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[Commlist] Conference: Designs on television
Fri Mar 29 09:36:00 GMT 2024
*DESIGNS ON TELEVISION: PRODUCTION DESIGN AND TELEVISION AESTHETICS *
**
18-19 April 2024, University of Westminster, 35 Marylebone Road, LONDON
NW1 5LS (opposite Baker St Tube station), in Chiltern Hall.**
**
*OVERVIEW *
Design is a key element of all sorts of television, but frequently
neglected in academic studies. In 2003, Piers D. Britton and Simon J.
Barker wrote ‘No serious, sustained examination of the role of scenic or
costume design in the medium has been attempted’ (p.1). Almost 20 years
later, Britton wrote ‘Scholarly analysis of almost any form of design
for the screen… is still a relatively new phenomenon’ (2021: 10). This
conference seeks to examine various aspects of television design,
including set design, set dressing, redressing locations, connections
between real space and onscreen place, relationships between set design
and costume design, and the interpersonal relationships and
institutional structures which inform design for television.
Early critical orthodoxies around television have assumed it is a medium
lacking in any distinctive visual aesthetic. However, more recent work
by scholars such as Steven Peacock, Brett Mills and Helen Wheatley has
drawn attention to television’s aesthetic. As Wheatley (2016) argues,
television has always been visual and has always been spectacular. This
conference therefore aims to draw attention to the visual and aesthetic
qualities of television design.
There will be input from industry practitioners to discuss their
experience of television design. In addition, in collaboration with the
University of Brighton Design Archives, which holds the papers of the
pioneering television designer Natasha Kroll (1914-2004) among others,
there will be an accompanying exhibition of documents and artefacts
related to television design.
*REGISTER HERE:*
https://store.westminster.ac.uk/product-catalogue/media-arts-and-design/designs-on-tv-conference-registration-platform/designs-on-tv-conference-registration-platform
<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https:/store.westminster.ac.uk/product-catalogue/media-arts-and-design/designs-on-tv-conference-registration-platform/designs-on-tv-conference-registration-platform__;!!IWcW7C1FDU-5!Z1DBzJkeICH7kyVdVLgxUF1FOQJ_YWaU39k6b-V2RQXIEqKrxAt7Kobi4lFeP9e2gXIa2nDb6p6dZslcMmu_NJLrfw8ztvw$>
**
**
*ORGANISERS *
Dr Christopher Hogg –(C.Hogg /at/ westminster.ac.uk)
<mailto:(C.Hogg /at/ westminster.ac.uk)> (University of Westminster)
Dr Douglas McNaughton –(D.Mcnaughton /at/ brighton.ac.uk)
<mailto:(D.Mcnaughton /at/ brighton.ac.uk)> (University of Brighton)
*LIST OF PRESENTATIONS ACCEPTED*
Rooms within Rooms within Rooms: Designing the Television Afterlife
Helen Wheatley
The Beginnings of Scenic Design on British Television, 1928-1939
John Wyver
The Designer’s Story – a model for the analysis and appreciation of
screen design
Jane Barnwell
**
Upstairs Downton: The Class Boundary When Filming in Stately Homes
Rosemary Alexander-Jones
Layers of ‘lost’ New York: Production design and period drama’s spatial
imaginary
Faye Woods
‘How to produce by a false thing the effects of a true’: asyndetic
spaces in /The Mayor of Casterbridge/(1978/2003)
Douglas McNaughton
Irma Vep’s Spectral Mutations: The Black Catsuit and Its Implied
Vampiric Attributes.
Juan Miguel Pardo Garrido
Creating Characters and Priming Performances: The Under-appreciated Role
of Costume and Make-up Workers in UK Television Production 1950-2000
Vanessa Jackson
‘You’re not progressive enough for this!’: Queer codes and costume for
/Sex and the City/And Just Like That/’s Miranda.
Kate McNicholas Smith
Interior Makeover Programmes: Strategies Behind the Camera
Neville Knott
In front of a live studio audience: Authenticity, authority, and
liveness in production design for non-fiction television.
Geraint D’Arcy
Designed for Women? The aesthetics of domesticity in early (pre- and
post-war) British television made for women
Kevin Geddes and Mary Irwin
Front Row: /The French Chef /and its Kitchen Counter
Verena Mund
Shifting the Scenery. Natasha Kroll: “display man” and set designer
Lesley Whitworth
Predicting Set Production Limitations and Possibilities through
Production Practices: A comparison of South Korean and Egyptian television
Maria Andrea Etienne
Dirty walls and peeling paint: the set design of public hospitals in the
Brazilian television series /Under Pressure /
Mariana Schwartz
Set Design as Involuntary Memory Cue:/ Pushing Daisies, WandaVision/,
and 1970s Sitcoms
Jennifer Gillan
Design and Reflexivity in Irwin Allen’s 1960s Adventure Series.
Jonathan Bignell
Q&A with the members of the Production Design Research & Education
Network (PD-REN)
A CREAM, University of Westminster conference
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