Teaching Strengths
Dr Rachel Hurst
School of Architecture and Built Environment
College of Creative Arts, Design and Humanities
Eligible to supervise Masters and PhD (as Co-Supervisor) - email supervisor to discuss availability.
Dr Rachel Hurst FRAIA is a Senior Lecturer in architecture and Design Studio coordinator for the Architecture programs of the School of Art Architecture + Design. She has a background of architectural practice, and for ten years was a partner in a design firm specialising in small scale and residential projects.
An award-winning university teacher and an international researcher, her work has been widely published in books, journals, and conferences, as well as publicly exhibited. An overview of rachel's creative practice can be seen at https://aad.unisa.edu.au/rachel-hurst/
Exemplifying her interest in the holistic nature of architecture, her portfolio explores multi-disciplinary approaches to practice-based design, expanded fields of representation, modern architectural history, criticism, and design education. Rachel is a Contributing Editor for Architecture Australia, and frequent contributor to a range of national design journals such as Architecture AU, Monument, Artichoke and Houses. She receives regular commissions to contribute to architectural monographs of nationally significant practices.
Rachel graduated from the South Australian Institute of Technology in 1978 with a Bachelor of Architecture [equivalent to current UniSA professional Master of Architecture] and the Architects Board of SA Travelling Prize. Under the supervision of Prof. Sand Helsel, Dr. Mel Dodd and Dr Richard Black at RMIT, her PhD by practice was awarded in 2016. Titled The Gentle Hand and the Greedy Eye: an everyday baroque practice in architecture, it was awarded the Pinnacle and Judge’s Choice Awards for Publication in the 2016 Australian Graphic Design Awards, and finalist in the NGV Cornish Family Art Book Publishing Prize 2017. In 2019 she was made a Fellow of the Australian Institute of Architects for her contributions to the profession.
Dr Hurst has a distinctive and diverse research record developed over 20 years that exemplifies the creative and changing nature of research in the architectural discipline. Its unifying thread is an interest in how complex and profound spatial patterns of everyday life might productively bridge the divide between theory and practice, the academy and the profession. She has a prolific publication and exhibition background, including nearly 100 text works and curating and exhibiting locally and internationally in over 20 shows. Major themes include theories of the everyday, analogue practices, architectural curation, design pedagogy, and Australian modernism. An overview of her research can be seen at https://aad.unisa.edu.au/rachel-hurst/
Her current focus is on practice based methodologies and the expanded field, interrogated through creative and speculative artefacts. A recent series of drawings, paintings and textile works for example, exhibited in Copenhagen, Sydney and published in the Journal of Architectural Education, explores the use of the archive for projective architectural thinking and critique of architectural representation. Her PhD by project explored the multi-sensorial nature of everyday settings via analogue techniques and curatorial practices, producing over 500 publicly exhibited artefacts, and a portfolio of architectural journalism.
Rachel has a continuing practice of creative writing and critique, producing on average three to four writing commissions a year for monographs, design journals and exhibition catalogues. Notable in these are essays for the 2014 Venice Architectural Biennale Australian pavilion catalogue and This Building Likes Me [Thames + Hudson, 2016].
However she has an extensive catalogue of traditional research outputs that build upon over a decade in practice. Her early research followed two directions: firstly applied research in cross-disciplinary fields of urban design, planning and design education (particularly on architecture and gastronomy as a teaching and spatial metaphor); secondly in architectural history where a series of publications on Australian modernists, Dickson & Platten have led to her status as the leading scholar on their work. Significant achievements include chapters and creative works in publications by the University of New Mexico Press, Wiley-Academy Architectural Design, Ashgate and MIT Press.
She also contributes to the supervision of PhD, Masters of Research and Architectural Thesis students, and regularly referees for scholarly organisations.
-
OLT Design and Architecture Practice Research (DAP_r), OLT-Grants - Innovation & Development, 01/01/2016 - 01/04/2018
Available For Media Comment.