 1500s; Volume II: The 1500s to the future (with Michael J. Ostwald, Birkhäuser, 2015)[6]
  • Masonry Structures: Between Mechanics and Architecture (with Danila Aita and Orietta Pedemonte, Birkhäuser, 2015)

References

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  1. ^ a b "Kim Williams", The Editorial Board 2020, Nexus Network Journal, retrieved 2020-05-19
  2. ^ a b Malkevitch, Joseph (1997), "Book Review: Nexus: Architecture and Mathematics, edited by Kim Williams", Humanistic Mathematics Network Journal, 1 (16): 52–53, doi:10.5642/hmnj.199701.16.17 (review of the first Nexus conference proceedings)
  3. ^ Reviews of The Mathematical Works of Leon Battista Alberti:
  4. ^ Review of Daniele Barbaro's Vitruvius of 1567:
  5. ^ Reviews of Two Cultures:
  6. ^ Reviews of Architecture and Mathematics from Antiquity to the Future:
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