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Archive for February, 2007


John Pratt Memorial Lecture

The first John Pratt Memorial Lecture will be presented at 4 p.m. March 5 by Dianne Harris, professor of landscape architecture at the University of Illinois. It will be held in Ray Parker Auditorium in Dudley Hall. Harris, whose lecture is titled “Clean and Bright and Everyone White: Seeing the Postwar Domestic Landscape in the United States,” is writing a book that examines postwar houses and gardens in the United States as frameworks for assimilation and the reinforcement of racial constructs and class assignment. She is the coeditor of “Villas and Gardens in Early Modern Italy and France” and the author of “The Nature of Authority: Villa Culture, Landscape and Representation in Eighteenth Century Lombardy” and “Maybeck’s Landscapes: Drawing in Nature.” Her edited volume titled “Sites Unseen: Essays on Landscape and Vision” is due in bookstores this spring. The John Pratt Memorial Lecture honors the memory of John MacDougall Pratt, who was a professor of architectural history in the AU College of Architecture. He was a cherished member of the faculty from 1989 until his untimely death in 2001. The lecture series is funded through the generosity of alumni and friends.


Maps of Rome

Students in the College of Architecture’s Foreign Studies Program are presenting maps and drawings of Rome through March 2, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., in the college’s Dudley Commons Gallery. The students have been researching the histories of 10 sites in Rome, and illustrating the results by layering the maps and drawings they have uncovered in a palimpsest. They have simultaneously been studying preliminary and schematic design proposals for inserting a 21st Century study center and museum of cartography into the context of the Eternal City. These 38 students will be traveling to Rome for the second half of the semester to study the principles of design.


The John Pratt Memorial Lecture

The first John Pratt Memorial Lecture is going to be held on March 05, 2007 by Dianne Harris, Professor of Landscape Architecture and Architecture at the University of Illinois-Urbana/Champaign.

Date: March 05, 2007
Time: 4 pm
Location: Ray Parker Auditorium (Dudley Hall B-6)

Professor Harris whose lecture is entitled “Clean and Bright and Everyone White: Seeing the Postwar Domestic Landscape in the United States” is currently writing a book that examines postwar houses and gardens in the United States as frameworks for assimilation and the reinforcement of racial constructs and class assignment. She is the coeditor (with Mirka Benes) of Villas and Gardens in Early Modern Italy and France (Cambridge University Press, 2001), and the author of The Nature of Authority: Villa Culture, Landscape and Representation in Eighteenth Century Lombardy (Pennsylvania State University Press, 2003) and Maybeck’s Landscapes: Drawing in Nature (William Stout, 2005). Her edited volume titled Sites Unseen: Essays on Landscape and Vision is due to be in the bookstores this spring. Professor Harris holds affiliate appointments in the departments of history and art history at the University of Illinois-Urbana/Champaign.

The John Pratt Memorial Lecture honors the memory of John MacDougall Pratt, a professor of architectural history in the School of Architecture. John was a cherished member of the School of Architecture faculty from 1989 until his untimely death in 2001. A native of Canada, Pratt did his graduate work under the direction of Christian Otto at Cornell University, where his research focused on Eero Saarinen and the influence of the Cranbrook Academy of Art. Former students and colleagues alike fondly recall his unbridled enthusiasm for architecture and its history, his insatiable curiosity for the wide spectrum of humanistic endeavors, and his wry sense of humor. The College continues to benefit from Pratt’s love of books and the ideas they contain as a result of the donation of his extensive personal library to the Library of Architecture, Design, and Construction.

The John Pratt Memorial Lecture is funded through the generosity of alumni and friends of the College.