Kyle Winston-Lindeboom

Critic

Kyle Winston-Lindeboom is a designer, artist, and teacher based in Cambridge, MA. He works in practice for Schwartz/Silver Architects in Boston and has previously worked for firms Johnston Marklee and Davies Toews. He has taught at Northeastern, the Strother School of Radical Attention and in the Design Discovery program at Harvard, and he co-coordinated and taught the [In]Arch program at UC Berkeley. He has served as a guest critic in architecture at the BAC, Brandeis, Harvard, Michigan, Northeastern, RISD, Tufts, Wentworth, and Yale.

Kyle has designed a number of books, written short pieces for the New York Review of Architecture and Paprika!, and edited volumes including Echos (Actar, 2018), the first three issues of the journal Pairs (Harvard GSD, 2020-22), and most recently, Long, Lasting, and Inevitable: Jorge Silvetti in Dialogues and Writings on Architecture as a Cultural Practice (Park Books, 2024).

He received his BSArch from the University of Cincinnati and MArch from Harvard GSD, where his thesis Pillow Space—adapted from the pillow shot technique in film—argued for architecture’s capacity to make spontaneous meaning with sudden attention to figural moments in space. He has exhibited at Rabbit Rabbit Gallery in NYC, performing Glyphs, Ligatures, and Logos (2023) with Jonathan Toews and Edge Crush Test (2024) with Olivia Howard. In 2025, he performed in an adaptation of Samuel Beckett’s Play, by artist Helen Miller, at MassArt’s Brant Gallery.