Symposium: "Architecture After Las Vegas"
Friday, Jan 22, 20106:06 AM — Sunday, Jan 24, 20106:06 AMEDT
| 180 York Street New Haven, CT
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Symposia take place in Paul Rudolph Hall, Hastings Hall unless otherwise noted.
Thursday, 21 January 2010
6:30PM
Stanislaus von Moos, Yale University
"The City as Spectacle: A View from the Gondola"
Friday, 22 January 2010
2:00PM
PROCESSION, SHOPPING, AND THE INVISIBLE ORDER
In a situation where urbanism is no longer about visions of order but about understanding and irrigating existing forces, i.e. the capacity of interpreting them in terms of design, Las Vegas continues to be a prime laboratory of urban dynamics.
Mary McLeod, Columbia University
“Ordinary and Extraordinary: Sheds, Signs and Spectacleâ€
Martino Stierli, University of Basel
“Las Vegas and the Mobilized Gazeâ€
David Schwarz, Architect
“Building Las Vegas Todayâ€
Response
Emmanuel Petit, Yale University
POP AND “THE NATURAL FLOW OF EXISTENCE
The “myth†of Las Vegas has its origins in the movies and in a sensibility in the arts labeled as “Pop.†Learning from Las Vegas played a major role in bringing this sensibility to architecture and to urban theory. The speakers in this session explore this shift of paradigms.
Ralph Stern, University of Washington
“Las Vegas and Cinemaâ€
Katherine Smith, Agnes Scott College
“Contemporary Art and the American Landscapeâ€
Libby Lumpkin, Art Historian and Curator
“Las Vegas High Architecture and the Market for Popular Designâ€
Response
Elihu Rubin, Yale University
Friday, 22 January 2010
6:30PM
KEYNOTE ADDRESS, Paul Rudolph Lecture
Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown, Architects
“What Did You Learnâ€
Reception, Architecture Gallery, second floor, Paul Rudolph Hall
Saturday, 23 January 2010
9:30AM
MODERN? POSTMODERN? VENTURI, SCOTT BROWN & ASSOCIATES AT WORK
Architectural modernism has practiced an ambivalent attitude to mass culture. While on the one hand actively engaging in mass production and spectacle, it defined its pursuits as an alternative to the “common sense†of the marketplace. The work of Venturi, Scott Brown & Associates offers a different approach.
Aron Vinegar, Ohio State University
“Scenes of Instruction: On Learning from Las Vegasâ€
Beatriz Colomina, Princeton University
“Beyond Las Vegas: Levittownâ€
Karin Theunissen, Delft University of Technology
“Directional Spaces and Billboardingâ€
Response
Alan Plattus, Yale University
SHEDS AND DUCKS ACROSS SPACE AND TIME
Perhaps more than indicating a strategic shift in design, Learning from Las Vegas reflects a change in interest in the history and theory of art and architecture. The interaction of word and image as an architectural trope, the paradigm of “architecture parlante†and the vernacular have become key issues in architectural and art discourse since.
Neil Levine, Harvard University
“The World and the Building (Labrouste)â€
Maristella Casciato, University of Bologna
“Italy: ‘Common Man’ and Historyâ€
Valéry Didelon, Architect
“European Architects and the Spell of the ‘Decorated Shed’â€
Response
Kurt W. Forster, Yale University
Saturday, 23 January 2010
2:00PM
ARTISTS’ STATEMENTS
The mix of Pop aesthetic, historic reference and no-nonsense functionalism proposed by the built work of Venturi, Scott Brown & Asociates has been a potent adaptation of the lessons from the strip as it existed around 1970. What are the strip’s challenges in art and architecture today?
Elizabeth Diller
Peter Fischli
Dan Graham
Moderator,
Stanislaus von Moos, Yale University
ARCHITECTS’ PANEL DISCUSSION
Stan Allen
Peter Eisenman
Rafael M oneo
Moderator,
Robert A.M. Stern, Yale University
CLOSING REMARKS
Stanislaus von Moos, Yale University
Reception, Architecture Gallery, second floor, Paul Rudolph Hall
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