Dear Madame and sirs,
unfortunately, we noticed the conference too late, otherwise we would have gladly joined. Sadly, because we could have included the conference easily in our trip to the UK, which we had already planned.
Possibly, you could send us the papers or maybe these will be placed on a website. The subject is very interesting.
Our housemuseum is in the process of becoming a member of the European Garden Heritage Network. Historically the garden of our late 17th Century house was considered the extention of the beletage (the first floor with the period rooms for entertaining guests).
Best regards,
Jurn Buisman
Museum Geelvinck Hinlopen Huis
www.museumgeelvinck.nl
Op 10 mei 2011, om 14:58 heeft The Modern Interiors Research Centre het volgende geschreven:
> Apologies for cross-posting
>
> FLOW: a conference in two parts Thursday 12 and Friday 13 May 2011 - Lawley Lecture Theatre, Kingston Hill Campus, Kingston University
>
> For BOOKINGS and further information please visit: www.kingston.ac.uk/flowconference
>
> ‘FLOW: a conference in two parts’ will address issues of the complex relationships between interiors and landscape, which have become increasingly relevant to the understanding of the modern interior. The conference recognises the complex relationship that exists between ‘interior’ and ‘exterior’ environments through a consideration of transitional, permeable and ambiguous spaces.
>
> Keynote speakers
> Sandy Isenstadt, University of Delaware
> Joel Sanders, Architect
>
> FLOW: a conference in two parts - CONFERENCE PROGRAMME
>
> The Dorich House Conference hosted by the Modern Interiors Research Centre and the Landscape Interface Studio, Kingston University in collaboration with Queensland University of Technology, Australia
>
> FLOW - CONFERENCE PROGRAMME: DAY ONE
>
> 0845 Registration and Refreshments
>
> 0915 Welcome and Introduction to Session 1 - Penny Sparke
>
> 0930 Tracing Events: Material Tales for Two Australian ‘Stately’ Homes and Gardens, Mark Taylor and Gini Lee, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia
>
> 0950 The View Beyond One’s Window: Framing Landscape as Space and Time in Modern Interiors, Anca Lasc, University of Southern California, USA
>
> 1010 Continuities and Discontinuities: The House and Garden as Material and Psychic Space in Vienna’s Early Modernism, Diane Silverthorne, Birkbeck, University of London, UK
>
> 1030 Transitional spaces in late XIX century Mexican Architecture, Gladys Arana, Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán (UADY) and Catherine R. Ettinger, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo, México
>
> 1050 Questions and Discussion
>
> 1110 Tea/Coffee
>
> 1140 Introduction of Keynote Sandy Isenstadt – Alice Friedman
>
> 1150 Sandy Isenstadt, University of Delaware- Kitchen Landscapes, or, Transparency, Literal and Culinary
>
> 1245 Lunch
>
> 1400 Introduction to Session 2 - Anne Massey
>
> 1410 George Bernard Shaw and His Writing Hut: Privacy and Publicity as Performance at ‘Shaw’s Corner’, Alice McEwan, University of Hertfordshire, UK
>
> 1430 From Nineteenth Century Villas to Neues Bauen Houses in Wroclaw and Germany (1871-1933),
> Jadwiga Urbanik and Agnieszka Tomaszewicz, Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland
>
> 1450 Giorgio Morandi and the Bologna Porticoes, Vicky Falconer, Artist in Residence, Kingston University, UK
>
> 1510 Questions and Discussion
>
> 1530 Tea/Coffee
>
> 1600 Introduction to Session 3 – Pat Kirkham
>
> 1610 Transitional Spaces: The Interior-Landscape Relationship in the Design of the Architects Small House Service Bureau, Lisa M. Tucker, Virginia Tech, USA (Fiona Fisher to read paper)
>
> 1630 A Point of View: Christopher Hussey’s Sense of the ‘Picturesque’, Pat Wheaton, Kingston University, UK
>
> 1650 Mobilizing Interiors: British Railway Compartments as Quasi-Domestic Spaces, 1920-1939, Colin Divall, Institute of Railway Studies and Transport History, National Railway Museum/University of York, UK (presented by Hiroki Shin)
>
> 1710 Questions and Close
>
> 1800 Drinks Reception at Dorich House Museum
>
> FLOW - CONFERENCE PROGRAMME: DAY TWO
>
> 0845 Registration and Refreshments
>
> 0915 Introduction to Session 4 – Brenda Martin
>
> 0930 Rethinking Indoor/Outdoor Living: California c. 1945-65, Pat Kirkham, Bard Graduate Center, New York, USA
>
> 0950 Curtaining the Curtain Wall: Traversing the Boundaries of the Modern Postwar Environment, Margaret Petty, Victoria University, Wellington, New Zealand
>
> 1010 Spatial Experience Within the Colonial Bungalow and the Tropical Modern House in South Asia, 1880-1980, Robin Jones, Southampton Solent University, UK
>
> 1030 A Bag of Air, Sandra Kaji-O’Grady, The University of Sydney, Australia
>
> 1050 Questions and Discussion
>
> 1110 Tea/Coffee
>
> 1140 Introduction of Keynote Joel Sanders – Charles Rice
>
> 1150 Joel Sanders, Architect - Human Nature
>
> 1245 Lunch
>
> 1400 Introduction to Session 5 – Pat Brown
>
> 1410 Relationships between Interiors and Landscape: Critical Reflections on Sukiya and Farmhouse Architecture, Carol Mancke, Kingston University, UK
>
> 1430 Light Events: Interior and Exterior Space in Wavelength, Eleanor Suess, Kingston University, UK
>
> 1450 Questions and Discussion
>
> 1510 Tea/Coffee
>
> 1540 Introduction to Session 6 – Gini Lee
>
> 1550 Interior Topography and the Fabric of Terrain, Chris Hay, Lincoln University, UK and Patricia Brown, Kingston University, UK
>
> 1610 Two Case Studies on Landscape, Interiors and Abstraction in Contemporary Art, Burkhart Meltzer, Zurich University of the Arts, Switzerland
>
> 1630 Questions and Discussion
>
> 1650 Closing Session - Chair: Charles Rice. Panellists: Penny Sparke, Pat Brown, Mark Taylor, Gini Lee
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