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My Architect: A Son's Journey is a documentary
film directed by Nathaniel Kahn, the illegitimate son fathered by architect Louis I. Kahn
with the second of two sequential extramarital liaisons that he formed during his life.
(There was a legitimate daughter by his wife, Esther, with whom he lived, and an
illegitimate daughter with the earlier mistress.)
Kahn died suddenly in 1974 at age 73, after which his unusual multiple
family arrangement became public knowledge. Nathaniel was 11 years old then; now, these
many years later, his documentary takes the form of a quest for the identity of his
father. As such, the film is somewhat dichotomous. There's the personal side of Kahn's
life and there's the professional side, with his extraordinary achievements as an
architect. While there's no question that personal aspects often help illuminate artistic
accomplishment, My Architect, as a son's personal investigation, tends to devote
more time to family matters than is justified in terms of understanding Kahn's
accomplishment, and Nathaniel's own journey is of far less interest. Indeed, the film
makes clear that Kahn, the driven, workaholic architect, put his work ahead of all three
families at all times. The work throws far more light on the relationships than the
relationships do on the work.