|
The
Complexity Of Black Cultural Landscapes Is The Topic Of A Symposium
At U.Va.'s School of Architecture
March
3, 1999 -- "Sites of Memory: Landscapes of Race
and Ideology," a multidisciplinary symposium that explores
the effects of race on the built environment, will be hosted by
the University of Virginia's School of Architecture in Campbell
Hall, March 25-27.
Architects,
landscape architects, planners, historians, and scholars of African-American
studies will gather to discuss "the historic and contemporary
effects of race upon the development of the built environment, examining
the realities and myths of America's racial landscapes," said
Craig Barton, the symposium's organizer and assistant professor
at U.Va.'s School of Architecture. This is a unique opportunity
to look at and begin to understand the dual racial landscapes that
exist in America and what that means to us as a nation in terms
of culture and environment.
Randall
Kenan, author of "Walking on Water: Black Lives at the Turn
of the Twenty-First Century," will be the keynote speaker.
He has taught writing at Vassar College, Duke University, Columbia
University, Sarah Lawrence College and his alma mater, University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Currently, Kenan is a visiting
professor of creative writing at the University of Memphis. The
symposium will look at the urban fabric that has resulted from the
weaving of the politics of slavery, custom and law. Participants
will discuss the "separate but equal" Supreme Court ruling
and the "Jim Crow" laws and explore the influence they
had on the churches, schools, homes, parks and streets in creating
a black landscape that relied on oral traditions. Conference participants
include:
Araya
Asgedom, Department of Architecture, Hampton University
Nathaniel
Q. Belcher, School of Architecture, Florida International University
Kofi
M. Boone, landscape architect, JJR Incorporated, Ann Arbor, MI
David
P. Brown, School of Architecture, Rice University
Reginald
Butler, Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African
Studies, University of Virginia
Maurice
D. Cox, School of Architecture, University of Virginia
Felecia
Davis, School of Architecture, Cornell University
Scot
French, Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African
Studies, University of Virginia
Kenrick
Ian Grandison, School of Natural Resources and Environment, University
of Michigan
Bradford
Grant, Department of Architecture, Hampton University
Lesley
Naa Norle Lokko, Department of Architecture, University of Illinois
at Chicago
Shawn
L. Rickenbacker, Knowlton School of Architecture, Ohio State University¥
William Wesley Taylor, College of Design, Art, Architecture and
Planning, University of Cincinnati
Amy
Weisser, American Museum of Natural History
LaBarbara
J. Wigfall, Department of Landscape Architecture, Kansas State University
William
Williams, School of Architecture, Rice University
Mabel
O. Wilson, School of Architectural Studies, California College of
Arts and Crafts
Craig
Barton, School of Architecture, University of Virginia
"History,
Memory, Race, and Place in the Jim Crow South, 1900-1925,"
an exhibit documenting the lives and cultural landscapes of African-Americans
in Central Virginia will be on view at the Carter G. Woodson Institute
for Afro-American and African Studies, Minor Hall. The exhibit features
more than 100 images from the Rufus W. Holsinger Studio Photography
Collection at the University of Virginia Library. The exhibition
is funded by the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities.
Funding
for the symposium is provided by grants from the Graham Foundation
for Advance Studies in the Fine Arts, the George Gund Foundation,
the Dean's Forum of the School of Architecture at the University
of Virginia, and the Institute for Sustainable Design. The project
is supported by the School of Architecture and the Carter G. Woodson
Institute.
The
symposium is free and open to the public. Advance registration is
recommended. To register call (804) 924-6467. Visit the conference
website at http://www.arch.virginia.edu/site-mem ###
For
additional information please contact Craig Barton at (804) 924-6467
or ceb8x@virginia.edu.
Contact:
Jane Ford, (804) 924-4298.
|