Symposium & Book Launch


WE WRITE: Finissage of Women Writing Architecture 1700-1900
Date: Thursday, 7 May 2026, 13.00-20.00
Location: ETH Zürich, Campus Hönggerberg
HIL E67 (Rote Hölle) and HIL D 50.5, gta Foyer
Stephano-Franscini-Platz 5, Zürich
Programme:
13.00 Exhibition Tour with Anne Hultzsch, Sol Pérez Martínez, and Elena Rieger
14.00 Feminist Translations in Architecture: Stéphanie Dadour, Émilie Oléron Evans, and Lucía Pérez Moreno
15.00 Coffee
15.30 Expanding Agency – Preliminary Research Results: Kathleen James-Chakraborty
16.15 Women Writing Architecture 1700-1900 – Wrapping Up: Anne Hultzsch
17.00 Lives and Afterlives of Collaborative Research Projects with Maarten Delbeke, Kathleen James-Chakraborty, and Anne Hultzsch
18.00 Book launch with Anne Hultzsch, Sol Pérez Martínez, and Moritz Gleich. Responses by Kathleen James-Chakraborty and Adrian Forty
18.30 Apéro
Abstracts & Speaker Bios
Kathleen James-Chakraborty
Expanding Agency: Preliminary Research Results
Funded through a European Research Council Advanced Grant, the project Expanding Agency: Women, Race, and the Dissemination of Modern Architecture, explores many of the same themes as Anne Hultzsch’s Women Writing Architecture, although it focuses on a later period. This report of its results to date includes a discussion of what can be learned from focusing on twentieth-century periodicals written by and for women. It will also address the project’s inclusion of African American women, the challenges of writing global histories, and a summary of the project's forthcoming edited collection Minding Her Business: Women, Architecture, and Design, as well as a discussion of our dissemination strategies, which include a poster exhibition as well as peer-reviewed scholarship.
Kathleen James-Chakraborty is Professor of Art history at University College Dublin.
Educated at Yale and the University of Pennsylvania, she has also Botaught at the University of Minnesota, the University of California Berkeley, the Ruhr University Bochum, and the Yale School of Architecture, where she was the Vincent Scully Visiting Professor of Architectural History. Her books include Modernism as Memory: Building Identity in the Federal Republic of Germany (Minnesota, 2018), The Belgian Friendship Building: From the New York World’s Fair to a Virginia HBCU (Virginia, 2025), co-authored with Katherine M. Kuenzli and Bryan Clark Green, and Minding Her Business: Women, Architecture, and Design, co-edited with Alborz Dianat.
Stéphanie Dadour is Associate Professor at ENSA Paris-Malaquais and co-founder of the architecture firm Dadour de Pous Architecture. Her teaching, research, and projects focus on the links between domestic space and spatial strategies of minority groups. Among her publications are Des voix s’élèvent. Féminismes et Architecture; The Housing Project. Discourses, Ideals, Models and Politics in 20th-Century Exhibitions (with G. Caramellino); and 1989, hors-champ de l’architecture officielle : Liban. She is currently completing a body of work centered on the notion of Encounter in architecture.
Dr Émilie Oléron Evans is an art historian and translator based at Queen Mary University of London. Her research focuses on the respective and combined roles of gender dynamics and of translation in the conceptualisation and institutional evolution of history of art, architecture and design as disciplines. She wrote on the reception and legacy of, among others, Nikolaus Pevsner, Linda Nochlin and Carol Duncan. She is co-investigator on the project ‘Women and History of Art in the Making, Britain, 1945-1974’, which proposes new approaches for documenting and interpreting the archival traces of women’s professional agency in the spaces shaping visual literacy.
Dr. Lucía C. Pérez-Moreno is a Professor of History of Architecture at the University of Zaragoza, Spain. She has served as a Visiting Professor at KU Leuven (Belgium) from 2022 to 2024 and at the University of Colorado Denver (USA) in 2016. She holds a PhD in Architecture from the Polytechnic University of Madrid (2013), an MS.AAD from Columbia University (New York, 2008), and completed postgraduate studies at Aalto University (Helsinki, 2004). A licensed architect and urban planner (University of Navarra, 2003), she also holds a BA in Philosophy from KU Leuven (2024). Her research focuses on the intersection of architecture and feminist theory. She has served as the Principal Investigator (PI) for several research grants dedicated to studying the work of women architects in Spain and has published widely on the subject, including: Women in a Spain in Transition, 1962–1999 (ed., 2025) and Architecture & Feminist Critical Theory: Selected Writings by Hilde Heynen (ed., 2025). She is currently working on the translation of these two volumes: the former from Spanish into English, and the latter from English into Spanish.
Book Launches
Society of Architectural Historians Annual International Conference, Mexico City
Date: Friday, 17 May 2026, 13.30-14.30
Location: Hilton Mexico City Reforma, Don Alberto 1
Join in the conversation with editors Anne Hultzsch and Sol Pérez Martínez and authors Ana Ozaki, Barbara Penner, Damla Göre and Pía Montealege.
Responses by Ana Esteban Maluenda and Itohan Osayimwese.
European Architectural History Network Biannual International Conference, Aarhus
Date: Wednesday, 17 June 2026
Location: Aarhus University Conference Centre
Join in the conversation with editors, authors, and respondents.
