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Built environment, knowledge, praxis: Post-colonial conversations between India and the UK

16 May 2014–17 May 2014, 10:00 am–6:00 pm

Built Environment India

Event Information

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Location

Wilkins Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre, UCL, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT

The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL will host a two-day symposium initiating a long-term critical and intellectual exchange between India and the UK focused on the knowledge, practice and discourse of the built environment.

This symposium focuses on the making and unmaking of the built environment in India and its concommitant discourses as well as unpacking some of the disciplinary, communitarian and epistemological frameworks that enclose such production. It also looks at the entanglements of some of these concerns with(in) the context of built-environment in Britain, either in terms of transcultural processes or related conceptual interests.

It is funded in the main by a UCL Grand Challenges Small Grants award and an Architecture Research Fund award.

The symposium is a collaboration between Dr. Tania Sengupta (UCL Bartlett), Dr. Jaideep Chatterjee (Shiv Nadar University, India) and Dr. Pushpa Arabindoo (Co-director, UCL Urban Laboratory). It is supported by a UCL Grand Challenges award and a Bartlett Architecture Research Fund award. The panellists from India and the UK include: Arunava Dasgupta (School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi), Andrew Harris (Co-director, UCL Urban Laboratory), Ashok Lall (independent practioner and educationist, Delhi/ Mumbai), Himanshu Burte (Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai), Hussain Indorewala (Kamla Raheja Vidhyanidhi Institute for Architecture, Mumbai), Jonathan Hill (UCL Bartlett), Kaiwan Mehta (Centre for the Study of Culture and Society, Bangalore), Shveta Mathur (The Aga Khan Foundation, Delhi) and Megha Chand (Cardiff University/ UCL Bartlett). 

Keynote Lecture

Dr. Swati Chattopadhyay, Professor, Dept. of Art History, University of California, Santa Barbara on 16 May at 6.30pm in the Gustave Tuck LT.

Symposium panels

Panel 1: The politics of the designed (16 May, 11am - 5.30pm)
Over the last two decades India's social, economic and political fabric has been witness to profound changes. Central to these transformations is the built environment which has emerged as the arena where diverse discourses of neoliberalism, governmentality, development, security, minority rights, disability, sustainability and ecology have laid their claims as well as contested each other. This panel seeks to unpack how architects, urbanists, governmental and non-governmental agencies and various stakeholder communities in India negotiate this complex and changing terrain, and also looks at the possible transcultural and trans-contextual links of such issues in Britain.

Panel 2: Architecture and its forms of knowledge (17 May, 10am - 1pm)
This panel investigates knowledges that ground Architecture as disciplinary formation, as practice and as culture, i.e. how architecture constitutes its object and domain and thereby (re)constructs, (re)produces, sustains, and even contests itself. It also looks at how the architectural artifact shapes and mediates various forms of knowledge, and revisits some of the fundamental categories of architectural knowledge (e.g. categories of design, space, temporality, contingency, representation) to forge newer ways of reimagining the field.

Panel 3: History and the architectural present (17 May, 2pm - 4.30pm)
This panel investigates how the disciplinary frameworks as well as the practice of architecture and urbanism in India today, deals with the question of history, memory, past and present while also engaging with descriptors of the present in order to understand the past. The panelists will explore their own critical practice(s) on the notion of archives, exploring alternative, everyday and minor histories, transnational and transcultural circulations of architectural heritage and expertise including, for instance, artisanal practices and modes of translations.

The event is free, but you should book your place via Eventbrite.

Further information: Contact Dr. Tania Sengupta t.sengupta@ucl.ac.uk