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Speaker Biographies and Session Synopsis
Ralph Muldrow and students (Kelly Clark and Diane Miller)
 


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Ralph Muldrow and students (Kelly Clark and Diane Miller) from the School of the Arts' Historic Preservation and Community Planning Program
Friday, March 15, 2002
3:45 - 5:15
Studies on Lowcountry Architecture
Location:Room 309, Simons Center for the Arts

Biographies: Ralph Muldrow is the Simons Professor of Architecture and Preservation in the School of the Arts' Department of Art History and the Co-Director of the School's Historic Preservation and Community Planning Program. He holds degrees in Architecture, Preservation, and Political Theory from the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Virginia. Mr. Muldrow is a licensed architect with numerous years of experience in new design and preservation projects throughout the east coast. His areas of teaching and research include architectural design and history, historic interior restoration, urban design, planning, preservation, and American cultural studies.

Kelly Clark holds a Bachelor of Arts in Historic Preservation and Community Planning from the College of Charleston. He has worked on a number of preservation and planning issues in the Lowcountry, and she will be presenting work which she did with Mr. Muldrow on the area between Charleston and McClellanville, South Carolina.

Diane Miller will be graduating from the College of Charleston with a Bachelor of Arts in Historic Preservation and Community Planning in May of 2003. She intends to pursue a career in Preservation with an emphasis on interior restorations. She was a docent for the 2001 Charleston Antiques Symposium, and she will be presenting work that she did with Mr. Muldrow on Brooklands Plantation.

Synopsis: This session will focus on architectural studies of Lowcountry structures outside of Charleston. Featuring a member of the faculty from the School of the Arts' Historic Preservation and Community Planning Program, a graduate of the Program, and a student currently enrolled in the Program, the session will offer an enticing view into the study of preservation.

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