- published: 03 Jun 2013
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Elizabeth Margaret Farrelly is a Sydney-based author, architecture critic, essayist, columnist and speaker who was born in New Zealand but later became an Australian citizen. She has contributed to current debates about aesthetics, ethics, design, public art, architecture, urban environments, society and politics, including criticism of the treatment of Julian Assange. Farrelly's range of interests and contributions are wide enough to have caused her to be described as a "Renaissance woman". Farrelly's portrait by Mirra Whale was a finalist in the 2015 Archibald Prize at the Art Gallery of New South Wales.
Farrelly was born in Dunedin, New Zealand and trained as an architect in Auckland. She left New Zealand in 1983 for London, moved to Sydney in October 1988 and became an Australian citizen in 1991. She holds a PhD in architecture from the University of Sydney.
Farrelly has taught at the University of New South Wales where she is Associate Professor (Practice) in the UNSW Graduate School of Urbanism; the University of Technology, Sydney, where she was Adjunct Associate Professor of Architecture; the University of Auckland; the Royal College of Art, London; the Humberside Polytechnic and the Architectural Association School of Architecture, London. Farrelly has set writing for Wikipedia as a task for post-graduate students, and has commented that its demand for every input to be traceable and published, enables "genuine crowd-sourcing of scholarship" and is both "a revelation and a revolution".
The Pascall Prize: Australian 'Critic of the Year' is an annual Australian award for critical writing and review, awarded to a critic whose work over the previous 12 to 18 months has contributed significantly to public appreciation, enjoyment and understanding of the area or areas of the arts in which he or she is involved. It was established in 1988 in memory of Geraldine Pascall, an Australian journalist who died of a stroke at the age of 38.
The recipient of the Pascall Prize is selected by a Judging Panel of industry peers appointed by Directors of the Geraldine Pascall Foundation, a not-for-profit organisation established specifically to award the prize. The Pascall Prize and the Geraldine Pascall Foundation are managed by the Music & Opera Singers Trust Limited (Music & Opera Singers Trust Limited website).
In 2015, the inaugural Lifetime Achievement Award was presented to film critic, journalist and speechwriter Evan Willams AM on the 23 May 2015 at an event held at the Sydney Writers' Festival.
In social science, the term built environment refers to the human-made surroundings that provide the setting for human activity, ranging in scale from buildings and parks or green space to neighborhoods and cities that can often include their supporting infrastructure, such as water supply or energy networks. The built environment is a material, spatial and cultural product of human labor that combines physical elements and energy in forms for living, working and playing. It has been defined as "the human-made space in which people live, work, and recreate on a day-to-day basis." The "built environment encompasses places and spaces created or modified by people including buildings, parks, and transportation systems." In recent years, public health research has expanded the definition of "built environment" to include healthy food access, community gardens, "walkability" and "bikability."
Early concepts of built environment date to Classical Antiquity: Hippodamus of Miletos, known as the "father of urban planning," developed Greek cities from 498 BC to 408 BC that created order by using grid plans that mapped the city. These early city plans eventually gave way to the City Beautiful movement in the late 1800s and early 1900s, inspired by Daniel Hudson Burnham, a reformist for the Progressivism movement who actively promoted "a reform of the landscape in tandem with political change." The effort was in partnership with others who believed that beautifying American cities would improve the moral compass of the cities and encourage the upper class to spend their money in cities. This beautification process included parks and architectural design.
Elizabeth is a common female given name. For more information, including people with that name, see Elizabeth (given name).
