<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"
         xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
         xmlns:silvanews="http://infrae.com/namespaces/silvanews"
         xmlns:rss="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/">
  <rss:channel rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-viewer">
    <rss:title>People</rss:title>
    <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-viewer/rss</rss:link>
    <rss:description></rss:description>
    <dc:creator>Ralph Bartholomew</dc:creator>
    
      <dc:date>2011-07-13T09:08:48Z</dc:date>
    
    <rss:items>
      <rdf:Seq> 
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people12"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people1"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people2"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people61"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people9"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people34"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people35"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people60"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/michaelstewart"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people59"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people11"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people40"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people26"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people25"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people20"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people52"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people4"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people42"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people29"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people31"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people50"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people47"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people36"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people54"/>
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people53"/>
      </rdf:Seq>
    </rss:items>
  </rss:channel>
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people12">
      <rss:title>Will Self</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people12</rss:link>
      <rss:description>   William Woodard &amp;quot;Will&amp;quot; Self (born
26 September 1961) is an English journalist, novelist and short story
writer. His fictional style is known for being satirical, grotesque, and
fantastical. He is a prolific commentator on contemporary British life, with
regular appearances on Newsnight and Question Time. He has also appeared on
the comedy panel show Have I Got News for You, though he has
since declared that he will not make any further appearances on the show.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-04-26T14:49:29Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people1">
      <rss:title>A.S. Byatt</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people1</rss:link>
      <rss:description> A.S. Byatt is renowned internationally for
her novels and short stories. Her novels include the Booker Prize-winning Possession,
The Biographer’s Tale and the quartet, The Virgin in the Garden, Still
Life, Babel
 Tower and A
Whistling Woman. The Children’s Book was short-listed for the Booker
Prize in 2009 and her most recent book is Ragnorak (2011). Her highly
acclaimed collections of short stories include Sugar and Other Stories, The
Matisse Stories, The Djinn in the Nightingale’s Eye, Elementals
and Little Black Book of Stories. A distinguished critic as well as a
writer of fiction, A.S. Byatt was appointed CBE in 1990 and DBE in 1999.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Ralph Bartholomew</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-01-20T14:26:00Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people2">
      <rss:title>Alan Hollinghurst</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people2</rss:link>
      <rss:description>   Alan Hollinghurst was born in Gloucestershire
in 1954. He read English at Oxford
and taught for one term at UCL before joining the staff of the TLS,
where he was Deputy Editor from 1990 to 1995. He is the author of 5 novels,
including The Swimming-Pool Library (1988), The Line of Beauty
(winner of the 2004 Man Booker Prize) and The Stranger's Child (2011).
He has also translated Racine's Bajazet for
the Almeida Theatre and Bérénice for the Donmar Theatre in London. In 2006 he gave
the Lord Northcliffe Lectures at UCL. He lives in London.

