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Professor John Macarthur
Professor

John Macarthur

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Phone: 
+61 7 336 53780

Overview

Background

John Macarthur is Professor of architecture at the University of Queensland where he conducts research and teaches in the history and theory of architecture, and in architectural design. John graduated from the University of Queensland with Bachelor (Hons 1st) and Master of Design Studies degrees (1984) before taking a doctorate at the University of Cambridge (1989). He is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities and a Fellow of the Queensland Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was the founding Director of the research centre for Architecture, Theory, Criticism and History (ATCH) and remains an active member of the Centre. He has previously served as Dean and Head of the School of Architecture at UQ and as a member of the Australian Research Council’s College of Experts. He is a past President and a Life Member of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand.

His research in the intellectual history architecture has focused on the conceptual framework of the interrelation of architecture, aesthetics and the arts. His book The Picturesque: architecture, disgust and other irregularities, was published by Routledge in 2007. John has edited and authored a further tenbooks and published over 150 papers including contributions to the journals Assemblage, Transition, Architecture Research Quarterly, Oase and the Journal of Architecture. John's book Is Architecture Art? an introduction to the aesthetics of architecture, was published in December 2024..

Memberships

Fellow, Australian Academy of Humanities Fellow; Queensland Academy of Arts and Sciences; Life Member, Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand

Availability

Professor John Macarthur is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor (Honours), The University of Queensland
  • Masters (Coursework), The University of Queensland
  • Doctor of Philosophy, University of Cambridge

Research interests

  • Architecture between art and aesthetics

    I am broadly interested in how architecture has been considered an art, defined by concepts of philosophical aesthetics on the one hand, and the social and professional institutions of the different arts on the other. The often conflicting determinations of art and aesthetics have a rich history going back to the eighteenth century and continue to define the professional and popular views of architecture. I am interested in relatively technical issues such as the concept of disgust in the eighteenth century picturesque and how the picturesque relates to later romanticism; but also in the assumptions of cultural industries policy in relating architecture to the creative and economic capacities of a population. A recent publication that gives and overview of some of these interests is: Macarthur, John, Susan Holden, Ashley Paine, and Wouter Davidts. Pavilion Propositions: Nine Points on an Architectural Phenomenon. Amsterdam: Valiz, 2018. Macarthur, John, Susan Holden, and Ashley Paine. "For What It’s Worth: The Value of Architecture as Heritage and Culture." In Valuing Architecture: Heritage and the Economics of Culture, edited by Ashley Paine, Susan Holden and John Macarthur. Amsterdam: Valiz, 2020. My definitive views on the topic are published as <Is Architecture Art: an introduction to the aesthetics of architecture? London: Bloomsbury, 2024.

  • The Architecture of Queensland

    I am involved with colleagues in the ATCH Centre in the recording and analysing the architecture of the Australian State of Queensland. Parallel studies involve archival research, oral histories, and discourse analysis using computer semantic text analysis tools. Themes of the study include architectural education, public policy, claims to climatic determination, and regional character. Publications include: Macarthur, John, Deborah van der Plaat, Janina Gosseye, and Andrew Wilson, eds. Hot Modernism: Queensland Architecture 1945-1975. London: Artifice, 2015. Plaat, Deborah van der, and John Macarthur, eds. Karl Langer: Modern Architect and Migrant in the Australian Tropics, Bloomsbury Studies in Modern Architecture. London: Bloomsbury Visual Arts, 2022. Macarthur, John, and Deborah van der Plaat. "Wireless Architecture: Robert Cummings Early Radio Broadcasts ". In Architectural Education through Materiality: Pedagogies of 20th-Century Design,, edited by Elke Couchez and Rajesh Heynickx, 221-34. London: Taylor and Francis, 2021.

Works

Search Professor John Macarthur’s works on UQ eSpace

146 works between 1984 and 2024

101 - 120 of 146 works

2004

Journal Article

Sweet whiteness

Macarthur, John (2004). Sweet whiteness. Architecture Australia, 93 (4), 58-63.