EAHN 2026 Session
Architectural Objects of Colonial Consumption: The Material and Visual Worlds of Tea, Coffee, Chocolate, and Other Hot Beverages
CHAIRS AND CONTACT DETAILS:
Laura Hindelang, University of Bern
laura.hindelang@unibe.ch
Anne Hultzsch, ETH Zurich
hultzsch@arch.ethz.ch
This session brings together three phenomena: ceramics featuring architectural motifs; the consumption of hot beverages, made from substances, including tea, coffee, and chocolate, which played a significant role in colonial trade and imperial networks; and their spatial environments. We invite papers that centre on a specific object or space and its agency as a prism through which to interrogate broader spatial histories in any geography; we focus on the period from ca. 1500 to 1900 but are also interested in examples outside this time span if they reflect on the above questions.
https://konferencer.au.dk/eahn26/call-for-papers-1/sessions
Session in Aarhus: 17-21 June 2026
Past events
Seeing Her. Where Women Wrote Architecture 1700-1900
Date: Friday, 29 November 2024
Location: ETH Hönggerberg, HIL E 71.1
Time: 15.00-18.00 CEST
The 5th WoWA Workshop & Colloquium is entitled SEEING HER / SIE SEHEN and will take place on 29 November 2024 at ETH Zurich. Featuring a private bilingual reading workshop followed by public talks in the afternoon, it brings together a diverse group of scholars in terms of seniority, period, background, and expertise.
Talks by Sonja Dümpelmann (Munich), Isabel Karremann (Zurich) and Elena Rieger will centre around specific sites ranging from maternity spaces to the literary country house and gendered landscapes. Together with the respondents, Anna-Maria Meister (Florence/Karlsruhe) and Anne Hultzsch (Zurich), speakers will complicate architectural histories of the 18th and 19th centuries with the question where women wrote architecture.
Join us for the in-person colloquium: all welcome!
Sie Sehen. Wo Frauen Architektur Schrieben 1700-1900
Datum: Freitag, 29. November 2024
Ort: ETH Hönggerberg, HIL E 71.1
Zeit: 15.00-18.00 Uhr MESZ
Unser 5. WoWA Workshop & Kolloquium trägt den Titel SEEING HER / SIE SEHEN und findet am 29. November 2024 an der ETH Zürich statt. Die Veranstaltung beginnt mit einem privaten zweisprachigen Leseworkshop, gefolgt von öffentlichen Vorträgen am Nachmittag, und bringt eine vielfältige Gruppe von Wissenschaftler*innen unterschiedlicher Karrierestufen,Hintergründe, Fachgebiete und Epochen zusammen.
Sonja Dümpelmann (München), Isabel Karremann (Zürich) und Elena Rieger werden in ihren Vorträgen gezielt Orte untersuchen, die auf unterschiedliche Weise durch Schreiben ‘gegendered’ wurden: von Räumen des Gebärens und der Mutterschaft, dem literarischen Landhaus bis zu geschlechtsspezifischen Landschaften. Mit Reflektionen von Anna-Maria Meister (Florenz/Karlsruhe) und Anne Hultzsch (Zürich) werden wir die Architekturgeschichten des 18. und 19. Jahrhunderts durch die Frage, wo Frauen Architektur schrieben, erweitern und verkomplizieren.
Nehmen Sie am Kolloquium vor Ort teil: Alle sind herzlich willkommen!

Lines of Enquiry
Architecture & Researchgta Lecture Series 2025
ETH Zurich
Hosted by the Institute for the History and Theory of Architecture (gta) at ETH Zurich, Lines of Enquiry is a new lecture series that provides a platform for postdoctoral researchers to share their current work. Focusing on original and critical approaches to architecture and its histories, the series invites scholars to present emerging architectural research and experimental methodologies. Lines of Enquiry aims to open up space for dialogue and exchange with colleagues and students of the Department of Architecture at ETH Zurich.
All lectures will be held at HIL E3, at ETH Zurich Hönggerberg campus, CH8093
Autumn Series
Frederike Lausch
UNESCO’s Photocopy Machine: Producing Self-Help Manuals
6th November 2025, 18.00, HIL E3
Sol Pérez Martínez
This Bridge Called My Back:
Between Architectural Practice and Research
March 2026 tbc, 18.00, HIL E3
Past lectures
Eric Häusler
Tokyo, New York, Zurich: Reconstructing Past Urban Futures
15th May 2025, 18.00, HIL E3
Cathelijne Nuijsink
Anyone, Anywhere, Anytime? Revisting the Any Conferences (1991-2000)
5th June 2025, 18.00, HIL E3
Frederike Lausch
UNESCO’s Photocopy Machine: Producing Self-Help Manuals6th November 2025, 18.00, HIL E3
Sol Pérez Martínez
This Bridge Called My Back:Between Architectural Practice and Research
March 2026 tbc, 18.00, HIL E3
Past lectures
Eric Häusler
Tokyo, New York, Zurich: Reconstructing Past Urban Futures15th May 2025, 18.00, HIL E3
Cathelijne Nuijsink
Anyone, Anywhere, Anytime? Revisting the Any Conferences (1991-2000)5th June 2025, 18.00, HIL E3