Elizabeth may also refer to:
Elizabeth Farrelly is one of Australia's most respected newspaper columnists who received the 2001 Pascall Prize for critical writing. She talks about her love of writing, the future of criticism and the way words can seduce the reader. The Pascall Prize is Australia's only major national prize awarded for critical writing and review. The Prize is awarded by a panel of judges that includes industry peers and previous recipients. For the last few years the Pascall Prize has been awarded at an event held at the Sydney Writers' Festival, featuring friendly debates with prominent writers, journalists and broadcasters. Venue: Wharf Theatre 2, Pier 4/5 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay, The Rocks, Sydney NSW, Australia. For more information: http://pascallprize.org http://mostlyopera.org
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE LATEST EXHIBITIONS, NEWS, INTERVIEWS AND HAPPENINGS INSIDE THE ART GALLERY OF NSW. http://bit.ly/SubscribeAGNSW For information visit http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/ Facebook: http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/facebook/ Twitter: http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/twitter/ Google +: http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/google/ CELEBRITY TALK presents, in association with The mad square: modernity in German art 1910-37: Elizabeth Farrelly is a Sydney-based columnist and author who trained in architecture and philosophy, practiced in London and Bristol and holds PhD in architecture from the University of Sydney. She was Assistant Editor of the Architectural Review in London and an independent City Councilor in Sydney. __________________________________________________ art.af...
Elizabeth Farrelly in:situ The 2015 New Zealand Institute of Architects Conference Wednesday, 11 February 2015 Introduced by Pip Cheshire Catalogue text: Elizabeth Farrelly is a Sydney-based author, architecture critic, essayist, columnist for The Sydney Morning Herald and Adjunct Associate-Professor of Architecture at the University of Sydney. She holds a PhD in architecture and has been the recipient of several international writing awards. Her books include Glenn Murcutt: Three Houses and Blubberland: the Dangers of Happiness, and she has contributed to debates about aesthetics, ethics, design, public art, architecture, urban environments, society and politics, and you can also find her on twitter: @emfarelly
Architecture and Morality: Geometries of virtue Elizabeth Farrelly - Associate Professor (Practice), UNSW Built Environment We know that architecture affects our happiness, and that happiness has moral import. Yet we relegate the making of architecture to the development machine, as though it had no more significance in our lives than some random consumer product. How does architecture shape our lives? What is its capacity, if any, to sustain meaning? Why, in short, does it matter? Elizabeth Farrelly is Associate Professor (Practice) in the UNSW Graduate School of Urbanism. A Sydney-based columnist and author, she trained in architecture and philosophy, practiced in Auckland, London and Bristol, holds a PhD in urbanism from the University of Sydney and is a former Councilor in the City ...
Elizabeth Farrelly talks about architecture, local politics and some of her journey towards becoming a writer and critic. She received the Pascall Prize in 2001 for her critical work on Australia's architecture. The Pascall Prize is Australia's only major national prize awarded for critical writing and review. The Prize is awarded by a panel of judges that includes industry peers and previous recipients. For the last few years the Pascall Prize has been awarded at an event held at the Sydney Writers' Festival, featuring friendly debates with prominent writers, journalists and broadcasters. Venue: Wharf Theatre 2, Pier 4/5 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay, The Rocks, Sydney NSW, Australia. For more information: http://pascallprize.org http://mostlyopera.org
Elizabeth Farrelly was thrilled to receive the Pascall Prize in 2001 and talks about why it's important to Australian literature and criticism. The Pascall Prize is Australia's only major national prize awarded for critical writing and review. The Prize is awarded by a panel of judges that includes industry peers and previous recipients. For the last few years the Pascall Prize has been awarded at an event held at the Sydney Writers' Festival, featuring friendly debates with prominent writers, journalists and broadcasters. Venue: Wharf Theatre 2, Pier 4/5 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay, The Rocks, Sydney NSW, Australia. For more information: http://pascallprize.org http://mostlyopera.org
High profile Architecture critic and author gives us a tour of Aurora Place the most outstanding commercial building in Australia and its residential counterpoint, Hugh Buhrichs world famous Castlecrag House
"No Such Thing As Architectural Theory" Architecture Panel Discussion chaired by Dr Elizabeth Farrelly as part of LuminoCITY, the Faculty of Built Environment's 2012 Graduation Exhibition. Panellists: Professor Xing Ruan, UNSW Built Environment Dr Peter Kohane, UNSW Built Environment Professor Bruce Judd, UNSW Built Environment Professor Philip Cox AO, Cox Architecture Helen Lochhead, Assistant Government Architect Peter John Cantrill, Director of Tzannes Associates Bertram Beissel von Gymnich, Design and Project Partner, Ateliers Jean Nouvel Graham Jahn AM, Director City Planning Development, City of Sydney
Associate Professor Elizabeth Farrelly talks about the living walls and the heliostat featured at the Central Park Sydney development which is the focus of our free 6 week online UNSW Built Environment course.
