Research
Archives
In terms of archives, I'm primarily interested in exploring their uses other than for historical research. I've been involved in two AHRC-funded research projects: 'Memories of Mr Seel's Garden' and 'Sustaining Time', both of which have worked with community and activist groups and used archives both to research the past and to imagine alternative futures. I have also explored the use of archives in artistic practice and the materiality and affect of archival documents.
I currently co-supervise four PhD students working on archival projects on commmunity archives, the archives of art dealers and archives as a source for research into water management. Three of these are collaborative projects with the National Gallery and Staffordshire Record Office respectively.
Architectural discourse
My architectural history research looks in particular at the post-medieval reception, interpretation and use of medieval architecture. I am fascinated by how medieval buildings continue to shape and be shaped by both our everyday experience and our highest ideals. I am also interested in the status of architecture as evidence. More specifically, my research falls within 4 main areas:
- Architectural writers of the nineteenth-century revisited (work on Willis, Ruskin, Freeman, Viollet-le-Duc, Pugin etc)
- Medieval architecture and meanings (the interpretation of the medieval monument in the post-medieval period)
- Unspeakable architecture (architectural terminology)
- Text and place
Developing from this is an interest in the role of architecture in literture in the years around 1800. I am particularly interested in reformist interest in architecture and its place in constructing future society.
I am currently co-supervising a student working on architecture and slavery in the Atlantic world in the period before the abolition of the British transatlantic slave trade.
Medieval architecture
Through my work on Robert Willis and my pre-existing interest in medieval architecture, I have started to use digital methods to return to the questions posed by Willis in his 1842 paper 'On the construction of the vaults of the Middle Ages'. Working with Dr Nick Webb in the School of Architecture, the project 'Tracing the Past' has scanned vaults at the cathedrals of Chester, Wells, Exeter and Ely, as well as Ottery St Mary and St Mary, Nantwich, which we are now interrogating using digital methods of 'reverse engineering' to try to identify methods of design and construction to ask questions of chronology, building site practices and knowledge transfer between sites.
Research groups
Research grants
Modelling Medieval Vaults: A digital analysis of Wells Cathedral Aisles
PAUL MELLON CENTRE FOR STUDIES IN BRITISH ART (UK)
April 2015 - June 2016
Architecture and Society in an Age of Reform
ARTS AND HUMANITIES RESEARCH COUNCIL
May 2017 - January 2020
Tracing the past: analysing the design and construction of English medieval vaults using digital techniques
ARTS AND HUMANITIES RESEARCH COUNCIL
September 2018 - September 2021
Modelling Medieval Vaults
SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES OF LONDON (UK)
June 2016 - December 2016
Memories of 'Mr Seel's Garden': Engaging with historic and future food systems in Liverpool
ARTS AND HUMANITIES RESEARCH COUNCIL
February 2012 - January 2013
Making Time: Exploring the emergent times of alternative economies
ARTS AND HUMANITIES RESEARCH COUNCIL
February 2013 - October 2013