Penetrable Walls: Architecture at the Edges of the Roman Empire
Thomas J. Morton, Bryn Mawr, Session Chair
“Ritual Places and Community-Formation on the Frontiers of Roman Britain,” Eleri Cousins, University of St. Andrews
Piranesi at 300
Heather Hyde Minor, University of Notre Dame, and John Pinto, Princeton University, Session Co-Chairs
“Lauding the Republic: Piranesi, Sallust, the Romans and the French,” Dirk De Meyer, Ghent University, Belgium
“Scipione Maffei, Piranesi, and the Construction of Etruscan Magnificence,” Eleonora Pistis, Columbia University
“Piranesi's Roman Bridges: Engineering to Art,” John Stamper, University of Notre Dame
“‘Nature, the great renewer’: Piranesi Visualizes Architectural Imitation,” Elizabeth Petcu, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Germany
“Rediscovering Piranesi in the Twentieth Century,” Victor Plahte Tschudi, The Oslo School of Architecture and Design, Norway
Chinese Architecture and Gardens in a Global Context
Tracy Miller, Vanderbilt University, Session Chair
“From Monastic Cells to Corridors: Historical Significance of Sixth–Seventh-Century Changes in the Chinese Buddhist Monastery,” Zhu...