Interior Spaces in Other Places: 2010 IDEA Symposium.[CD-ROM Ed.]

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Interior Spaces in Other Places: 2010 IDEA Symposium.[CD-ROM Ed.] This may be the author’s version of a work that was submitted/accepted for publication in the following source: Taylor, Mark, Lee, Gini,& Lindquist, Marissa (Eds.) (2010) Interior Spaces in Other Places:2010 IDEA Symposium.[ CD-ROM ed.]. Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Qld. This file was downloaded from: https://eprints.qut.edu.au/56355/ c IDEA 2010 The copyright in this volume belongs to IDEA. Copyright of the papers contained in this volume remains the property of the authors. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part of this volume may be reproduced by any process without the prior permission of the publishers and authors. Copyright of images in this publication are the property of the authors or appear with permissions granted to those authors. Notice: Please note that this document may not be the Version of Record (i.e. published version) of the work. Author manuscript versions (as Sub- mitted for peer review or as Accepted for publication after peer review) can be identified by an absence of publisher branding and/or typeset appear- ance. If there is any doubt, please refer to the published source. http:// idea-edu.com/ wp-content/ uploads/ 2013/ 01/ 2010-Symposium-Papers-Interior-Spaces-in-Other-Places.pdf Interior Spaces in Other Places An IDEA [Interior Design/Interior Architecture Educators Association] Symposium Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, 3-5 February 2010 Papers 01 Mark Taylor, Gini Lee and Marissa Lindquist Interior Spaces in Other Places 02 Penny Sparke (Invited Keynote Paper) The Modern Interior: a Euro- American paradigm 03 Michael J Ostwald (Invited Keynote Paper) Ignored or Repressed: reconstructing the missing interior in ‘Learning from Las Vegas’ 04 Davide Colaci The Human Metropolis: interior architecture as a process of manipulation, invention and inversion of the contemporary metropolis 05 Katheleen Connellan ‘At Home’: a discussion of diaspora and hybridity 06 Robert Crocker Re-assembling the Past: tradition and modernity in the Anglo-American ‘period-style’ interior 07 Katarina Dimitrijevic Township Metropolis: design for disposal 08 Georgina Downey Maisons d’artistes: sympathetic frame and wandering aesthetic 09 Julie Dwyer Place: walking it, naming it, taking it 10 Kathleen Gibson Imaginary Architectures, Overseas Chinese and the Mingshi Lou 11 Andrew Gorman-Murray Materialising Masculinity: men and interior design 12 Krismanto Kusbiantoro Localizing the Universal Values of Christianity in Local Church Design of Indonesia: towards sustainability 13 Brenda Martin Art Deco Moderne in Singapore in the 1930s Domestic Interior 14 Terry Meade Representation and Destruction: the creation of territorial islands through exclusion and retreat 15 Hannah Mendoza & Matthew Dudzik Residential Spaces in a Culture of Fear: interior design in São Paulo, Brazil 16 Kathy Mezei Living the Domestic Interior: seven characters in search of home in Vancouver, 2008- 2010 17 Julieanna Preston Into After 18 Angela Rui Art that Turns into Space Proceedings of the IDEA Symposium Interior Spaces in Other Places Brisbane, Australia 3-5 February 2010 Biographies Penny Sparke Penny Sparke is a Pro Vice-Chancellor and Professor of Design History at Kingston University, London. She graduated from Sussex University in 1971 and was awarded her doctorate in 1975. She taught the History of Design from 1972 to 1999 at Brighton Polytechnic and the Royal College of Art. She has published over a dozen books with an emphasis, since the mid 1990s, on the relationship between design and gender. Her books include As Long as It’s Pink: The Sexual Politics of Taste (Pandora, London, 1995); Elsie de Wolfe: The Birth of Modern Interior Decoration (Acanthus Press, New York, 2005); and The Modern Interior (Reaktion Books, 2008). Michael J. Ostwald Michael J. Ostwald is Dean of Architecture and Professor of Architecture at the University of Newcastle, Australia. He is a Visiting Professor at RMIT University and a Professorial Research Fellow at Victoria University Wellington. In 2009 he was awarded the first ARC Future Fellowship in the architecture and design area. He has a PhD in the history and theory of design and a higher doctorate, DSc, in design mathematics. He is co-editor of the journal Architectural Design Research and on the editorial boards of Architectural Theory Review and the Nexus Network Journal. His recent books include The Architecture of the New Baroque (2006), Homo Faber I: Modelling Design (2007), Residue: Architecture as a Condition of Loss (2007), Homo Faber II: Modelling Ideas (2008), Understanding Architectural Education in Australasia (2008) and Fractal Architecture (2009). Davide Fabio Colaci Davide Fabio Colaci graduated in architecture from Milan Polytechnic and studied at the Faculty of Architecture in Oporto [Portugal]. He works as a designer and set designer in Milan. He is in charge of interior design projects and the design of public buildings at the Guidarini & Salvadeo Architetti Associati studio. In 2003 he was one of the founders of Xgr+n, a multidisciplinary research group that has investigated the borderline areas between product, fashion, food and communication. He is an instructor in set design at the Faculty of Architecture and Society, Milan Polytechnic, where he has been carrying out teaching activities for five years. He is currently an assistant in the course run at the Faculty of Design by Professor Andrea Branzi, with whom he is carrying out research activity into the theme of the spaces of the contemporary metropolis as part of his research doctorate in interior and exhibit design. Kathleen Connellan Kathleen Connellan lectures in art and design history at the University of South Australia. Her research connects art and design with issues of social accountability. Currently she is portfolio leader of research in Art, Architecture & Design (AAD) where she works with researchers from all of these areas. Past projects include curriculum renewal in design history and theory in Australia (Opening Pandora’s Paintbox) and current projects include developing research pathways for students interested in the theory of art and design (Theory Spine). Her research outputs are strongly interdisciplinary incorporating postcolonial theory and critical race theory. Proceedings of the IDEA Symposium Interior Spaces in Other Places Brisbane, Australia 3-5 February 2010 Robert Crocker With a research background in the history of early modern science and ideas, Dr Robert Crocker is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Art, Architecture and Design at the University of South Australia, where he teaches the history and theory of architecture and design and coordinates the honours program in Interior Architecture and Industrial Design. His current research includes a project focusing on the cultural history of the Anglo-American ‘period style’ interior (c.1900-1940). In 2007 he was awarded a Winterthur Museum and Library Research fellowship to develop this research project further. Katarina Dimitrijevic Katarina currently heads the Interior Design Department at Greenside Design Center in Johannesburg. Her research interests lie in exploring the recycling-re-used design strategies and to promote conscious design approach. She presented a paper at Heltasa – Bloemfontein RSA on the 10% community engagement program which was integrated into the GDC curriculum from 2007. As co-author presented and published a paper in 2008 at Milan, Italy (Places & themes of interiors, contemporary research worldwide): ‘Street synergy: African Re-Tale in a global narrative’. As an interior design/architecture practitioner, Katarina has considerable experience and has been the sole member Inspace Interiors since 1998. Georgina Downey Dr Georgina Downey is a Visiting Research Fellow in the Art History Program at the University of Adelaide. Her research interests include paintings of domestic interiors in the early twentieth century as well as cosmopolitan networks in London and Paris. She is currently working on a book Picturing Home: Representing Interiors from the Victorians to the Moderns (Berg), that is a trans-disciplinary room-by-room exploration of representations of the domestic interior. Matthew Dudzik Matthew R. Dudzik is a professor at the Savannah College of Art and Design. He received an MArch from Washington University and a BA in architecture from Miami University of Ohio. His research focuses on urban paranoia and the enactment of social identity in the built environment. Julia Dwyer Julia Dwyer practices across art and architecture, combining architectural practice with collaborative public art projects. She studied architecture at the University of Sydney, the Architectural Association and North London Polytechnic (London Metropolitan University). She is senior lecturer at the University of Brighton, and teaches on the MA Interior Spatial Design at Chelsea College of Art and Design. She has published chapters in Altering Practices: Feminist Politics and Poetics (Petrescu 2007) and Thinking Inside the Box: a reader in interiors for the 21st century (Gigli, et al 2007). She is a member of the Taking Place group, which investigates feminist spatial practice through spatial interventions. Kathleen Gibson Professor Gibson is a design educator at Cornell University. She practiced contract interior design for seven years before joining the academy. Her expertise is in computer-aided design (CAD) where she investigates
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