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Building Zaha by Victoria Tentler-Krylov
Building Zaha by Victoria Tentler-Krylov





Rendered with watercolor and digital tools, the illustrations exude energy and power. Tentler-Krylov describes Hadid’s confident persistence in the face of criticism (“she had to be tougher than most”) and tracks her burgeoning career with vivid details (her fire station in Germany resembled “a bird taking flight”). After studying math in Beirut, Hadid moved to London: “It was time to get serious about studying architecture.” The daring young professional, who “reached for paints and brushes and conjured structures that tilted, swayed, and floated on air,” was hired by two of her professors after graduation and also entered design competitions. With fittingly bold, whimsical, flowing illustrations, this picture-book biography showcases Iraqi British architect Zaha Hadid, who “dreamed big and defied convention.” Born in Baghdad in 1950, Hadid was an active, observant child, noticing the shifting “light and shadow play” in local palaces and mosques, and the “rippling harmony” between people and their environment in the Iraqi marshes - keen observations that would later inform her work. Primary, Intermediate Orchard/Scholastic 48 pp. Building Zaha: The Story of Architect Zaha Hadidīy Victoria Tentler-Krylov illus.







Building Zaha by Victoria Tentler-Krylov