 </rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Ralph Bartholomew</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-01-20T14:26:00Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people61">
      <rss:title>Salena Godden</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people61</rss:link>
      <rss:description>   
Salena Godden's latest collection 'Under The Pier' was published by hip-indie
imprint Nasty Little Press in 2011. Most recently her work has appeared in
Shortfire Press, Illustrated Ape Magazine, Trespass Magazine, Paraphilia,
Rising, Teller Magazine, 'The Mechanics Institute Review' published by
Birkbeck University, Picador's 'Punk Fiction' and Parthian Books
'Raconteur'. </rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-23T10:48:01Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people9">
      <rss:title>Iain Sinclair</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people9</rss:link>
      <rss:description>Iain Sinclair is a writer, filmmaker and ‘psychogeographer’ whose work
and documentation of the borough of Hackney is unrivalled.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-04-17T09:37:12Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people34">
      <rss:title>Hilary Powell</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people34</rss:link>
      <rss:description>   Hilary Powell is
an artist and is currently AHRC Fellow in the Creative and Performing Arts at
the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL working on a three-year project
critiquing the utopian narratives of the Games through the appropriation of the
traditional techniques of pop-up book production and etching alongside a 
‘residency’ on a demolition site. </rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-31T09:56:44Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people35">
      <rss:title>Isaac Marrero-Guillamon</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people35</rss:link>
      <rss:description>    Isaac Marrero is post-doctoral research fellow
at Birkbeck undertaking a two-year project entitled ‘The Militant City’
investigating the role of art in the configuration of spaces of dissent in
relation to the Olympic mega-event. </rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-31T09:56:15Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people60">
      <rss:title>Alex Preston</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people60</rss:link>
      <rss:description> Alex
Preston is the award-winning author of *This Bleeding City* and *The Revelations
*(Faber &amp;amp; Faber). His work has been published in twelve languages and his
novels have been best-sellers in the UK, Italy and China. He is a journalist
and critic and appears regularly on the BBC Review Show.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-31T09:39:34Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/michaelstewart">
      <rss:title>Michael Stewart</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/michaelstewart</rss:link>
      <rss:description>  Michael
Stewart is the founder of Open City Docs at UCL which produces both Open City
Docs Fest (2nd edition, June 21-24 this year) and the MyStreet project. He
teaches anthropology at UCL, promoting the use of documentary film as a means
to see the world differently, encouraging students and others to understand why
documentary matters and to think about how it can be used.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-31T09:27:10Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people59">
      <rss:title>Anna Brownsted</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people59</rss:link>
      <rss:description> Anna Brownsted is a theatre director and designer of interactive
performance events. Her company,
 Unclaimed Creatures ,
has produced work at the Roundhouse, Old Vic Tunnels, Battersea Arts Center, British Museum, and for the
Forest Fringe Traveling Sounds Library. Anna
is currently a PhD candidate at Central School of Speech and Drama, where her
practice-as-research focuses on heterotopic spaces of deviation and performance
structures that ‘produce’ the participant as a protagonist.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-23T10:48:32Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people11">
      <rss:title>Chris Petit</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people11</rss:link>
      <rss:description>   Chris Petit is a writer and filmmaker whose novels include
Robinson and The Passenger and whose films include Radio On. He is curator of
various projects which may or may not exist, including The Perimeter Fence and
The Museum of Loneliness. He has written or made films about air stewardesses,
weather, JG Ballard and CIA spymaster James Jesus Angleton. He is a frequent
collaborator with  Iain Sinclair  and they have made several feature-length films
together including Asylum and London Orbital.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-16T21:13:21Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people40">
      <rss:title>Nick Shepley</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people40</rss:link>
      <rss:description>Nick Shepley is the organiser of UCL's first-ever Festival of London and Literature: One Day in the City, and a Teaching Fellow in Modern British and American Literature in the English Department at UCL. The idea of &amp;quot;One Day in the City&amp;quot; sprang from Nick's current research on the one-day or circadian novel and its relationship with the city.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-16T21:13:21Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people26">
      <rss:title>Sophie Hoyle</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people26</rss:link>
      <rss:description> Sophie Hoyle is a writer
and artist living and working in London, with a background in Human Geography
(UCL), and postgraduate Fine Art (CSM, UAL). Hoyle’s interests span a
range of aspects of urban living from individual phenomenological experiences
of the urban landscape, to wider socio-political issues of the built
environment. She has been involved with a range of organisations that approach
the city and debate its issues (TINAG: Soapbox, Art &amp;amp; Architecture, Archway
Investigations and Response, Silent City), and has taught with Diego Ferrari on
the Photography, Art and Architecture
course at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design. </rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-16T21:13:21Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people25">
      <rss:title>Christopher Hartley</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people25</rss:link>
      <rss:description>Chris is currently studying
for a D.Phil at Oxford University on the subject of Financial Crisis in English
and American Literature. Prior to this he obtained a BSc. in Economics from the
London School of Economics and an MA in English Literature from Birkbeck
College. He also spent several years working in financial services prior to his
return to academia.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-16T21:13:21Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people20">
      <rss:title>Doris R. Bremm</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people20</rss:link>
      <rss:description> Doris Bremm is a Marion L. Brittain Postdoctoral Fellow at the
Georgia Institute </rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-16T21:13:21Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people52">
      <rss:title>Kasia Boddy</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people52</rss:link>
      <rss:description> Kasia Boddy teaches in the Department of English at UCL. Her book Geranium, a cultural history of one of the world's most popular flowers, will be published by Reaktion Books in September.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-16T21:13:21Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people4">
