Programme Networks of (Ex)Change, Global Disseminations of Architectural Knowledge
Here you can find the complete programme for the twelfth annual Jaap Bakema Study Centre conference Networks of (Ex)Change, Global Disseminations of Architectural Knowledge in Nieuwe Instituut in Rotterdam (26 November) and the Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment of Delft University of Technology (27 November).
Programme 26 November | Auditorium, Nieuwe Instituut, Rotterdam
13.00 — Doors open
13.30 — Welcome
13.45 — Nieuwe Research
- 'Architecture of Development: The Bouwcentrum as International Broker of Dutch Building Knowledge' by Setareh Noorani (Nieuwe Instituut)
14.30 — Session I: Networks and Coloniality, moderated by Eytan Mann
- 'Blueprints of a Shift: Moments and Movements that Shaped Post-Independence Indian Architecture' by Chinmay Gheware (CEPT University)
- 'Aligned in Exchange: Fairgrounds of Sovereignty' by Tashania Akemah (Independent Scholar)
- 'The Aga Khan Award and the Idea of "Modern African" Architecture' by Tomà Berlanda (Politecnico di Torino)
- 'Memories of Palimpsest: Yamada Mamoru and the Architecural Discourses on the German-Japanese Colony of Tsingtao' by Moe Omiya (University of Zurich)
- Q&A
16.30 — Session II: Networks and Conferences moderated by Andreas Kalpakci
- 'Against CIAM: Socialist Architectural Networks in Europe, ca. 1951' by Richard Anderson (University of Edinburgh)
- 'Modern Planning Meets the Historic Town: Contradictions and Frictions in the 1929 IFHTP Congress in Rome' by Ella Müller (European University Institute)
- ‘"To Keep Abreast of World Ideas": Gender, Networks, and Landscape Architecture as a Transnational Project' by Luca Csepely-Knorr and Joy Burgess (University of Liverpool)
- 'The Anyone Project as a Mediatised Network of Knowledge Exchange (1990-2001)' by Cathelijne Nuijsink (ETH Zurich)
- Q&A
19.30 — Keynote Speaker: Albena Yaneva (Politecnico di Torino)
Programme 27 November | Berlagezaal 1, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology, Delft
10.30 — Doors open
10.45 — Welcome
11.00 — Session III: Networks and Education, moderated by Yağız Söylev
- 'Tracing CIAM Summer School’s Networks: Continuity, Connections, and Peerships in CIAM’s Experimental Pedagogy' by Leonardo Zuccaro Marchi (Politecnico di Milano)
- 'Class of ’30: "International" Students and the Liverpool School of Architecture' by Juliana Kei (University of Liverpool)
- 'The World as Project: Pedagogical Exchanges between the Hochschule für Gestaltung Ulm and the Design Schools of Latin America' by María Paszkiewicz (University of Navarra, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)
- 'Cooperation and Exchange Networks in Architectural Education: Notes from Post-Independence Mozambique' by Patricia Noormahomed (Dinâmia’CET-Iscte)
- Q&A
13.30 — Session IV: Networks and Dwelling, moderated by Dirk van den Heuvel
- 'UNRRA-Casas and Post-War Social Housing in Italy: Transnational Exchanges and State Warfare' by Jiayao Jiang (University of Cambridge)
- 'From Jan to Yankee: Tracing the Jengki Architecture Networks in Post-Independence Indonesia' by Anita Halim Lim (University of Amsterdam)
- 'Affinity Group as Architectural Practice: Dweller-Controlled Urbanism and Anarchist Architects' by Jere Kuzmanic (Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya)
- 'Archipelagos of Appropriation: Squatting and the Dissemination of Spatial Knowledge' by Sean Yuxiang Li (University of Copenhagen)
- Q&A
15.30 — Session V: Networks and Actors, moderated by Irina Davidovici
- 'The Friendship and Archives of Werner Moser and Mart Stam' by Ludo Groen (ETH Zurich)
- 'Intertwined Avant-Gardes: Bauhaus Dialogues with Tagore, Shantiniketan, and Indian Modernism' by Pappal Suneja (Bauhaus Universität) and Manu P. Sobti (The University of Queensland)
- 'The Modern Socialite: Gabriel Guevrekian, from Parisian Salons to American Universities' by Hamed Khosravi (Architectural Association)
- 'Phyllis Lambert and the Canadian Centre for Architecture: Towards the Creation of a Global Network of Exchange' by Léa-Catherine Szacka (University of Manchester)
- Q&A
17.00 — Closing remarks