Architecture, Culture and Tectonics Research Group

ACT Guest Seminar 5th June 2024

 
Location
B38 Lenton Firs
Date(s)
Wednesday 5th June 2024 (13:00-14:00)
Contact
For further information please contact Professor Jonathan Hale, or send an email to EZ-ENG-ERKE@nottingham.ac.uk
Description

When Lines Became Objects

Jordan Kauffman

 
ACT 5 May 24 Seminar
 
Wednesday, June 5th 2024
13:00–14:00
B38 Lenton Firs

Abstract
This talk traces a moment in the late 20th century when architectural drawings attained autonomy from architectural processes to become perceived as aesthetic artifacts in and of themselves. It unravels the transnational social and economic forces that shifted perceptions and understandings of them, the impact this had on their collection and preservation as objects with historical and cultural value, and the effects of this on the discipline and practice of architecture.

Bio
Jordan Kauffman is an architectural historian whose work spans from the Renaissance to the present, with particular interests in architectural representations, art-architecture relationships, global architectural history, and architecture’s impact on Indigenous landscapes. His book, Drawing on Architecture, The Object of Lines, 1970-1990, was published by the MIT Press in 2018, and numerous essays of his have appeared in academic and disciplinary media. Kauffman has taught architecture and design history at the University of Nottingham, where he is currently Assistant Professor, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Brandeis University, Tufts University, Boston University, the University of Melbourne, and Monash University. He sits on the editorial board of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand.

Architecture, Culture and Tectonics

The University of Nottingham
Faculty of Engineering
Nottingham, NG7 2RD


telephone: +44 (0)115 74 86257
email:ACT@nottingham.ac.uk