
Architecture Cultures [Archived]
This cluster included a vibrant scholarly community working on architecture and its visual culture, understood in its broadest sense. Research interests spanned vast periods and geographies. From modern and contemporary architecture and design to the gardens and landscapes of the Qing court; from urban development and architecture in Renaissance Rome to early modern Isfahan and Paris; from medieval Jewish, Christian and Islamic Toledo to the architecture of seventeenth-century London; from Byzantine and Georgian churches to the architecture of the British empire. We recognised the distinctive nature of architecture cultures, but saw these as part of visual and material culture more broadly. Our intersecting areas of enquiry in architecture, urban experience and landscape were both global and local, and concerned issues of design, ornament, sense perception, patronage, empire, postcoloniality, transmission, materiality, building technologies, digital modelling, restoration and historiography, among others.
The Courtauld has a long history of teaching and research in architectural history, and with a lively community of visiting scholars and students at every level it has one of the largest concentrations of historians of urbanism, interior design, ephemera and architectural theory and practice in the world. We also enjoy scholarly connections with major local collections and institutions, including the Royal Institute of British Architects, the Society of Antiquaries of London, the Victoria & Albert Museum, the Warburg Institute, Sir John Soane’s Museum, the Royal Academy, and a number of architectural practices. We also benefit from access to the Conway Library (a vast photographic archive of architecture, sculpture and design) and The Courtauld Gallery’s important collection of architectural drawings.
Convenors: Dr Tom Nickson, Dr Sussan Babaie, Dr Robin Schuldenfrei