Sweet whiteness

2004

Journal Article

Recto/verso: 2 drawings. The pleasures of making: Matter and making, pleasure and ethics, architecture and the everyday

Loo, Steve, Treadwell, Sarah and Macarthur, John (2004). Recto/verso: 2 drawings. The pleasures of making: Matter and making, pleasure and ethics, architecture and the everyday. Architecture Australia, 93 (3), 44-45.

Recto/verso: 2 drawings. The pleasures of making: Matter and making, pleasure and ethics, architecture and the everyday

2004

Conference Publication

Ivor de Wolfe's picturesque, or who and what as townscape

Macarthur, John and Aitchison, M. H. (2004). Ivor de Wolfe's picturesque, or who and what as townscape. Limits: Proceedings of the 21st Annual Conference of SAHANZ, Melbourne, 26-29th September, 2004. Melbourne: SAHANZ.

Ivor de Wolfe's picturesque, or who and what as townscape

2004

Journal Article

A simple gesture across a piece of land: Kerstin Thompson architects house at Lake Connewarre

Macarthur, John (2004). A simple gesture across a piece of land: Kerstin Thompson architects house at Lake Connewarre. Architecture Australia, 93 (1), 50-57.

A simple gesture across a piece of land: Kerstin Thompson architects house at Lake Connewarre

2004

Conference Publication

Picturesque minimalism: Architecture, visual experience and form

Macarthur, John (2004). Picturesque minimalism: Architecture, visual experience and form. 2003 ACSA International Conference, Helsinki, Finland, 27-30 July 2003. Washington, U.S.A.: Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture.

Picturesque minimalism: Architecture, visual experience and form

2004

Other Outputs

Report on the cultural heritage significance of the former T and G building, Townsville

Macarthur, John (2004). Report on the cultural heritage significance of the former T and G building, Townsville. Townsville: Planning and Environment Court of Queensland.

Report on the cultural heritage significance of the former T and G building, Townsville

2003

Other Outputs

Assessment of objection to the inclusion of the Wintergarden Theatre, Rockhampton in the Heritage Register of Queensland

Macarthur, John P. (2003). Assessment of objection to the inclusion of the Wintergarden Theatre, Rockhampton in the Heritage Register of Queensland. Report to the Queensland Heritage Council Brisbane, Australia: Queensland Heritage Council.

Assessment of objection to the inclusion of the Wintergarden Theatre, Rockhampton in the Heritage Register of Queensland

2003

Journal Article

Form in the Suburbs

Macarthur, John (2003). Form in the Suburbs. Architecture Australia, 92 (3), 58-63.

Form in the Suburbs

2003

Journal Article

Federation Square: The aesthetics of public space

Macarthur, John (2003). Federation Square: The aesthetics of public space. Architecture Australia, 92 (2), 48-49.

Federation Square: The aesthetics of public space

2002

Journal Article

Casuarina beach house

Macarthur, John (2002). Casuarina beach house. Architecture Australia, 91 (3, May/June), 58-63.

Casuarina beach house

2002

Conference Publication

Introduction

Moulis, Antony and Macarthur, John P. (2002). Introduction. XIX Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand, Brisbane, Qld, Australia, 4-7 October, 2002. Brisbane, Australia: Society of Architectural Historians, Australia & New Zealand. doi: 10.3233/978-1-61499-175-5-1

Introduction

2002

Journal Article

The picturesque movement-effect: Motion and Architectural affects in Wolfflin and Benjamin

Macarthur, John (2002). The picturesque movement-effect: Motion and Architectural affects in Wolfflin and Benjamin. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Art, 3 (1), 137-157.

