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Marginalia – Architectural History Symposium & Publication Launch

25 October 2019, 9:45 am–5:30 pm

A concrete walkway which weaves through the 19th-century Storhamar Barn, built on top of 16th-century archaeological ruins. (From the Archbishop Museum in Hamar, Oslo, by Sverre Fehn, 1970). By Lauren Teague

Join the 2018/19 Architectural History MA cohort for their symposium ‘Marginalia’ and its accompanying publication launch.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Organiser

The Bartlett School of Architecture
02031087337

Location

G.12
22 Gordon Street
London
WC1H 0QB
United Kingdom

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About

Concerned with 'the marginal', the often ignored and under-studied corners of architecture and history, 'Marginalia' brings together the work of 2019 Architectural History MA graduates to present and reflect on the topics and methods they engaged with whilst writing their dissertations.

With contributions from international keynote speakers, the day will be structured into four panels discussing four themes: technology, postcolonialism, urbanism and British architecture. 

This event is free and open to all, but tickets must be reserved in advanced. 


Speakers

Orit Halpern (Concordia University, Montréal)

Orit Halpern is an Associate Professor in Sociology at Concordia University. She completed her Ph.D. at Harvard and her work bridges the histories of science, computing, and cybernetics with design.

Orit has published widely and has held numerous visiting scholar positions including at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin and at Duke University. She is currently working on two projects. The first involves extreme infrastructures and the second examines the changing relationship between environment, finance, and machine learning. She is also the director of the Speculative Life Research Cluster, a laboratory bridging the arts, environmental sciences, media, and the social sciences.

Luke Jones (Cass School of Architecture, London Metropolitan University) 

Luke Jones is an architect and the co-host of About Buildings + Cities, a podcast about architectural history, culture, theory and technology. He is a Senior Lecturer at the Cass School of Art, Architecture and Design, and a partner at urban ecology practice Heat Island.

Stephen Walker (University of Manchester)

Stephen Walker trained as an architect, working in London and Madrid, and then at the Universities of Sheffield and Nottingham. He is currently Head of Architecture at the University of Manchester, and his research encompasses architectural and artistic critical theory, including research into Mediaeval Breton architecture, ring-roads and the work of contemporary artists.

In particular, Stephen has worked with artists Gordon Matta-Clark and Helen Chadwick, about whom he has spoken and published extensively. His recent research has examined the architecture of travelling street fairs and fairgrounds, supported by the RIBA Research Trust.


Programme

09:45 – 10:00 | Introductions

A short welcome and introduction will be given by Architectural History Programme Director, Peg Rawes.

10:00 – 11:00 | Keynote Speaker Orit Halpern

Orit Halpern, Concordia University, 'Event Horizons and Planetary Tests'

11:00 – 11:55 | Student Panel: Technology, Infrastructure, Technology

Chaired by Iain Borden

  • Sorcha McGarry Hunt, Deliveroo: Vernacular Un-Building the City
  • Filippo Foschi, Platform Architecture: An Anonymous History of Warehouses in Tilbury from 1716 – 2015
  • Dean Black, The Modern Broiler Chicken, The Female Farmhand and The Artificial Mother: Spatial and Technological Generation of Inter-special Subjectivities in 20th/21st Century Northern Ireland
  • Miriam Stoney, "A strait-jacket to developing attitudes" Designing discourse at Broadmoor Hospital
12:15 – 12:55 | Student Panel: Post Colonialism and Multiple Modernities

Chaired by Tania Sengupta

  • Zoya Hassan, Other Spaces: Self-Representation, Mobility and Agency in Women's Spatial Worlds in 16th – 18th century Mughal India
  • Rodrigo Fernandez Berenguer, Domestic Desires, The "House of the Presidents" in Santiago, Chile, as a site of ideological negotiations
  • Lu Te-Chen, Unliving House: The Rise and Fall of Lanyu National Housing, 1966 – 1980
13:00 – 14:00 | Lunch break

Light refreshments will be provided.

14:00 – 13:00 | Keynote Speaker Stephen Walker

Stephen Walker, Manchester University, 'Four Stories of and from the Margins'

15:00 – 15:50 | Student Panel: Urban Walks in Paris, Venice and London

Chaired by Jane Rendell

  • Jade Benei, Architecture and Design of Le Marais' queer venues
  • Irma Delmonte, Self-Building in Venice, An Itinerant critique through the historical sites of the Rebiennale
  • Georgios Bousios, Kings Cross Fiction, A History of Urban Change through Novels and Films (1845 – 1988)
  • Sophia Edwards, Precarity: Exploring Live/Music spaces through Diurnal and Nocturnal economies in the urban environment
16:00 – 16:55 | Student Panel: Rethinking British Architecture and Urbanism

Chaired by Ben Campkin

  • Matthew Lloyd Roberts, Experiencing, Describing, Criticising British Architecture, 1660 – 1750
  • Joanne Preston, Vernacular Processes: Design Codes for Convoys Wharf (2013 – 2019)
  • Joe Thompson, Nostalgia, Authenticity and Identity: Re-imagining everyday 'ghosts' of empire in the pub chain JD Wetherspoon
  • James Sims, Pasts Beyond Memory: Urbanity and John Outram's un-built City Projects
16:55 – 17:30 | Closing comments and publication launch

Closing comments will be given by Luke Jones, followed by the official publication launch of Marginalia.

17:30 – 19:00 | Drinks reception 

Drinks will be provided in the foyer of 22 Gordon Street. 


Access

All our event spaces are accessible. For any additional support or information, please email or call 020 3108 7337. 


Image: A concrete walkway which weaves through the 19th-century Storhamar Barn, built on top of 16th-century archaeological ruins. (From the Archbishop Museum in Hamar, Oslo, by Sverre Fehn, 1970). Photo by Lauren Teague.