Associate Professor Elizabeth Farrelly talks about the living walls and the heliostat featured at the Central Park Sydney development which is the focus of our free 6 week online UNSW Built Environment course.
Elizabeth Farrelly in:situ The 2015 New Zealand Institute of Architects Conference Wednesday, 11 February 2015 Introduced by Pip Cheshire Catalogue text: Elizabeth Farrelly is a Sydney-based author, architecture critic, essayist, columnist for The Sydney Morning Herald and Adjunct Associate-Professor of Architecture at the University of Sydney. She holds a PhD in architecture and has been the recipient of several international writing awards. Her books include Glenn Murcutt: Three Houses and Blubberland: the Dangers of Happiness, and she has contributed to debates about aesthetics, ethics, design, public art, architecture, urban environments, society and politics, and you can also find her on twitter: @emfarelly
Elizabeth Farrelly was thrilled to receive the Pascall Prize in 2001 and talks about why it's important to Australian literature and criticism. The Pascall Prize is Australia's only major national prize awarded for critical writing and review. The Prize is awarded by a panel of judges that includes industry peers and previous recipients. For the last few years the Pascall Prize has been awarded at an event held at the Sydney Writers' Festival, featuring friendly debates with prominent writers, journalists and broadcasters. Venue: Wharf Theatre 2, Pier 4/5 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay, The Rocks, Sydney NSW, Australia. For more information: http://pascallprize.org http://mostlyopera.org
Architecture and Morality: Geometries of virtue Elizabeth Farrelly - Associate Professor (Practice), UNSW Built Environment We know that architecture affects our happiness, and that happiness has moral import. Yet we relegate the making of architecture to the development machine, as though it had no more significance in our lives than some random consumer product. How does architecture shape our lives? What is its capacity, if any, to sustain meaning? Why, in short, does it matter? Elizabeth Farrelly is Associate Professor (Practice) in the UNSW Graduate School of Urbanism. A Sydney-based columnist and author, she trained in architecture and philosophy, practiced in Auckland, London and Bristol, holds a PhD in urbanism from the University of Sydney and is a former Councilor in the City ...
Elizabeth Farrelly talks about architecture, local politics and some of her journey towards becoming a writer and critic. She received the Pascall Prize in 2001 for her critical work on Australia's architecture. The Pascall Prize is Australia's only major national prize awarded for critical writing and review. The Prize is awarded by a panel of judges that includes industry peers and previous recipients. For the last few years the Pascall Prize has been awarded at an event held at the Sydney Writers' Festival, featuring friendly debates with prominent writers, journalists and broadcasters. Venue: Wharf Theatre 2, Pier 4/5 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay, The Rocks, Sydney NSW, Australia. For more information: http://pascallprize.org http://mostlyopera.org
Elizabeth Farrelly is one of Australia's most respected newspaper columnists who received the 2001 Pascall Prize for critical writing. She talks about her love of writing, the future of criticism and the way words can seduce the reader. The Pascall Prize is Australia's only major national prize awarded for critical writing and review. The Prize is awarded by a panel of judges that includes industry peers and previous recipients. For the last few years the Pascall Prize has been awarded at an event held at the Sydney Writers' Festival, featuring friendly debates with prominent writers, journalists and broadcasters. Venue: Wharf Theatre 2, Pier 4/5 Hickson Road, Walsh Bay, The Rocks, Sydney NSW, Australia. For more information: http://pascallprize.org http://mostlyopera.org
