A call for proposals for a forthcoming book: “Interiors in the Era of Covid-19” | Deadline: Tuesday, June 1, 2021

The Covid19 pandemic has caused people, worldwide, to be confined to their homes for longer periods of time than previously, causing many changes to take place within them, while many other interiors beyond the home, including hospitals and care homes, have had to respond to the new priorities in a variety of ways. Homes have had to accommodate the additional roles of schools, gymnasia, restaurants, cinemas, offices, making spaces and more. Above all, the home has been looked to as a site to support and enhance the well-being of its inhabitants in a variety of ways. At the same time, the work, retail, leisure, and hospitality spaces in our city centre buildings sit empty constituting a threat to the future urban environment.

A webinar on the subject of Interiors in the era of Covid-19 was hosted by the Modern Interiors Research Centre (MIRC), which is based at Kingston University, London on March 24th 2021. Following that highly successful event, and interest shown by an academic press, we are currently constructing a proposal for a book of essays, based on the themes and ideas that were raised at the webinar.

With Prof. Penny Sparke as lead editor, ‘Interiors in the era of Covid-19’ will be a collection of essays that offer reflections on the complex ways in which a variety of inside spaces have responded to Covid-19 and other pandemics/human crises. The scope of this volume is global and, while most of the essays deal with contemporary issues, others are historically based. We are keen to consider essays that address, among others, the following themes:

    •   health and well-being at home
    •   home working
    •   representing home during the pandemic
    •   interiors beyond the home
    •   collection and museum initiatives on pandemic interiors
    •   responses by interior design educators to the changing context

Some over-arching themes – including the shifting relationship between the arenas of the public and the private; the implications for people’s identities; the important roles played by technology; gender; and the importance of ‘making’ – cut across these themes. Importantly, the essays explore the roles played by designers (both amateur and professional) in accommodating changing requirements and anticipating future ones.

In addition to considering developments of the papers presented at the webinar as potential content for the proposed book, MIRC is offering an opportunity to anyone else who would like to be considered as a contributor to submit a proposal to us. We are especially interested in essays which deal with historical case-studies that address the relationship of pandemics/diseases/human crises with interiors that could help provide a context for the essays with a contemporary focus.

Please send proposals of 500 words, complete with references, to Patricia Lara-Betancourt at p.lara-betancourt@kingston.ac.uk by Tuesday 1st June 2021.

Call for Participation: SAH Historic Interiors Affiliate Group (First Annual) New Research Symposium “Interiors and their Histories” | Deadline for submission of abstracts – April 20, 2021

The Society of Architectural Historians Historic Interiors Affiliate Group (HIG) announces its first annual New Research Symposium: Interiors and their Histories.

The symposium will showcase innovative projects, highlighting ground-breaking research and methods in the historical study of the conception, design, representation, experience, preservation, and interpretation of interior spaces across time and geography. We seek work notable for its creative exploration of archival material, oral history, theoretical models, fieldwork, and interpretation, with a special emphasis on the revision or reconceptualization of the interiors history canon.

Graduate students, postdocs and recent graduates (2018-) from diverse disciplinary fields of study are invited to send proposals for brief 10-minute talks. The presentations will take place online via a live Zoom webinar on May 21, 2021.

Please send abstracts and a 2-page CV by April 20th to: alasc@pratt.edu and Paula.Lupkin@unt.edu

Society of Architectural Historians

Call for Papers: CHORD workshop – ‘Retailing, Architecture and Material Culture: Historical Perspectives’, Deadline for Abstracts 2nd March

Call for Papers

CHORD workshop: ‘Retailing, Architecture and Material Culture: Historical Perspectives’

Tuesday 22 May 2018

University of Wolverhampton, UK

The Centre for the History of Retailing and Distribution (CHORD) invites submissions for a workshop that explores the architecture, material environmement, objetcs and material culture of retailing and distribution.

Papers focusing on any historical period or geographical area are welcome, as are reflections on methodology and / or theory. We invite both experienced and new speakers, including speakers without an institutional affiliation. Potential speakers are welcome to discuss their ideas with the organiser before submission (please see details below). Some of the themes that might be considered include (but are not limited to):

  • The architecture of shops, markets and retail premises
  • Retailing and distribution ephemera
  • Retail exteriors, displays and interiors
  • The material culture of distribution
  • Fixtures, fittings and packaging
  • The restoration and recreation of historical shops
  • Retailing and town planning
  • Retail premises in the wider environment

Individual papers are usually 20 minutes in length, followed by 10 minutes for questions and discussion. We also welcome shorter, 10 minute ‘work in progress’ presentations, also followed by 10 minutes for discussion.

To submit a proposal, please send title and abstract of c.300 to 400 words, specifying whether you are proposing a 10 or a 20 minute presentation to Prof Laura Ugolini, at l.ugolini@wlv.ac.uk by 2 March 2018.

If you are unsure whether to submit a proposal or would like to discuss your ideas before submission, please e-mail Prof Laura Ugolini at l.ugolini@wlv.ac.uk.

The workshop will be held in the Mary Seacole (‘MH’) Building, Wolverhampton University City Campus Molineux, a short walk from Wolverhampton’s bus and train stations. Maps and directions are available here.

The call for papers is available here.

Find out more about this and other CHORD events at https://retailhistory.wordpress.com

For further information, please e-mail Prof Laura Ugolini at: l.ugolini@wlv.ac.uk

Featured image: Marks and Spencers Edgware Road, London store in 1912 © Marks and Spencers Company Archive