Rating:  Summary: I'll Take Manhattan Review: "Manhattan Unfurled" is a beautiful and unique look at the island of Manhattan. Deceptively simple in appearance, one is quite amazed as the Manhattan skyline truly unfurls in two continuous pen-and-ink drawings stretching 22 feet each! If you do not have the room to fully open it up, you can flip 24 accordion-style pages. Work your way up and down Manhattan's East and West sides, from small collections of apartment buildings to dense clusters of skyscrapers. It took Matteo Pericoli, an Italian-born architect and illustrator, two-and-a-half years to create this incredible work of art. Also included in a quite nice heavy cardboard slipcase is an essay by Paul Goldberger (an architecture critic for The New Yorker) and a handy guide pointing out famous (and not so famous) landmarks for those who may not be intimately familiar with one of the world's great skylines.Although published in October 2001, the book of course features Pericoli's rendition of the World Trade Center. While it is bittersweet and startling to see the towers even today, "Manhattan Unfurled" ultimately becomes (albeit unintentionally) a wonderful and loving tribute to the skyline that many of us will never forget. Amid all the discussion of the removal of the WTC towers from movies and television, some have said in doing so is like removing a grandparent from a family photo. Just because they are gone, does not mean we should forget or tuck them away. Pericoli's work will certainly be a treasure to look back on for many years to come. A great gift for your favorite New Yorker, art lover, artist or architect in your life -- even if that happens to be you!
Rating:  Summary: Visual Music Review: "Manhattan Unfurled" presents a pen-and-ink line drawing of the island's amazing skyline, done before the September 11th tragedy and therefore all the more affecting in the magnificent exclamation marks of grandeur provided by the World Trade Center's Twin Towers. To open this book, page by page or at its full 22-foot length, is to see the improvisational, jazz-like rhythm of the city's architecture as viewed from its rivers and opposite shores, with small riffs where the island's profile is low (at the northern tip and along parts of the lower West Side and opper East Side)and symphonic climaxes in Midtown and in the financial district. This is clearly a labor of love for this young Italian-born architect--the detail of the buildings is fine and exact, the waves of the water mythical, fabulous, the ad-hoc nature of the city's real-estate development unified by a comprehending sensibility. I guarantee you that you've never seen anything like it. And now, more than ever, it is a tribute to the tough, whimsical grandeur of an island rocked by tragedy but ultimately indomitable.
Rating:  Summary: I'll Take Manhattan Review: "Manhattan Unfurled" is a beautiful and unique look at the island of Manhattan. Deceptively simple in appearance, one is quite amazed as the Manhattan skyline truly unfurls in two continuous pen-and-ink drawings stretching 22 feet each! If you do not have the room to fully open it up, you can flip 24 accordion-style pages. Work your way up and down Manhattan's East and West sides, from small collections of apartment buildings to dense clusters of skyscrapers. It took Matteo Pericoli, an Italian-born architect and illustrator, two-and-a-half years to create this incredible work of art. Also included in a quite nice heavy cardboard slipcase is an essay by Paul Goldberger (an architecture critic for The New Yorker) and a handy guide pointing out famous (and not so famous) landmarks for those who may not be intimately familiar with one of the world's great skylines. Although published in October 2001, the book of course features Pericoli's rendition of the World Trade Center. While it is bittersweet and startling to see the towers even today, "Manhattan Unfurled" ultimately becomes (albeit unintentionally) a wonderful and loving tribute to the skyline that many of us will never forget. Amid all the discussion of the removal of the WTC towers from movies and television, some have said in doing so is like removing a grandparent from a family photo. Just because they are gone, does not mean we should forget or tuck them away. Pericoli's work will certainly be a treasure to look back on for many years to come. A great gift for your favorite New Yorker, art lover, artist or architect in your life -- even if that happens to be you!
Rating:  Summary: I'll Take Manhattan Review: "Manhattan Unfurled" is a beautiful and unique look at the island of Manhattan. Deceptively simple in appearance, one is quite amazed as the Manhattan skyline truly unfurls in two continuous pen-and-ink drawings stretching 22 feet each! If you do not have the room to fully open it up, you can flip 24 accordion-style pages. Work your way up and down Manhattan's East and West sides, from small collections of apartment buildings to dense clusters of skyscrapers. It took Matteo Pericoli, an Italian-born architect and illustrator, two-and-a-half years to create this incredible work of art. Also included in a quite nice heavy cardboard slipcase is an essay by Paul Goldberger (an architecture critic for The New Yorker) and a handy guide pointing out famous (and not so famous) landmarks for those who may not be intimately familiar with one of the world's great skylines. Although published in October 2001, the book of course features Pericoli's rendition of the World Trade Center. While it is bittersweet and startling to see the towers even today, "Manhattan Unfurled" ultimately becomes (albeit unintentionally) a wonderful and loving tribute to the skyline that many of us will never forget. Amid all the discussion of the removal of the WTC towers from movies and television, some have said in doing so is like removing a grandparent from a family photo. Just because they are gone, does not mean we should forget or tuck them away. Pericoli's work will certainly be a treasure to look back on for many years to come. A great gift for your favorite New Yorker, art lover, artist or architect in your life -- even if that happens to be you!
