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Peter M. Wolf
American author and businessman From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Peter M. Wolf is an American author, land planning and urban policy authority, investment manager, and philanthropist. He lives in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Early biography
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Peter Michael Wolf was born in New Orleans.[1] He is the author of several books, including the biography The Sugar King: Leon Godchaux, A New Orleans Legend, His Creole Slave, and His Jewish Roots and his memoir, My New Orleans, Gone Away – A Memoir of Loss and Renewal. Wolf attended Metairie Park Country Day School, Phillips Exeter Academy, Yale University (BA), Tulane University (MA), and New York University Institute of Fine Arts (PhD). At Yale, he was elected to the Manuscript Society and the Elizabethan Club, and was a board member and the publicity manager of the Yale Daily News.[2] During his graduate studies, he was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship in Paris. His doctoral dissertation was published in 1968, Eugène Hénard and the Beginning of Urbanism in Paris 1900–1914. In 1969, it became the basis for a solo exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.[3]
Wolf has been awarded grants for his writing and scholarship by the Ford Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts, and the National Research and Education Trust Fund. He has twice been a visiting artist/scholar at the American Academy in Rome.[4]
Wolf's career in urbanism began at Wilbur Smith Associates, where he engaged in land planning focused on transportation. He began teaching urbanism as an adjunct professor at the School of Architecture at the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in 1971, and continued in that role through 1987. Wolf also began working for the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies in 1971, participating in a number of research initiatives, including: "The Street as a Component of the Urban Environment" (co-director with architect Peter Eisenman, 1971–1973); "Low-Rise High-Density Prototype" (co-director with professor Kenneth Frampton, 1971–1973);[5] and Union Square Redevelopment Program (director, 1972–1973). From 1972–1982 Wolf was chairman of the IAUS Board of Fellows and as a trustee.
Between 1965 and 1990, Wolf published studies and articles related to land use and open space planning for the Office of the Manhattan Borough President, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Pan American World Airways, and private land owners across the US.[6] His study, "Shaker Heritage Historic District," commissioned by the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts, the Shaker Central Trust Fund, and the Historical Society of the Town of Colonie, New York, was instrumental in saving the first Shaker settlement in America, a National Register of Historic Places property.[7][better source needed] In 1987, as the consultant to the Village of East Hampton, New York, he rewrote the East Hampton Village Residential Zoning Ordinance and, in 2002, he was senior advisor to the Town of East Hampton Comprehensive Plan.[8][better source needed]
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Recent biography
In 2010, Wolf founded and became chairman of the Thomas Moran Trust, a nonprofit organization aiming to restore the Thomas Moran House, the studio house and gardens of painter Thomas Moran and printmaker Mary Nimmo Moran, a National Historic Property.
Wolf's memoir, My New Orleans, Gone Away, was published by Delphinium Books in 2013.[9] The book, which reached the New York Times e-book best seller list in 2016, celebrates New Orleans and explores growing up as a Jew in the South.[10][11]
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Public service
Wolf has served on the New York Cultural Council, the Executive Committee of the Architectural League of New York, and the Advisory Board of the National Academy of Design. He was chairman of the Van Alen Institute in New York, New York and a trustee of One to World, a program for Fulbright Fellows and other foreign students in the greater New York area.[12] He was appointed to the New York State Advisory Board of The Trust for Public Land. He is currently an Advisory Board member of the Tulane University School of Architecture, a trustee of Guild Hall and the Village Preservation Society, both in East Hampton where he was a Town-appointed member of the Airport Planning Committee, Noise Subcommittee.[13]
Bibliography
Books
- Eugène Hénard and the Beginning of Urbanism in France 1900–1914 (International Federation of Housing and Planning/Centre de Recherché de Urbanisme, 1969)[14]
- Another Chance for Cities (Whitney Museum of American Art, 1970)[15][16]
- The Evolving City: Urban Design Proposals by Ulrich Franzen and Paul Rudolph (Whitney Library of Design for American Federation of Arts, 1974)[17]
- The Future of the City: New Directions in Urban Planning (Watson Guptill Publications, 1974)[18]
- Land in America: Its Value, Use and Control (Pantheon Books, 1981)[19]
- Hot Towns: The Future of the Fastest Growing Communities in America (Rutgers University Press, 1999)[20]
- Land Use and Abuse in America: A Call to Action (Xlibris Corporation, 2010)[21]
- My New Orleans, Gone Away – A Memoir of Loss and Renewal (Delphinium Books, 2013)[22]
- The Sugar King: Leon Godchaux, A New Orleans Legend, His Creole Slave, and His Jewish Roots (Bayou Editions/Xlibris Books, 2022). ISBN 978-1-6698-2931-7
- The Etruscans and the Jews: New Orleans Echoes, Sardinian Shadows, Roman Shame (Bayou Editions/Xlibris Books, 2025). ISBN 979-8-3694-3429-1
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Exhibitions
- Eugène Hénard and Urban Anticipations, Museum of Modern Art, New York (1969)
- Another Chance for Cities, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (1970)
- Another Chance for Housing, Low-Rise Alternatives, Museum of Modern Art, New York (1973)[23]
- Recapturing Wisdom's Valley: The Watervliet Shaker Heritage, 1775–1975, Albany Institute of History & Art, Albany, New York (1975)
References
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External links
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