October 15, 2024 Teston Publishes Book Detailing Public Interiority
A new book inspired by 快活视频鈥檚 College of Architecture and Design鈥檚 Public Interiority symposium and exhibition, led by Associate Professor Liz Teston, has just been published, offering fresh insights into the intersection of interior spaces and public life.
The symposium, held in February 2023 inside UT鈥檚 Art and Architecture Building, welcomed practitioners and academics from around the region. The Ewing Gallery of Art and Architecture hosted an exhibition intended to articulate phenomenological prospects related to contemporary interiorities.
The book, 鈥,鈥 written by Teston along with the event鈥檚 presenters, exhibitors and Teston鈥檚 editorial board members, describes five different ways public interiority could exist鈥攁tmosphere, politics, programs or usage of space, form, and psychologies.
Through eight chapters and 16 visual essays, Teston aims to expand the discipline of interior architecture beyond literal building interiors.
鈥淒esigners are experts at human-scale spatial designs and this book can shed light on the projects, histories, and theories of this approach,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t is critical to the progression of the interior architecture field and to contemporary culture that we explore settings where transient, user-generated conditions can play out in the urban realm. Increasing designer expertise in experiential public space enables us to establish frameworks for spatial rights, significance, and subjectivity.鈥
She knew a symposium would circulate the topic to the discipline and bringing people into the conversation and revealing this phenomenon of exterior interiors in public places. Teston presented and exhibited widely, including in Bucharest, Romania; Venice, Italy; Barcelona, Spain; Berlin, Germany; and New York.
The book, published by Routledge, 鈥渞econsiders the limits of the interior and its perceived spaces, exploring the notion that interior conditions can exist within an exterior environment, and therefore challenging the very foundations of the interior architecture field.鈥
The college supported Teston鈥檚 research through the James Musgraves Research Award, the Hal and Alma Reagan Research Award, and Dean鈥檚 Symposium Fund.
Additional support for Teston鈥檚 research has come from the AIA NY Center for Architecture Arnold W. Brunner Grant and UT grants including the Office of Research Innovation and Economic Development鈥檚 Scholarly Projects Fund and Exhibit, Performance, and Publication Expense Fund and the Division of Access and Engagement鈥檚 mini-grant, and the Division of Student Success鈥檚 Departmental Research Assistant and Faculty Research Assistant Funds.
鈥淧ublic Interiority鈥 is , with support from the University of Tennessee鈥檚 Open Publishing Support Fund.聽