Place, progress and memory : McGlashan and Everist at Geelong College


Autoria(s): Trimble, Judith
Contribuinte(s)

Gusheh, Maryam

Stead, Naomi

Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

Building in an historical setting engages the problem of progress and authentic dialogue between tradition, contemporaneity and visions of a future. Since 1960, McGlashan and Everist have been the sole architects for Geelong College's Talbot Street campus, established in 1871. They have designed its master plans and all new buildings and alterations to the existing eclectic stock. As modernists with a task providing no opportunity for stylistic coherence in an age of universality, the architects were caught between protecting the College's perceived authenticity by continuing its historicist links with English collegiate architecture on the one hand, and their own modernist ethic on the other. Adopting what Frampton has called in his essay, 'Critical Regionalism', an 'arriere-garde' position (an 'identity-giving culture' rather than reversion to the past or to the 'Enlightenment myth of progress'), the architects avoid overt display of nostalgic historicism, modernist tectonics and populism. This paper asks whether and to what extent they have been capable of an authentic dialogue. Have they created an existential place in an 'architecture of resistance' as Frampton would have it, attending sufficiently to 'identity-giving culture' and the future? What is the role of implacement in the problematic of 'progress' in this context and how might it have affected a particular approach and the outcome?<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30004941

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30004941/trimble-placeprogressmemory-2002.pdf

Tipo

Conference Paper