Dean Lykoudis to Lecture at the Driehaus Museum on February 11, 2014

Author: Ashley Johnston

Dean Michael Lykoudis joins the Chicago ICAA to discuss how a new Greek national identity was created during the Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries with aspirations of modernity and prosperity in a period of great economic austerity and political turmoil. The architectural unity that evolved was a profound lesson in place-making for the world as a whole but especially for Greece, a new country whose citizens had just emerged from four centuries of cohabitation with the Ottoman Empire.

This unity was created by two forces: one top-down from the newly formed government of Greece that included a young king from Bavaria and a Danish, German and French architectural entourage. They brought with them a reinvented neoclassical ideal to its birthplace. The other was bottom-up force made up mostly of builders and developers self taught or trained in technical vocational schools. The result was the building of beautiful cities with an architectural and urban unity that redefine Greek culture and entry into the modern world.

Driehaus Series Lecture:

Neoclassical Architecture in Greece: Architecture and Urbanism in an Age of Political Turmoil and Economic Austerity presented by Michael Lykoudis, The Francis and Kathleen Rooney Dean of the School of Architecture at the University of Notre Dame

Date:

Tuesday, February 11th, 6:00 - 8:30 pm

Location:

The Richard H. Driehaus Museum
40 East Erie Street
Chicago, Illinois 60611
http://www.driehausmuseum.org

Pricing:

$10.00 for ICAA Members
$20.00 for non-ICAA Members

Please, click here to register

Or register through Brown Paper Tickets at:http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/558459