      <rss:title>Daljit Nagra</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people4</rss:link>
      <rss:description>    Daljit Nagra comes from a Punjabi background. He was born
and raised in London then Sheffield. He has won several prestigious prizes for
his poetry. In 2004, he won the Forward Prize for Best Individual Poem with  Look We Have Coming to Dover!  This was
also the title of his first collection which was published by Faber &amp;amp; Faber
in 2007. This won the Forward Prize for Best First Collection and The South
Bank Show Decibel Award, and was nominated for The Costa Prize, The Guardian
First Book Prize, the Aldeburgh Prize and the Glen Dimplex Award.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Ralph Bartholomew</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-01-20T14:26:00Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people42">
      <rss:title>Hope Wolf</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people42</rss:link>
      <rss:description>Dr Hope Wolf is a Teaching Fellow in Life Writing at King's College
London. Her research and teaching focuses on 20th century and contemporary
life writing and literature. After taking her BA and MPhil degrees at Cambridge
University, she began researching at the Imperial War Museum,
funded by an AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Award. After completing her doctorate
she held a Graduate Fellowship at the Human Rights Consortium, working on a
Mellon Sawyer project, 'Fratricide and Fraternité: Understanding and Repairing
Neighborly Violence.' From August 2010 she worked as the Lead Researcher on Strandlines: a community engagement
project based at the Centre for Life-Writing Research at King’s College London.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-09T11:32:57Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people29">
      <rss:title>Kyran Joughin</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people29</rss:link>
      <rss:description>Kyran Joughin
lectures in Film and Critical Practice at the University of the Arts London. She
serves on panels at several international film festivals and she served time
working at Compendium bookshop in CamdenTown many years ago. She lives in
London and France.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-09T11:31:04Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people31">
      <rss:title>Ali Mangera</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people31</rss:link>
      <rss:description>  Ali Mangera 
is founder partner of the London-Barcelona based architectural practice Mangera
Yvars Architects. Mangera Yvars is currently working on
projects for Qatar University, The Salaam Centre, North Harrow and designed the
experimental (unbuilt) mosque at Abbey Mills. 
</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-09T10:09:09Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people50">
      <rss:title>Amy Thomas</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people50</rss:link>
      <rss:description>Amy is a PhD student at the Bartlett School
of Architecture in the department of History and Theory. Her research addresses
the impact of financial flows on the built environment with a particular focus
on the City of London
and its position within the offshore and imperial networks. She holds an MA in
Architectural History from the Bartlett and an
undergraduate degree in History of Art from the University of Edinburgh.
Amy is funded by the Schools Competition Act Settlement Trust (SCAST)
Postgraduate Research Scholarship.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-09T10:08:04Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people47">
      <rss:title>Rebecca Ross</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people47</rss:link>
      <rss:description>Rebecca Ross is an academic researcher and
graphic designer with interests in urbanism, interaction, and media. She
recently completed her PhD Candidate at the Harvard Graduate School of Design.
Her thesis, &amp;quot;All Above: Visual Culture and the Professionalization of City
Planning, 1867-1933,&amp;quot; considers interactions between broad cultural
enthusiasms for viewing the city from above—manifest in forms such as tethered
hot air balloons, bird's eye views, observatories—and visual practices
associated with installation of urban planning as a new and enduring
professional category. Rebecca also teaches graphic and interaction design at
Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-09T10:05:14Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people36">
      <rss:title>Ruth Richardson</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people36</rss:link>
      <rss:description>     I am a Londoner born &amp;amp; bred, from generations of Londoners.
I'm an interdisciplinary historian, with an interest in architecture, medicine,
and London life and literature. I have written several books: *Death Dissection
&amp;amp; the Destitute* (Chicago University Press, 2000); *Vintage Papers from The
Lancet* (Elsevier, 2006); *The Making of Mr Gray's Anatomy*(Oxford University
Press, 2008) and *Dickens &amp;amp; the Workhouse* (Oxford University Press, 2012).</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-08T10:51:19Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people54">
      <rss:title>John Timberlake</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people54</rss:link>
      <rss:description>John Timberlake
(b. Lancashire, 1967) is a London
based artist whose combinations of drawing, painting and photography reflect a
longstanding engagement with landscape and the science fiction imaginary. He is
an alumnus of Brighton Polytechnic and the Whitney Museum of American Art
Independent Study Program. Exhibitions include the international surveys Beyond
the Picturesque (Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst, Ghent), and Pittoresk
(MARTa, Herford, Westfalen, Germany) both 2009; Breakthrough: Works from the
Collection at the Imperial War Museum (2009 – 2010) and After London,
a collaboration with art historian  Dr Joy Sleeman  (Slade/UCL) at The Stephen
Lawrence Gallery, University of Greenwich, 4/3-2/4/2011. Exhibitions in 2012
have included 'Ron Haselden / John Timberlake' at Galerie des Petits Carreaux,
Paris, and the group exhibition 'Dark Sky' curated by Geoffrey Batchen and
Christine Barton, at Te Pataka Toi Adam Gallery, Wellington, New Zealand.
Timberlake's book Bussard Ramjet, an illustrated fiction, was published
by Artwords/Artis Den Bosch in 2009.</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-08T10:16:00Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
  
    <rss:item rdf:about="http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people53">
      <rss:title>Joy Sleeman</rss:title>
      <rss:link>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/onedayinthecity/people-blog/people53</rss:link>
      <rss:description> Joy Sleeman  is Head of Taught
Courses in History and Theory of Art at the Slade School of Fine Art. Her
research embraces aspects of the histories of sculpture and landscape and these
two areas of interest coalesce in work on the new forms of landscape art that
emerged in the 1960s, often referred to as 'Land Art'. Her publications related
to this area include: ‘&amp;quot;Like two guys discovering Neptune&amp;quot;:
transatlantic dialogues in the emergence of Land Art’ (Anglo-American
Exchange in Postwar Sculpture, 1945 – 1975, Los Angeles: Getty
Publications, 2011) and ‘Land Art and the Moon Landing’ (Journal of Visual
Culture 8.3, 2009). She is currently co-curating an exhibition of Land Art
in Britain, with the Arts Council Collection and Hayward Touring. 
</rss:description>
      
      <dc:creator>Nick Shepley</dc:creator>
      
      <dc:date>2012-05-08T10:14:42Z</dc:date>
      
      
      
      
    </rss:item>
  
</rdf:RDF>
