ArchitectsJohnston Marklee

“Unpacking”: Angela Pang and Taishin Shiozaki with Mark Lee

Please join us for a conversation “unpacking” the current exhibition Shinohara Kazuo: ModerNext. We will be joined by Taishin Shiozaki, who will discuss Shinohara's...

Sharon Johnston & Mark Lee: Too fast to live too young to die (March 12, 2014)

Mark Lee of JohnstonMarkLee’s discusses projects that fall under the category of Single objects, including houses in Argentina, Chile, Oxnard, and Spain. In the...

“When do looks matter more than performance?” w/ Sharon Johnston & Mark Lee

0:05 - Introduction by Dean Richard Sommer 8:00 - Mark Lee presentation 36:20 - Sharon Johnston presentation 50:10 - Michelle Addington presentation 1:23:45 - Moderated discussion On November 3,...

2017 Chicago Biennale Roundtable with UCLA AUD Participants

UCLA Architecture and Urban Design 2017 Chicago Architecture Biennial participants: Erin Besler, Sarah Hearne, Wonne Ickx, Andrew Kovacs, Jimenez Lai, and Sylvia Lavin...

A.UD Lecture Series 2011-2012: Mark Lee and Sharon Johnston

A.UD Lecture Series Monday, April 2, 2012 Mark Lee and Sharon Johnston are the principals of Johnston Marklee & Associates. Born in Hong Kong, Mark Lee studied...

Sharon Johnston and Mark Lee, Johnston Marklee

Monday, March 28, 2016 6:30pm Wood Auditorium Architecture and the Ecology of Objects Response by Dean Amale Andraos Since its founding in 1998, Johnston Marklee's diverse portfolio has...

1:1: Mark Lee on John Hejduk – Victims, Islands, and Archipelagos

Mark Lee discusses the influence of John Hejduk’s project Victims (1984) on the work of his firm, Johnston Marklee. “1:1” (1 architect, 1 building) is...

Sharon Johnston (MArch ’95) and Mark Lee (MArch ’95), “No Shirt, No Shoes, No Problem” HD

The work of Sharon Johnston and Mark Lee (both MArch '95), design critics in architecture and principals of Los Angeles-based Johnston Marklee, is widely...

Symposium on Architecture: “Design Techniques”

At a moment of dissolution in design, technique is all an architect can grasp. Techniques occupy a beautifully indeterminate void on the fault line...