Monument Biography
In each episode of this ten-part podcast series, we spotlight a unique monument to explore how every place can come to take on various meanings for different people, with one space living multiple lives.
This series was originally conceived within the context of an art history graduate seminar taught by Emily Neumeier at Tyler School of Art and Architecture, Temple University.
Executive Producer & Host: Emily Neumeier | Senior Producer: Özlem Yıldız | Producers: Alexa Smith, Sara Potts, Michael J. Ernst, Nicole Emser Marcel, Michael A. Lally, Kendra Schmit, Nonna Batrakova, Molly Bernhard, & Ari Lipkis.
Episode 10: Two Starchitects Walk into a Synagogue...
In the middle of the 20th century, two prominent Jewish communities in Philadelphia undertook major building projects in order to grow their congregations. Producer Ari Lipkis discusses how the leadership of both groups decided to recruit the top talent in modern architecture for these projects, and the potential successes—and pitfalls—of engaging individuals whom we could today describe as some of the first American “starchitects.”
Episode 9: Heroes or Highwaymen?
In this episode, producer Molly Bernhard discusses the famous capture of Major John André, a British spy, by a group of Americans in Tarrytown, New York. The subsequent monument that was created to commemorate the event honors and glorifies the captors. Historians likewise argue that André’s arrest saved the fate of the Continental Army and the American cause. We take a deeper dive into the stories of the captors and consider whether or not they were in fact the heroes that subsequent generations have made them out to be.
Episode 8: The Masonic Temple of Philadelphia
In this episode, producer Nonna Batrakova examines the remarkable diversity of architectural styles that served as inspiration for the design of the Masonic Temple of Philadelphia’s Grand Lodge. Interviews explore the monument’s history and reveal the significance of this lodge to its current Freemason members.
Episode 7: Stories of the Galata Tower
In this episode, producer Özlem Yıldız traces the many lives of the iconic Galata Tower in Istanbul, which has served many uses through the centuries from a fire station to an astronomical observatory and recently reopened as a museum.
Episode 6: Love to Hate It, Hate to Love it— Philadelphia's First Skyscraper
In this episode, producer Kendra Schmit dives into the history of Philadelphia’s iconic City Hall and explores how its architectural style actually fell out of fashion rather quickly.
Episode 5: Fairfield Hills Psychiatric Hospital
In this episode, producer Michael Lally investigates the early years of the Fairfield Hills Hospital in Newtown, Connecticut and the decade of abandonment that drew urban explorers and ghost hunters, and contemporary debates about the town’s “Master Plan” for the site.
Episode 4: Temporary Iconoclasms
In this episode, producer Nicole Emser Marcel asks: How can artists intervene in or mediate an existing monument? And could these interventions bring about long-term change?
Episode 3: The Bawa Muhaiyaddeen Fellowship
The Bawa Muhaiyaddeen Fellowship is a Sufi Muslim community located just outside of Philadelphia. Producer Michael Ernst visits the Fellowship to learn that the real monument to Bawa Muhaiyaddeen is not the building, but the community itself.
Episode 2: Gettysburg: The Good, the Bad, and the Enigmatic
In this episode, producer Sara Potts investigates multiple overlapping histories at Gettysburg National Military Park: from the official account of the National Park Service to the long ignored African American presence at the site.
Episode 1: The Bride Who Tried to Sell Her Skin
The Painted Bride Art Center has long stood as a cultural monument in the city of Philadelphia. In this episode, Alexa Smith traces the Bride’s longer history, as well as the recent controversy around its sale.