Lecture date: 2001-11-14
in 1954 the painter Victor Pasmore was invited to collaborate on a proposed new housing estate in Peterlee, County Durham. His involvement with the project was far-reaching, and lasted 23 years. In it he aimed at a complete synthesis of architecture and art, a synthesis perhaps best achieved in the Apollo Pavilion, the monumental concrete form that dominates the surrounding parkland. Unfortunately, what began as a symbol of hope for the future of suburban post-war living was, by the 1980s, derelict and neglected. To coincide with the AA exhibition ‘The Developing Process: The Pasmore Pavilion at Peterlee’, Victor Pasmore’s son, John Pasmore, presents a personal view of the work of his father.
Introduced by Alan Powers.
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