The picturesque movement-effect: Motion and Architectural affects in Wolfflin and Benjamin

2002

Journal Article

The Image as an architectural material

Macarthur, John (2002). The Image as an architectural material. South Atlantic Quarterly, 101 (3), 673-693. doi: 10.1215/00382876-101-3-673

The Image as an architectural material

2002

Journal Article

The look of the object: Minimalism in art and architecture, then and now

Macarthur, John (2002). The look of the object: Minimalism in art and architecture, then and now. Architectural Theory Review, 7 (1), 137-148. doi: 10.1080/13264820209478450

The look of the object: Minimalism in art and architecture, then and now

2002

Edited Outputs

Additions to architectural history: Nineteenth Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand

J. P. Macarthur and A. Moulis eds. (2002). Additions to architectural history: Nineteenth Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. XIX Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand, Brisbane, Qld, Australia, 4-7 October, 2002. Brisbane, Australia: Society of Architectural Historians, Australia & New Zealand.

Additions to architectural history: Nineteenth Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand

2001

Journal Article

Australian Baroque: Geometry and Meaning at the National Museum of Australia

Macarthur, John (2001). Australian Baroque: Geometry and Meaning at the National Museum of Australia. Architecture Australia, 90 (2), 48-61.

Australian Baroque: Geometry and Meaning at the National Museum of Australia

2001

Book Chapter

Remarks around a pause: The plan and the architectural object

Macarthur, John (2001). Remarks around a pause: The plan and the architectural object. Pause. (pp. 9-12) edited by C. Murphy and S. Murray. Melbourne: RMIT University Press.

Remarks around a pause: The plan and the architectural object

2001

Conference Publication

The picturesque movement-effect:Motion and architectural affects in Wolfflin and Benjamin

Macarthur, John (2001). The picturesque movement-effect:Motion and architectural affects in Wolfflin and Benjamin. The 18th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand, Darwin, 30 Sept - 3 Oct, 2001. Darwin: SAHANZ.

The picturesque movement-effect:Motion and architectural affects in Wolfflin and Benjamin

2001

Journal Article

The City as Territory: Aerial Photography and the Everyday

Hawker, Rosemary and Macarthur, John (2001). The City as Territory: Aerial Photography and the Everyday. Photofile (63), 34-39.

The City as Territory: Aerial Photography and the Everyday

2000

Journal Article

Malappropriation of the picturesque

Macarthur, John (2000). Malappropriation of the picturesque. 38 South: The Graduate Journal of Architecture and Design from RMIT (2), 52-59.

Malappropriation of the picturesque

Funding

Current funding

  • 2024 - 2025
    Twentieth Century Queensland: A thematic study of heritage places
    Queensland Government Department of Environment, Science and Innovation
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2021 - 2023
    Australian Cultural Data Engine for Research, Industry and Government (ARC LIEF project administered by University of Melbourne)
    University of Melbourne
    Open grant
  • 2016 - 2022
    Is architecture art? A history of categories, concepts and recent practices
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2015
    The design and construction of quality, sustainable and affordable pre-made housing in Australia - Optimisation and Integration
    ARC Linkage Projects
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2018
    The design and construction of quality, sustainable and affordable pre-made housing in Australia - Optimisation and Integration (ARC Linkage Project administered by The University of Sydney)
    University of Sydney
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2014
    Intercultural architectural and material culture heritage and conservation in Moreton Bay
    UQ FirstLink Scheme
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2014
    Architectural Practice in Postwar Queensland (1945-1975): Building and Interpreting an Oral History Archive.
    ARC Linkage Projects
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2013
    The Cultural Logic of Queensland Architecture: Place, Taste and Economy
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2011
    Architectural Education and Practice in Post-war Queensland (1937-1970): Building and Interpreting an oral history archive
    UQ FirstLink Scheme
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2012
    Writing the Architecture of Queensland: Innovative Approaches to Architectural Critique
    Arts Queensland Funding
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2011
    The Baroque in Architectural Culture, 1880-1980
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2003 - 2005
    The Picturesque in Modernity: object image and architecture
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor John Macarthur is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Available projects

  • Architecture and Cultural Policy in Australia

    Architecture is absent from national cultural policy in Australia despite being a significant part of the cultural economy and the way that civic identity is formed. Taste, civic norms and the economy come together in buildings and urban spaces, but there is little understanding about how they interact at personal, community and national levels. Recent econometric accounts of culture include architecture, forcing the issue of its place in cultural policy. This project aims to study architecture as a matter of culture that overcomes the gaps between concepts and administrative categories. Its goal is to inform better policy formation, increased public engagement with architecture, and growth in the creative economy.

