Activities

Year in Review 2022
UMassBRUT hosts an array of public and academic activities including tours, exhibits, lectures, and other outreach activities to educate and advocate for UMass Brutalist architecture.

Biannual Review - 2023-2024
Awards
Docomomo Modernism in America Award of Excellence in the Inventory/Survey Category (2022)
UMassBRUT was honored with a 2022 Docomomo Modernism in America Award of Excellence in the Inventory/Survey Category and, on November 3rd, six members of the Executive Committee traveled to New York to accept the award in person.
Events
EVENTS
The Breuer Window: Take a Closer Look at Brutalist Architecture (2023)
Location: Bromery Center for the Arts South Plaza, next to Lobby entrance, 151 Presidents Dr, Amherst
Date & Time: 13 October 2023, 2PM – 9PM
An art installation that presents a 3/4 scale reconstruction of the Lincoln Campus Center hotel window façade panel, allowing the public to experience the beauty and formal grandeur of a Marcel Breuer’s architecture. This event occurs during Family Weekend at UMass Amherst and is organized in collaboration with the following: UMass Fine Arts Center Art Walk (3pm – 6pm); the Joy of Art After Party with Laudable productions (6pm – 9pm); and the UMass Student Life Pond Fire (6pm – 9pm). Installation designed and constructed by by Colleen Tully ‘G24.
Illuminating Brutalism: A Projection Art and Music Experience (2022)
Saturday, October 29th, 2022, 7:00pm - 8:00pm (Rain Date: October 30th) at UMass Amherst Bromery Center for the Arts South Plaza, 151 Presidents Dr, Amherst
In conjunction with University of Massachusetts Amherst’s 2022 Homecoming Weekend, UMassBRUT is partnering with the Bromery Center for the Arts on a large public event centered on projecting artwork onto the building's south façade. The event will comprise of an animated light show projected onto the large scale south façade of the Bromery Center. We anticipate large crowds from both the UMass and Amherst community gathering in the southern plaza in front of the Arts Bridge to enjoy the projection art and musical accompaniment.
The show will be designed by noted artist and UMass Dartmouth Professor, Mark Millstein, and UMass Amherst Graduate Architecture student, Lincoln Nemetz-Carlson. Mark Millstein is overseeing both the development of the artwork and the projection itself. Millstein is an experienced artist who developed a special animation and video projection onto the buildings of UMass Dartmouth for our UMassBRUT Symposium in 2021.
The overall goal of the projection mapping event is to raise awareness of and appreciation for the Brutalist buildings on the University of Massachusetts campuses. The artwork is designed to emphasize the bold forms and dramatic shadows of the Bromery Center for the Arts complex and to highlight its powerful, expressive architecture. The project is part of a multi-year campaign by UMassBRUT, a UMass Amherst and UMass Dartmouth collaborative advocacy group dedicated to celebrating, preserving, and reimagining our Brutalist architecture.
The event will take place on Saturday, October 29th from 7:00–8:00 PM (or, in case of inclement weather, at the same time the following day). Food and drinks will be available for purchase. It is free and open to the public and no advance registration is required. Although plenty of space will be available for standing (or dancing!), limited seating will be provided. We encourage participants to bring their own chairs or blankets; please dress warmly for the weather. Parking on President’s Drive will be reduced, and accessible parking will be limited to spaces across from Herter hall and in the north portion of Haigis Mall. Buses will be rerouted to a stop along Mass Avenue for the duration of the event. Visitor parking is available at the Campus Center Parking Garage; the rate is $1.75/hr. and it is open 24/7.
Exhibitions
Windows on UMass (2023)
October 7 - December 20, 2024 at the John Olver Design Building Gallery, University of Massachusetts Amherst, 551 N Pleasant St, Amherst, MA 01003
Windows on UMass is a project that inspired students to interpret the brutalist buildings of the UMass Amherst and UMass Dartmouth campus through their windows. The exhibit showcases original works by students from both universities. It comprises various mediums including but not limited to photography, digital renderings, drawings, and writings.
