Conference: 'Architecture of Deregulations' (Mar 10-12)
Welcome to an international conference about postmodernism, politics, and the built environment in Europe, 1975–1995. Organisers are Catharina Gabrielsson and Helena Mattsson, KTH School of Architecture in collaboration with Moderna Museet. Attending the conference is free of charge, and it will take place at two different venues in Stockholm, Sweden: School of Architecture KTH and Moderna Museet. Financed by Vetenskapsrådet, the Swedish Research Council.
Tid: To 2016-03-10 - Lö 2016-03-12
Plats: KTH School of Architecture, Oscars backe 5, Stockholm
For full programme, see below, the conference website www.architecture-of-deregulations.com or download it as a pdf .
Contextualising architectural discourse, aesthetic ideals and executed projects within specific national frameworks and cultural situations, the conference revisits the relation between architecture and ideology viewed through the lens of a situated postmodernism.
If modernism in European architecture is associated with a socialist agenda and the implementation of the welfare state, shaped by architects in close proximity to politicians, the role and identity of postmodernism as a socio-political phenomenon appears far more uncertain. How does the heterogeneous flux of critiques and affirmations known as postmodernism in architecture relate to a broader political sphere and to new social ideals that emerge after the post-war years? How does architecture respond to the extensive transformations in politics and economics that many European countries undergo in the latter half of the 20th century, marked by the gradual dismantling of the welfare state and the subsequent ‘triumph’ of liberalism and global capitalism?
By adopting ‘deregulations’ as a banner heading for these multi-scalar, geographically varied, yet interconnected processes – spanning from public management, jurisdiction to market conditions – the matter of architecture’s role vis-à-vis incremental social change rises to the fore, again. Does architecture merely respond to or materialise changing conditions in matters like jurisdiction, industry, public management, planning procedures or housing politics, or does it also somehow contribute to, transmit and provoke the production of sensibilities that make these transformations possible?
The hypothesis underpinning this conference is that postmodern architecture – much like functionalism/modernism that went before – holds a reciprocal relationship to society; that it, precisely as ‘style’, has the capacity to enforce, generate and perhaps even forebode that change of sensibilities known as an ideological shift.
THURSDAY MARCH 10
KTH SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
ROOM: MAIN ATELIER (A108) OSQUARS BACKE 5, STOCKHOLM
13.00:
Welcome address and introduction by conference organisers Catharina Gabrielsson and Helena Mattsson
13.30: SESSION 1 – AMBIGUOUS URBAN PROJECTS
“Milton Keynes’ Centre: the Apotheosis of the British Post-War Consensus or, the Apostle of Neoliberalism?” — Janina Gosseye
“Euralille: a New Urbanism in the Age of Neoliberalism” — Valéry Didelon
“The Hybridity of Housing Politics: Production and Reproduction of a Norwegian Satellite Town” — Guttorm Ruud
15.00: BREAK
15.15: SESSION 2 – IDEALS IN URBAN PLANNING
“Playing the Green Card: The Futuring Function of a Disengaged Jardin-Fôret” — Maria Hellström Reimer
“Postmodernism Revisited: The European Quarter, Brussels” — Kris Scheerlinck & Adrià Carbonell
“The Long Nineties: Reassessing the Project of ‘A Complex Order’” — Helen Runting
16.45: COFFEE BREAK
17.00: SESSION 3 – STATE, BUREAUCRACY AND NEW PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
“Deregulation’s Double: Fire Safety Engineering and the Reconstruction of Architectural Practice” — Liam Ross
“The Profitable State: Marketization of Public Premise Provision in Sweden” — Erik Sigge
“Toward a Pessimist Utopia” — Salomon Frausto
18.30: BREAK
19.00: “IMMEDIATE AFFECT: ARCHITECTURE, NEOLIBERALISM AND THE PATTERNING OF EXPERIENCE”
Douglas Spencer, Dr Douglas Spencer is a writer and teaches architectural history and theory at the Architectural Association, The Royal College of Art and the University of East London.
Response by Hélène Frichot, Associate Professor in Critical Studies and Gender Theory at KTH School of Architecture
20.30: DINNER WITH DELEGATES
FRIDAY 11 MARCH
MODERNA MUSEET
BIOGRAFEN, PLAN 2, SKEPPSHOLMEN, STOCKHOLM
10.00: MODERNA MUSEET OPENS. COFFEE.
