词条 | Draft:Douglas Jarvie Clelland |
释义 |
|name = Doug Clelland |nationality = British |birth_date = |birth_place = |death_date = |death_place = |parents = |alma_mater = |practice = |significant_buildings= |significant_projects = |significant_design = |awards = |website = }} Douglas Jarvie Clelland (a.k.a Doug Clelland) is an architect, educator and author, born on 13 May 1945. As an architect, he has practised as Clelland Associates (1972 to 1996), Aire Design (1996 to 2007) and JARVIE Architecture and Writing (2015 to the present). His most recent completed building is an extension to The Mulberry House School in London. He has also acted as a design consultant to JIG Architects (2007 to 2015). He has taught widely, most recently as the Herbert Rowse Professor of Architecture and Urban Design at Liverpool John Moores University (1994 to 2010) and Professor of Architecture at the Beuth University in Berlin (2013 to 2016). He is currently Emeritus Professor at Liverpool John Moores University and continues to teach in Berlin. He has written extensively as an academic, and most recently is the author of two non- architectural hybrid narratives, God’s Brains and Joyful Darkness, which explore collisions within the contemporary world, and the tragic consequences inherent in the ever-growing hegemony of materialism. {{AFC submission|t||ts=20181119170142|u=Mwoolliams|ns=118|demo=}}Personal LifeDoug Clelland was born in Glasgow in May 1945, attended Eastbank Primary School until nine, after which he completed his schooling at Hutchesons Boys Grammar School. In 1963 he commenced architectural education at the Glasgow School of Art, moving to London, then to Canada and the USA, working for a range of architects, before completing his formal architectural education at the Architectural Association in London, obtaining his Diploma in Architecture in 1970, being one of the first of two students to be influenced by Dalibor Vesely, working with him on a shared project for Kentish Town, London in 1972. He taught at the Architectural Association from 1971 to 1975, sharing units with Daniel Libeskind and Dalibor Vesely, moving to the Polytechnic of Central London (PCL), where he ran the urban architecture studio until 1988. Maintaining bases in London and Berlin, Clelland largely lived from 1989 until 1991 in Glasgow, where he conceived and managed a keynote event of ‘Glasgow: European Capital of Culture’. He returned to teaching in 1994 as the Herbert Rowse Professor of Architecture and Urban Design at Liverpool John Moores University, where he remained until 2010. Since then he has acted as a Professor of Architecture at the Beuth University of Applied Sciences in Berlin, has continued in practice and as a design consultant, and has published two non- architectural books. Clelland now divides his time between Oxfordshire and Berlin – between the life of writing and the life of architecture. He is the father of three daughters and one son. Student LifeGlasgow School of ArtFor three years at the ‘The Mac’ as a part-time student, Clelland’s mind altered from that of being ‘spatially innocent’ to that of being ‘obsessively architectural’. Kingston College of ArtA year of bureaucratically-required study in order to facilitate the move from Scotland to the Architectural Association in London. The Architectural AssociationThe Architectural Association in the period on either side of 1968 was something of a hotbed, both in terms of the political climate outside 34-36 Bedford Square, and in terms of the ‘bloodless’ transferal from the era of the Smithsons to the era of Alvin Boyarsky and Peter Cook. Working LifeDoug Clelland began his working life in 1963 in the Education Architecture Department of Glasgow Corporation, studying at the ‘Mac’ part-time. Moving to Canada in 1966, he worked in the office of John Andrews and then, when travelling in Canada and the USA for a year, he spent limited periods in the studios of American architects, being most influenced by the thinking and work of Louis Kahn. Returning to the UK to complete his formal architectural education at the AA, he commenced private practice in 1972 and completed a set of small buildings in London, Nackington near Canterbury and Forgandenny in Perthshire. Continuing to have his base in London, the Weinreb Studio received an RIBA regional award and the Gartnernes Forsikring a design award in Denmark. His involvement with Berlin commenced in 1977 and between then and today, he has published a number of journals on the city, was involved in the Internationale Bauausstellung (IBA) 1984 to 1987, and designed buildings for Siemens and GSW. He was elected to the Berlin Architektenkammer in 1992. He returned to full-time teaching in 1993 in Liverpool, and from 2010 until today, Clelland has mixed practice, teaching and writing – and in recent years has committed more time and resources to travel and to reflection on globalisation. References |
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