Windows on UMass renews the public perception of UMass collection of Brutalist heritage by highlighting their historic and cultural significance and today's use of these treasures. as well as the people that use them.
The Windows on UMass exhibit is led by UMassBRUT founding members Timothy M. Rohan, Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of the History of Art & Architecture, UMass Amherst, and Ludmilla Pavlova-Gillham, Senior Campus Planner and Architect, UMass Amherst.
Exhibition curators and designers: Colleen Tully, MArch ’24, Erica DeWitt, MArch’23, Lincoln Nemetez-Carlson, MArch ’23, with the assistance of Kay Tierney, MArch candidate.
Standing in Silhouette: The Southwest Dormitories at UMass (2021)
September 1 - December 8, 2021 UMass Amherst Fall Semester, Greenbaum Gallery at Elm House (entrance on Hicks Way) at 145 Commonwealth Avenue, UMass Amherst. Student exhibition open Fall 2021 in conjunction with the "Brutalism and the Public University: Past, Present and Future" Symposium. Opening reception at the Greenbaum Gallery, November 6, 2021, 11 am.
Brutalism in Color" Exhibit (2021)
UMass Amherst, October 20 - 31, 2021, Randolph W Bromery Center for the Arts lobby, 151 Presidents Drive, UMass Amherst
Opening on October 15 - 31, 2021 in conjunction with the "Brutalism and the Public University: Past, Present and Future" Symposium. Free and open to the public.
“Brutalism in Color” presents the renowned Brutalist architecture of UMass Amherst and UMass Dartmouth in new and colorful ways. Featuring brightly colored archival photography, original artwork by Lincoln Nemetz-Carlson, PhD, and representations of recent renovations to Brutalist interiors, the exhibition will focus on different ways architects, designers, and caretakers have employed color in and around our Brutalist structures. The exhibit highlights the use of textiles, water, paint, and art not only to connect Brutalism to its original vibrant context of the 1960s and 1970s, but also to portray these architectural masterpieces in an entirely new light.
UMASS Dartmouth
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Initiatives
Paul Rudolph Modernist Architectural Modernist Virtual Tour
For the first time, enthusiasts of Paul Rudolph and modernist architecture can participate in an online or in-person self-guided virtual tour of UMass Dartmouth's nationally renowned brutalist campus. The UMassBrut group will celebrate the launch of the tour at AHA! Night Thursday, May 11, at 6:30pm at the Star Store campus in downtown New Bedford.
Art History Professor Anna Dempsey and Librarian Allison Cywin will present the interactive tour, including a question-and-answer session to be followed by a celebratory reception. Attendees will learn about the life and career of internationally renowned architect Paul Marvin Rudolph, explore Rudolph's urbanist campus, and become familiar with his aesthetic and design approaches that made Southeastern Massachusetts Technological Institute (now UMass Dartmouth) an iconic university campus.
Dempsey and Cywin hope this tour provides students, parents, alumni, faculty, staff, and the greater public community with an appreciation for this brutalist treasure that represents an age of optimism and idealism in public education.
The interactive tour is approximately 45 minutes long and includes thirteen video stops as well as links to arts and cultural organizations and tourist designations to encourage visitation and commerce in the region.
Those interested in supporting the effort to promote, educate, and advocate for brutalist architecture are encouraged to join UMassBrut, an advocacy group that celebrates, preserves, and re-imagines the mid-century brutalist public architecture in the University of Massachusetts system.
UMassBRUT Community ScholarWorks Archive
ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst is a digital showcase of the research and scholarly output of members of the University of Massachusetts Amherst community. The ScholarWorks repository is administered by the UMass Amherst Libraries and serves as a permanent digital archive for these scholarly materials.
GRANTS
UMASS DARTMOUTH - Creative Economy Grant for Virtual Tour Paul Rudolph's Brutalist Campus 2019-2023
UMASS DARTMOUTH - Creative Economy Grant for the first UMassBrut Symposium, October 2021
Outreach & Tours
Science of Bird-Window Collisions and the Need to Protect Birds from the Human Built Environment (2024)
Held November 8th from 11:30am to 1:00pm at UMass Amherst. John Olver Design Building, room 170, 551 North Pleasant Street, Amherst, MA 01003.
