Donald Judd Architecture Office Restoration and Adaptive Reuse
A discussion on the restoration of the Architecture Office and Donald Judd’s own adaptions within contemporary architectural practices.
Date and time
Location
98 S Austin St
98 South Austin Street Marfa, TX 79843About this event
A panel discussion with Peter Stanley, Director of Operations and Preservation, Judd Foundation; Troy Schaum, Principal and Founder, Schaum Architects; Rosalyne Shieh, Assistant Professor at MIT; and Beatrice Galilee, Executive Director and Founder, The World Around. They will discuss the restoration of the Architecture Office and Donald Judd’s own adaptions within contemporary architectural practices.
This event is free and open to the public though advance registration is encouraged. Please note priority will be given to those who have registered in advance, though advance registration does not guarantee admission once the event reaches capacity.
Peter Stanley Peter Stanley is the Director of Operations and Preservation for Judd Foundation in Marfa. With a background in art, architecture, and construction, he has spent over a decade preserving and restoring Donald Judd’s structures and installed spaces for both the Chinati Foundation and Judd Foundation. Past projects include the reconstruction of Donald Judd’s Winter Garden at the Block, the restoration of the John Chamberlain Building, and the realization of Robert Irwin’s untitled (dawn to dusk).
Troy Schaum is the principal of Schaum Architects and an associate professor at Rice University School of Architecture, where he has taught since 2008. His firm considers the city at the scale of the building, both as a site of theoretical experimentation and as a reality that may be transformed through building. He pursues these design ambitions through projects with Schaum Architects (formerly Schaum/Shieh), an award-winning architectural firm based in Houston. Texas. Recent and ongoing work includes the restoration the Winter Garden and Block restoration for Judd Foundation and a restoration of the Chamberlain Building for the Chinati Foundation, both in Marfa, Texas; the headquarters for an arts institution in Houston; and a residential tower on Park Avenue in New York City. His work has been exhibited globally–including at the Venice Biennale, MoMA, the Storefront for Art and Architecture, and the Center for Architecture in New York–and published in many journals, including Architect’s Newspaper, Texas Architect, Dezeen, Domus, Architect, and Architectural Record.
Rosalyne Shieh is an architect and educator, she is Assistant Professor at MIT. She was part of former collaborative architecture practice SCHAUM/SHIEH. Her writing has been published in Log, Pidgin, and Paprika. Her current research looks at place at the intersection of material culture, oral history, and postcolonial identity in Taiwan. Previously, Rosalyne taught at the Yale School of Architecture, The Cooper Union, and the University of Michigan, where she was the 2009-2010 Taubman Fellow in Architecture. She is a MacDowell Fellow, a recipient of the AIA Henry Adams Certificate, and holds degrees from Berkeley, the Bartlett, and Princeton. In 2021-2022 Shieh was a Fulbright Scholar in Taiwan. Before forming SCHAUM/SHIEH, she worked at Abalos&Herreros in Madrid and in New York City for Stan Allen Architect and ARO. She is licensed in the state of New York and NCARB certified.
Beatrice Galilee is an internationally recognized architecture curator, author and design advisor. She is founder and executive director of The World Around, a New York-based nonprofit platform dedicated to visionary global design and architecture. She is the author of Radical Architecture of the Future, published by Phaidon in 2021, and between 2014-2019 served as the first curator of contemporary architecture and design at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, where she worked on collections, exhibitions and commissions including collaborations with artists including Wolfgang Tillmans, Cornelia Parker and Adrián Villar Rojas.