Join us Monday, March 25, at 5:30 p.m., for a lecture with landscape architect Julie Bargmann
titled “Trouble Beauty: A Manifesto for Ugly Duckling Landscapes.”
“Landscapes are hard, all messy and complex. Sites are entangled, many toxic and degraded.
Neighborhoods are complicated, uniquely layered and wanting. To evoke the swan from tough
sites, good design isn’t enough: environmental regeneration, social equity, savvy
resourcefulness, and sheer joy is required. Be it a coal mine, a shipyard, a city full of polluted
soils, or all sorts of abandoned land, DIRT digs deep. Site forensics and slow looking carefully
and empathetically uncovers evidence to appreciate the complexity, to allow a reciprocal
process guide giving form to the landscape with an artistic vengeance.”
Julie Bargmann is internationally recognized as a leader in the design and building of
regenerative landscapes as well as a rigorous, adventuresome educator. She founded D.I.R.T.
studio in 1992 to execute projects with the passion, vision, and unflinching honesty that define
her unique. Bargmann’s work hews to themes of economy of means, neighborhood
connections, respect for site histories, and above all a love of the landscape — specifically, the
existing complicated and often former industrial landscape. Highly regarded for her versatility
and hands-on methods, Bargmann earned her BFA in sculpture at Carnegie Mellon University,
followed by a master’s in landscape architecture at Harvard University. Amongst numerous
national and international awards received for D.I.R.T. work, Bargmann was named the
inaugural recipient of the Cornelia Oberlander International Prize in Landscape Architecture.
Simplicity of form, use of extant materials, and deliberate restraint are hallmarks of her
evocative and authentic landscapes.
This event is part of the Sam Fox School’s Public Lecture Series and is free and open to the
public. The lecture will take place in Steinberg Hall.
Free parking is available in the East End Garage beginning at 5:00 p.m. Enter the garage from
Forsyth Boulevard or Forest Park Parkway.
For more information: samfoxschool.wustl.edu
or email Melissa at:
Event Date | 03-25-2024 5:30 pm |