SAHGB Graduate Student Research Forum 2014

SAHGB Graduate Student Research Forum 2014
Friday, 2 May 2014, 9:00 am – 7:15 pm
Hosted by the History of Art Department, University of Cambridge,
The Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain is pleased to announce the second annual Graduate Student Research Forum at the University of Cambridge on the 2nd May 2014. This is a student-led event that offers post-graduate students in architectural history an opportunity to present their research while engaging with others studying and working in the field. This year’s event will once again feature a diverse selection of presentations and notable academic speakers.
The Forum is free to attend, but registration is compulsory and space is limited.
Registration will open on 31 March 2014. To register, and for additional details, please visit our event page: http://www.sahgb.org.uk/graduate-student-research-forum.html
Please contact the event organisers with any questions or inquiries at: SAHGBforum2014@gmail.com.
 
 

Share this post

News from the field

SITA Landscape as Horizon

In the last chapter of L’architecture au futur depuis 1889, Jean-Louis Cohen listed several “vanishing points” that, although barely visible in the distance, would allow architecture to escape the unrelenting aspiration for originality, newness, monumentality,...

On the Move: l’architettura è mobile

The conference addresses scholars from different disciplines in order to trace the multiple aspects that accompany the transfer of architecture from antiquity to the present day. The heterogeneity of the cases calls for up-to-date reflections on this topic, in order...

Cotsen Traveling Fellowship for Research in Greece

The Gennadius Library offers the Cotsen Traveling Fellowship, a short-term grant awarded each year to Ph.D. holders or graduate students pursuing research topics that require the use of the Gennadeion collections. Eligibility:  Senior scholars (Ph.D. holders) and...

JOEHLO 16: The Architecture of Inexact Respiration

While the shift towards an architecture of “inexact respiration” means to abandon the standards of comfort provided by mechanical control and assume a more tolerant culture towards the relationship between architecture and the environment, where architecture itself...