    PhD topics within this wider project include: architecture in public interest broadcasting; architecture in school curricula; non-professional architectural and building culture on the WWW; architecture and cultural citizenship; architecture and liberalism.

  • Picturesque Australasia

    The aesthetic concept of the picturesque and, to a greater extent, the cultural practices associated with it were significant in the history of the European settlements in present day Australia and New Zealand. Projects suitable for Phd investigation include: the circulation of books of designs and advice on architecture and gardening; the role of mid 19th century publications on the aesthetic and agricultural potential of the colonies in powering immigration and expanded settlements; and the role of nature aesthetics in town planning.

  • Architecture as an art: aesthetic theory, taste and the institutions of the arts

    Architecture has been considered an art, or not, for different reasons which follow two main branches. The first branch is the consideration of architecture's place among ‘the arts’ understood as an institution of cognate knowledges and practices. The alternative track is to consider architecture through the concept of aesthetics which a human orientation to beauty in all of the material world both natural and artifactual and a faculty anterior to the social institution of art and the arts. PhD projects within this stream might include: the intellectual history of art, architecture and philosophical aesthetics since the 18th century; the place of building and architectural representation in contemporary art practice; and how standards of taste were formed historically and are today.

  • Design Expertise, Design Governance, and the Architecture Profession

    This research explores architecture in built environment governance, and more broadly the role of architecture and design in governing: in fostering civic engagement, demonstrating values, and defining a common good. It investigates the relatively recent establishment of design advisor roles in liberal democratic governments, and how this can be understood as a new site of professional production and an index of a changing profession. It explores the interrelationship between regulation, informal design governance processes, and processes that influence cultural change such as education. It draws on theories of governance and governmentality to understand the reliance of design governance processes on negotiated justifications of design quality and worth.

    Opportunities for PhD topics within this research project will include both empirically and conceptually focused studies:

    • The economy of professional expertise in urban development
    • The role of expertise in aesthetic judgements about the built environment and architecture
    • Post-professionalism and lay-expertise
    • Concepts of quality in regulation and review of design
    • Gender equity in professional participation

  • Architecture and Cultural Policy in Australia

    Architecture is absent from national cultural policy in Australia despite being a significant part of the cultural economy and the way that civic identity is formed. Taste, civic norms and the economy come together in buildings and urban spaces, but there is little understanding about how they interact at personal, community and national levels. Recent econometric accounts of culture include architecture, forcing the issue of its place in cultural policy. This project aims to study architecture as a matter of culture that overcomes the gaps between concepts and administrative categories. Its goal is to inform better policy formation, increased public engagement with architecture, and growth in the creative economy.

    PhD topics within this wider project include: architecture in public interest broadcasting; architecture in school curricula; non-professional architectural and building culture on the WWW; architecture and cultural citizenship; architecture and liberalism.

  • Picturesque Australasia

    The aesthetic concept of the picturesque and, to a greater extent, the cultural practices associated with it were significant in the history of the European settlements in present day Australia and New Zealand. Projects suitable for Phd investigation include: the circulation of books of designs and advice on architecture and gardening; the role of mid 19th century publications on the aesthetic and agricultural potential of the colonies in powering immigration and expanded settlements; and the role of nature aesthetics in town planning.

Supervision history

Current supervision

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Professor John Macarthur directly for media enquiries about:

  • Architectural theory and history
  • Architecture
  • Building design
  • Design - architecture
  • Heritage - assessment and policy
  • History - of architecture
  • Urban design
  • Western Architecture

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