Open Lecture Series: “Evolving Event Design” David Ball, Brandfuel, Monday, October 14, M416 Robin Evans Room, Marylebone Campus, 17:00

When: 14th of October 2019, 17:00

Where: M416, Robin Evans Room, 35 Marylebone Rd, London NW1 5LS

To book your free tickets please click here

David Ball is CEO of award winning brand experience agency Brandfuel.

About this Event

Brandfuel the award-winning London based creative agency produces major experiences for Google and other global brands year on year. This includes designing the internationally acclaimed Zeitgeist event in the UK for the last fourteen years. How have they kept it fresh to reinvigorate the attendee’s, when the location, format and often many of the guests are the same each year?

Learning outcomes:

Understand why a client’s expectations change each year for the same event type

Understand how the design process evolves to accommodate new expectations

Understand what design elements can be re-used or re-imagined each year

WAS Open Lecture: “James Stirling: Inspiring Places and Spaces” by Alan Berman, 3rd April,13:00, M416

The Westminster Architecture Society is pleased to announce the last Open Lecture of the term. James Stirling: Inspiring Places and Spaces will complement the month-long events held by the RIBA to honour Stirling’s contribution to modern architecture in anticipation of the eponymous annual Stirling Prize.

The lecture will take place on 3rd April, 13:00 in Robin Evans Room (M416), Marylebone Campus, University of Westminster.

Alan Berman is founder of Berman Guedes Stretton Architects and also works at Studio Berman. Alan gives the architecture lecture series at Wolfson College, University of Oxford, and is a lecturer at University of Liverpool. He edited Jim Stirling and the Red Trilogy: Three Radical Buildings and Stirling+Wilford American Buildings.

 

M.Arch History and Theory Open Lecture: Teresa Stoppani, 16th March, 18:30, M416

The series of lectures organised by the M.Arch History and Theory continues on Thursday 16th March at 18:30 in Robin Evans Room (M416), Marylebone Campus with Professor Teresa Stoppani’s Architecture & Paradigm.

‘Paradigm’ (Gr. paradèigma, ‘example, exemplar’) is an action and relation word that contains within itself the possibility of variation and movement; it indicates oscillation and multiplicity rather than fixity and one-ness.  As an intellectual operation the paradigm defines a distance of the object from itself, removing the object from its singularity to then return it to another singularity.  It also enables a distancing from acquired historical, morphological and typological preconceptions and classifications that are well known in architecture and urbanism.  The paradigm as a cultural operation works towards the production of a non-dialectical form of knowledge, which does not aim to achieve the universal and to derive principles (rules) from it.

This lecture argues that the architectural and urban ‘project’, as a cultural construction around its object, performs in the city the relational operation of the paradigm.

Teresa Stoppani is an architect and architectural theorist. She has taught architectural design and theory in Italy, Australia and the UK, and is currently Professor of Architecture at Leeds Beckett University, where she directs the PhD in Architecture programme. Her research interests are the relationship between architecture theory and the design process in the urban environment, and the influence on the specifically architectural of other spatial and critical practices. She is author of Paradigm Islands: Manhattan and Venice (Routledge 2010) and Unorthodox Ways to Rethink Architecture and the City (Routledge 2018) and editor with G. Ponzo and G. Themistokleous of This Thing Called Theory (Routledge 2016).