Architectural and social historian Elizabeth Cox presents her lecture “Their Presence Could Work a Revolution”: Early Women Architects in New Zealand in a Lecture series in Auckland.
Tuesday 25th September 2018
5:00 pm
— 6:30 pm
Pioneer Hall, Ellen Melville Centre, Freyburg Place, Auckland
She looks specifically at the period 1900-1940s, and at the call by a sector of the New Zealand community for women to become architects. This presentation explores why, and tells the stories of those who answered the call. How did they contribute to the field and why have they mainly disappeared from our architectural history today?
In the three lectures, Elizabeth told wonderfully-rich stories and managed to set a scene of architectural practice in the early Twentieth Century in New Zealand. We particularly enjoyed the social snapshot of the early Twentieth Century, seen so clearly in the life of Lucy Greenish, who contended with the pain of a secret adoption in Australia in order to have a life in architecture. A radical woman in so many ways, and not only because she was the first NZIA female associate member and quite possibly the first to set up practice.
The mihi whakatau was given by Dr Deidre Brown followed by wiata led by Amber Ruckes.