10.15:
Welcome address by Anna Tellgren, Curator and Research leader, Moderna Museet
10.30: “From Norm to Form: Rethinking Welfare State Housing” — Helena Mattsson, Associate Professor in History and Theory of Architecture at KTH School of Architecture
11.00: “The Architecture of Postmodern Legal Aesthetics” — Timothy Hyde, Clarence H. Blackall Associate Professor in Architectural History at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
12.00: LUNCH
13.00: “‘Functionalism, modernism, mannerism, neo-neo-classicism, postmodernism, rationalism, postmodern classicism… ’: Resistance or Assimilation through the Lens of ‘Style’ in Swedish Architectural Discourse” — Catharina Gabrielsson, Assistant Professor in Urban Studies at KTH, School of Architecture
13.30: “An Archeology of Neoliberal Housing in France” — Anne Kockelkorn, architectural historian and urban researcher, Department of Architecture, ETH Zurich
14.30: COFFEE BREAK
15.15: “Condemned to Stardom” — Penelope Dean, Associate Professor at School of Architecture, University of Illinois at Chicago
14.45: “Whatever Happened to Postmodernism?” — Lea-Catherine Szacka, Associate Professor at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design
15.45: BREAK
16.00: “If Spatialising Capital is the Answer, What is the Question?” — Jeremy Till, Professor of Architecture, head of Central Saint Martins
Response by Sven-Olov Wallenstein, Professor of Philosophy, Södertörn University
18.00: Opening of the exhibition “Object and Bodies at Rest and in Motion” at floor 4 Moderna Museet
SATURDAY 12 MARCH
KTH SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
ROOM: MAIN ATELIER (A108) OSQUARS BACKE 5, STOCKHOLM
09.30: SESSION 4 – ARCHITECTURAL DISCOURSE AND IDEOLOGY
“The End of Planning and the Political Aporia of the Architectural City” — Adrià Carbonell & Roi Salgueiro Barrio
“Anonymous Concrete Monsters c. 1990” — Maros Krivy
“1976: Crisis and Compromise in the Welfare State. Swedish Architectural Debate in the Mid 1970s” — Christina Pech
11.00: BREAK
11.15: SESSION 5 – CAPITAL, INDUSTRY AND FINANCE
“Euroc House: The Architecture of Management and Speculation” — Matthew Ashton
“Reconceptualising Risk: Deregulation and the Design of the Lloyd’s of London HQ, 1978–1986” — Amy Thomas
“Toward the Contextual Plattenbau: Postmodern Exchanges in Architectural Design and Production Between Finland and the GDR in the 1980s” — Torsten Lange
12.45: LUNCH
13.45: SESSION 6 – ARCHITECTURE, NATIONAL IDENTITY AND POLITICS
“On the Other Side of the Wall: Discussions on Postmodernism in the Late GDR” — Kirsten Angermann
“Two Sides of the Same Coin: Liberty and Liberalization in Portuguese Post‐Revolutionary Architecture. The Lisbon School towards European Integration: 1976–1986” — Leonor Matos Silva
“Bursting the Big Bubble: Architecture and Politics in Italy, 1976–1992” — Silvia Micheli & Lea-Catherine Szacka
16.15: BREAK
16.30: SESSION 7 – NEOLIBERAL CONTRADICTIONS – POPULISM, CRITIQUE AND ASSIMILATION
“There is Nothing Here for Us” — Tor Lindstrand & Håkan Nilsson
“Participation, Postmodernism, and Architectural Populism” — Alexandros Vazakas
“Mafia and the City” — Alessandro B & Davide B
18.00: BREAK
18.15: “Human Territoriality and the Neoliberalization of Housing” — Kenny Cupers, Associate Professor in the History and Theory of Architecture and Urbanism at the University of Basel
Response by Jennifer Mack, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute for Housing and Urban Research at Uppsala University, researcher at the KTH School of Architecture
19.15: SUMMARY AND CLOSING REMARKS
Conference organisers: Catharina Gabrielsson and Helena Mattson, KTH School of Architecture Royal Institute of Technology in collaboration with Moderna Museet. Research Assistant: Katarina Elvén. Graphic Design: Sara Kaaman. Financed by Vetenskapsrådet, the Swedish Research Council.