Architecture, diplomacy and national identity: Sir Basil Spence and mid-century modernism |
The exhibition Back to the Future: Sir Basil Spence 1907-76, hosted by theNational Galleries of Scotland and the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland to mark the centenary of Spence’s birth, stimulated fresh interest in the work of this once most celebrated of British twentieth-century architects. The individualism and exuberance of Spence’s mature work has arguably more in common with the approach of American architects such as Paul Rudolph and Edward Durrell Stone than with the architecture typical of post-war Britain. |
Architecture, diplomacy, and national identity: 3rd – 5th December 2008 The British School at Rome Supported by the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art and the Arts and Humanities Research Council
Wednesday 3rd December
18.00 Welcome by Professor Andrew Wallace-Hadrill, Director of the British School at Rome, and Professor Brian Allen, Director of the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art 18.15 Plenary Lecture - Professor Gavin Stamp (Independent scholar, London): Morning Session: 9.45 Introductory remarks - Dr. Louise Campbell (University of Warwick) 9.50 Professor Jane Loeffler (University of Maryland):
10.30 Professor Eeva-Liisa Pelkonen (Yale University): 11.10 - 11.40 Morning Break 11.40 Dr. Robin Skinner (Victoria University of Wellington): 12.20 Professor Brian Edwards (Edinburgh College of Art): 13.00 Lunch Break 14.30-15.10 Dr. Miles Glendinning (Edinburgh College of Art):
15.10-15.50 Professor Maristella Casciato (University of Bologna): 15.50 - 16.20 Afternoon Break 16.20-16.40 Professor Giorgio Piccinato (University of Rome): 16.40 – 18.00 Discussion |