Enrique Ramirez is a writer and a historian of art and architecture. His work considers histories of buildings, cities, and landscapes alongside larger cultures of textual, literary, and object production in Europe and the Americas from the Renaissance onwards. He received his BA in the History of Science from Northwestern University and his JD in Public and Private International law from the George Washington University Law School. After studying Urban Planning at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), he received a Master of Environmental Design (MED) from Yale School of Architecture and a PhD in the History and Theory of Architecture from Princeton University. His work has been recognized and supported by various organizations, including the Canadian Centre for Architecture, the Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation, the Institute for Historical Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, and most recently, the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts. In May, the Graham Foundation awarded him a Research and Development Grant for his research project, “Lines of Least Resistance: Architecture, Aeronautics, and Other Airs of Modernity,” which will become a monograph. He is currently working on a conservation management plan for Eero Saarinen and Associates’ North Christian Church (1964) as part of the Getty Foundation’s Keeping it Modern initiative. He has also been a faculty member at Yale School of Art, where he taught seminars on print history at the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Enrique joins the Editorial Board of Manifest: A Journal of the Americas and is a Director of the Manifest Institute of the Americas, an organization that seeks to foster critical and imaginative conversations about art, architecture and urbanism, literary studies, and landscape design in the Americas through innovative research, publications, outreach, and exhibition programs..