Wednesday
04Nov2009

Schrenk Member of Delegation to China

Last spring Professor Lisa Schrenk was selected by the East West Center's Asian Studies Development Program as a member of a delegation of 14 university educators from the United States and Southeast Asia to travel to China in July 2009 as guests of the Chinese Ministry of Education. During the three-week trip the group attended lectures on various aspects of Chinese culture given by prominent university faculty and visited sites of historical and natural significance in Beijing, Chengdu, Guizhou Province, and Shanghai.  Particularly exciting for Schrenk was being able to meet members of the Expo 2010 planning commission and then visit the fairgrounds of the upcoming Shanghai international exposition. She hopes to return to China next year to attend the fair and give a lecture as part of the educational activities sponsored by the Expo Museum, a permanent feature of the exposition. Below are a few of her photographs from the trip. To see more, check out her blog: AdventuresinArchitecture

 

Wednesday
22Apr2009

Edward Lifson: Look and Listen

One of the most intesting blogs on architecture is Hello Beautiful by Edward Lifson, Annenberg Fellow in L.A. Lifson did an NPR show in Chicago for a number of years that focused on architecture and art before becoming  a Loeb Fellow at Harvard's Graduate School of Design and then moving on to L.A.  His blog explores a wide range of current issues and news in architecture and also includes links to other interesting architecture-related websites. Check it out by clicking on Hello Beautiful!

Wednesday
04Mar2009

Schrenk Wins Outstanding Title Award

 

Reviewed January 2008 in CHOICE:

In an engaging and wide-ranging study, Schrenk (architecture and art history, Norwich University) situates the architecture of the "Century of Progress" World's Fair in Chicago in many broader contexts.

This well-written book argues for the continuing impact of this fair long after its temporary structures came down. Built during the Depression, it introduced new materials and technologies (such as various pressed wood boards, some including asbestos, and other innovative forms of prefabrication) that would shape building practices for subsequent decades.

Schrenk's story is surprisingly interesting, enlivened by postcards and ephemera as illustrations. Major and minor architectural firms receive equal treatment (Frank Lloyd Wright and Norman Bel Geddes are mostly considered in their absence from the built environment of the 1933-34 fair site).

A marvelous gallery of color images supports an important assessment of the role of color in architectural theory of the era. Those unfamiliar with the growing literature on world's fairs as cultural phenomena will find this a useful starting point. This book has much to interest audiences from art history, architecture, modern cultural history, and American studies.

Summing Up: Highly recommended.

All levels. -- J. E. Housefield, Texas State University--San Marcos


Every year in the January issue, Choice publishes a list of Outstanding Academic Titles that were reviewed during the previous calendar year. This prestigious list reflects the best in scholarly titles reviewed by Choice and brings with it the extraordinary recognition of the academic library community.

The list is quite selective: it contains approximately ten percent of some 7,000 works reviewed in Choice each year. Choice editors base their selections on the reviewer's evaluation of the work, the editor's knowledge of the field, and the reviewer's record.

Friday
12Dec2008

Lisa Schrenk

Lisa SchrenkAssociate Professor. B.A., Macalester College with degrees in studio art and geography, 1983; Masters in Architectural History, University of Virginia, 1988; Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin, 1998. Dr. Schrenk teaches art and architectural history courses, including seminars on Frank Lloyd Wright, Chicago, international expositions, Brazil, and India and Southeast Asia.

Research

My main areas of research are international expositions and Frank Lloyd Wright. In 2007 the University of Minnesota Press published my book Building a Century of Progress, which explores the architecture of the 1933-34 Chicago World’s Fair. I am currently a consultant on the upcoming exhibit Designing the World of Tomorrow: America's World Fairs in the 1930s, scheduled to open at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C. in 2010, and just co-authored the paper, Trains for a Century of Progress: How Railroads Promoted the 1933-34 World’s Fair for the 2009 annual meeting of the Southwest Popular Culture Association. I am currently completing a book manuscript that explores the educational environment of Wright's Oak Park studio and how the architect used the physical structure of the building as an experimental laboratory for his innovative design ideas.

Travel

One of my main passions is travel (a wonderful habit that I attempt to pass on to all my students in the belief that it is always better to experience a building firsthand than to just look at images of it in a darkened classroom). To gain the fullest understanding of important landmarks, I have visited sites of architectural significance in all 50 states and travelled throughout Europe, Peru, India, China, Japan, Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam. In 2007 I spent six weeks touring Brazil with fifteen other educators on a Fulbright. This past winter I traveled for three weeks in Jordan and Egypt. Two of my favorite stops were Petra and Abu Simbel. (To see pictures from my travels, check out the blog http://adventuresinarchitecture.blogspot.com/.)

Aesthetics

The aesthetics of my working and living environments have always been extremely important to me. Prior to arriving at Norwich in 2002, I had the opportunity to experience a couple of amazing architectural settings on a daily basis. As a graduate student at the University of Virginia, I was able to soak in the architectural lessons of Thomas Jefferson while living among the classical colonnades and curving brick walls of his original 1819 campus (just a few doors down from Edgar Allen Poe’s former dorm room). After graduation I moved to the Chicago area and spent four years as Education Director for the Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio Foundation in Oak Park, Illinois. During much of my tenure there my office was located on the balcony of Wright’s octagonal drafting room where he and his employees developed prairie house designs. Today I feel fortunate to be able to work within the handsome brick and granite walls of the former Carnegie Library that houses the various creative activities of Norwich’s School of Architecture and Art.

lschrenk@norwich.edu