"No Such Thing As Architectural Theory" Architecture Panel Discussion chaired by Dr Elizabeth Farrelly as part of LuminoCITY, the Faculty of Built Environment's 2012 Graduation Exhibition. Panellists: Professor Xing Ruan, UNSW Built Environment Dr Peter Kohane, UNSW Built Environment Professor Bruce Judd, UNSW Built Environment Professor Philip Cox AO, Cox Architecture Helen Lochhead, Assistant Government Architect Peter John Cantrill, Director of Tzannes Associates Bertram Beissel von Gymnich, Design and Project Partner, Ateliers Jean Nouvel Graham Jahn AM, Director City Planning Development, City of Sydney
Video by Anna Tol, Music by Darren Percival Event: Access PR, Vanessa Watson, Carriageworks, All of our fabulous volunteers. MC and Keynote: Jill Dupleix, Elizabeth Farrelly. Food and Drinks: Christine Manfield, Mitch Orr, Analiese Gregory, Pasi Petanen, Cana Farm, Feather and Bone Providore, Fishtales, The Bread and Butter Project, Ovvio Organics, Pepe Saya, Young Henrys, Young and Rashleigh Wines, Madfish Wines, Bibendum Wines, Angullong Wines, United Cellars Australia, Electrolux, Mak Catering. Styling: Davenport Campbell, Doctor Cooper. Table Cloth: BVN, Anthony Lister, Antonia Pesenti, Auguste Blackman, Craig and Karl, Craig Ruddy, Danie Mellor, Jim Tsinganos, Kim Leutwyler, Mika Utzon Popov, Nell, Yosi Messiah. Music Lighting Production: Darren Percival, Linsey Pollak, Jeanette...
Can community really be put at the heart of decision-making around the shape, growth and direction of our cities? Can everyday people actually influence major development considerations? Can public participation in planning move beyond rhetoric to help achieve better policy outcomes? Participants of the event enjoyed a lively discourse, healthy discussion and thoughtful reflection from our panel of expert speakers featuring: The Hon. Rob Stokes MP, NSW Minister for Planning Rod Simpson, Environment Commissioner for the Greater Sydney Commission Associate Professor Elizabeth Farrelly PhD, Columnist for the Sydney Morning Herald and Associate Professor at UNSW Graduate School of Urbanism Professor Michael Neuman (retired), University of NSW newDemocracy Foundation Grandstand Series. Part ...
Comic Movie - Guarda il film d'animazione italiano Un film di Elizabeth Banks, Steven Brill, Steve Carr, Rusty Cundieff, James Duffy, Griffin Dunne, Peter Farrelly, Patrik Forsberg, James Gunn, Bob Odenkirk, Brett ...
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE LATEST EXHIBITIONS, NEWS, INTERVIEWS AND HAPPENINGS INSIDE THE ART GALLERY OF NSW. http://bit.ly/SubscribeAGNSW For information visit http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/ Facebook: http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/facebook/ Twitter: http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/twitter/ Google +: http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/google/ CELEBRITY TALK presents, in association with The mad square: modernity in German art 1910-37: Elizabeth Farrelly is a Sydney-based columnist and author who trained in architecture and philosophy, practiced in London and Bristol and holds PhD in architecture from the University of Sydney. She was Assistant Editor of the Architectural Review in London and an independent City Councilor in Sydney. __________________________________________________ art.af...
Entrevistas internacionales realizadas por Sebastian Tabany para El Acomodador, Canal Volver. Gary Goldman - Titan A.E. Graeme Revell, GLen Ballard - Titan A.E. Don Bluth - Titan A.E. Jackie Chan - Shanghai Knight Kevin Bacon - Hollow Man Elizabeth Shue - Hollow Man Bobby & Peter Farrelly - Me, Myself & Irene Ron Howard - How The Grinch Stole Christmas Taylom Momsen - How The Grinch Stole Christmas Jim Carrey - How The Grinch Stole Christmas Keley the Dog - How The Grinch Stole Christmas Keanu Reeves - Sweet November Guy Ritchie - Snatch Don Hahn - Atlantis Ashley Judd - Someone Like You Julia Roberts - America`s Sweetheart Billy Crystal - America`s Sweetheart Heath Ledger - A Knight´s Tale Catherine Zeta-Jones - America`s Sweetheart John Cusack - America´s Sweetheart Eduardo Noriega - ...