Rating:  Summary: Visual Music Review: "Manhattan Unfurled" presents a pen-and-ink line drawing of the island's amazing skyline, done before the September 11th tragedy and therefore all the more affecting in the magnificent exclamation marks of grandeur provided by the World Trade Center's Twin Towers. To open this book, page by page or at its full 22-foot length, is to see the improvisational, jazz-like rhythm of the city's architecture as viewed from its rivers and opposite shores, with small riffs where the island's profile is low (at the northern tip and along parts of the lower West Side and opper East Side)and symphonic climaxes in Midtown and in the financial district. This is clearly a labor of love for this young Italian-born architect--the detail of the buildings is fine and exact, the waves of the water mythical, fabulous, the ad-hoc nature of the city's real-estate development unified by a comprehending sensibility. I guarantee you that you've never seen anything like it. And now, more than ever, it is a tribute to the tough, whimsical grandeur of an island rocked by tragedy but ultimately indomitable.
Rating:  Summary: Manhattan Circled Review: As a native New Yorker who has been on the Circle Line tour around Manhattan TEN times, this book at first brings back memories of those tours. However, upon closer examination of the line-drawn buildings, I am reminded of my childhood playing around Riverside Drive (Grant's Tomb, Riverside Church), my adulthood playground Wall Street (The World Trade Center, Pier 17), and my old neighborhoods (Harlem and Tribeca). It astounded me how much the simplicity of black and white line drawings brought to color my New York City life.
Rating:  Summary: Manhattan Circled Review: As a native New Yorker who has been on the Circle Line tour around Manhattan TEN times, this book at first brings back memories of those tours. However, upon closer examination of the line-drawn buildings, I am reminded of my childhood playing around Riverside Drive (Grant's Tomb, Riverside Church), my adulthood playground Wall Street (The World Trade Center, Pier 17), and my old neighborhoods (Harlem and Tribeca). It astounded me how much the simplicity of black and white line drawings brought to color my New York City life.
Rating:  Summary: The Perfect and Timely Pictoral Tribute to the Big Apple Review: At this time, I find no better way to honor the great NYC than Matteo Pericoli's "Manhattan Unfurled." The fold-out pages (22 feet in length!) explicitly, accurately, beautifully, and lovingly picture the unspeakably west and east shorelines of Manhattan--including the to-be-forever missed "Twin Towers." While viewing the drawn shoreline views, including renderings of the burrough's historically important bridges, I remember fondly those several times, as a fomer resident of NYC in the early 70's, riding on the slow and lumbering Circle Line Cruise and enjoying the splendor of the island's magnificent architecture. This book, so ingeniously created, should be in every library, and would be just the perfect book to be presented to the individual who dare asks, "Why would anyone want to live in New York City?". Thank you, Matteo Pericoli, for offering to the reading public one of the finest and perfectly conceived books in many a year. You are to be commended, and lauded for allowing many the opportunity to enjoy a unique view of such a beloved city as NYC. My only personal disappointment is that I will never have the opportunity for the author/artist to sign my prized copy!! ...
Rating:  Summary: makes a great gift Review: I bought Manhattan Unfurled as a gift, and that is how I rate it. Personally, I was disappointed. I was expecting a more detailed work done is a stronger, classic pen and ink style. The the casual cartoon style however is charming and really does not detract from the impact of the book. Manhattan Unfurled is best appreciated when unfurled. Anyone who adores Manhattan will love this book, stretching out the pages and oohing and ahhing over the vista.
Rating:  Summary: Frozen in time... Review: I bought this book so that my children could one day see the Manhattan skyline as I fell in love with it. It's fun to note the small details in the drawings--I think I notice something new each time I open it up. Given the excellent presentation with the slipcase, etc., this book is an awesome gift for anyone who loves NYC. The artwork is solid, but not too formal, giving just the right feeling to the buildings. This book would also be a fun springboard for children to use to draw panoramic skylines of their own home towns.
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