11:30am Welcome by Margaret Vickery, Senior Lecturer, History of Art and Architecture, UMass Amherst
11:45am Science of Bird-Window Collisions by Daniel Klem, Jr. Sarkis Acopian Professor of Ornithology and Conservation Biology, Muhlenberg College
This program is supported by UMass Amherst Department of Environmental Conservation.
DOCOMOMO Windows on UMass Campus Walking Tour (2024)
Held October 25, 2024 at 4:30pm at UMass Amherst. John Olver Design Building Gallery, UMass Amherst
This campus walking tour, part of the Docomomo US annual celebration of modern architecture and design, concentrates upon the windows of the Brutalist buildings of UMass Amherst. Studying their fenestration provides us a focused way to examine these large-scale structures, such as the Murray D. Lincoln Campus Center by Marcel Breuer. The tour was led by UMassBRUT founding members Timothy M. Rohan, Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of the History of Art & Architecture and Ludmilla Pavlova-Gillham, FAIA, Senior Campus Planner and Architect, with assistance from student docents.
Architectural Tour of W.E.B. Du Bois Library 6th and 7th Floor Renovations: by Liv Wyatt, Designer/Construction Administrator, and Kuhn Riddle Architects & Designers (1 AIA HSW credit available with prior registration).
DOCOMOMO Windows on UMass Campus Walking Tour by Prof. Timothy Rohan (1 hour, free and open to the public). RSVP recommended but not required to umassbrut@umass.edu
Understanding UMass Amherst's Modernist Heritage: Walking Tour (2024)
Held April 29, 2024 at the Bromery Center for the Arts South Plaza lobby, UMass Amherst. 151 Presidents Dr, Amherst
The UMass Amherst’s campus has a rich and eclectic architectural history and is home to an outstanding collection of buildings and landscapes from the 18th to the 21st century. This tour will be led by Timothy M. Rohan, associate professor and chair of the Department of the History of Art & Architecture, CHFA, and Ludmilla Pavlova-Gillham, FAIA, Senior Campus Planner and Architect, both of whom are founders of UMassBRUT.
The event is being promoted as part of a series of Inauguration Weekend/Founders Day activities highlighting campus points of pride and building community. Founders Day is an annual opportunity to reflect on the rich and storied history of UMass Amherst, take pride in its present standing, and look toward its future. In combination with the Inauguration of Chancellor Javier Reyes, and the 150th anniversary of the Alumni Association, this year’s festivities will be particularly impactful.
Understanding UMass Amherst's Brutalist Heritage (2024)
Location: Meet at the Bromery Center for the Arts South Plaza lobby, 151 Presidents Dr, Amherst
Date & Time: Friday, April 12th at 3:00pm
Led by Timothy M. Rohan, associate professor and chair, Department of the History of Art & Architecture, CHFA, and co-founder of UMass Brut, the advocacy group for Brutalist architecture in the UMass system
After World War II, the University of Massachusetts Amherst embarked upon an ambitious building program to demonstrate that it had become a great research university. UMass employed talented architects of the time, such as the internationally known Marcel Breuer, and gifted but less remembered ones such as the Coletti Brothers of Boston. An expert on postwar modern architecture, Tim Rohan from Art History will lead the tour and his students will speak about the remarkable windows of the buildings, the subject of a classroom assignment and forthcoming fall 2024 exhibition entitled “Windows on UMass” sponsored by UMass Brut.
Campus Tour: UMass Amherst's Remarkable Brutalist Heritage (2023)
Held Friday, October 13, 2023 from 2:00pm-3:00pm at UMass Amherst. Campus Center Way, Amherst, MA
After World War II, the University of Massachusetts Amherst embarked upon one of the most ambitious academic building programs in the United States. Following a 1963 master plan by renowned landscape architect, Hideo Sasaki, UMass Amherst employed some of the most distinguished architects of the time, among them Marcel Breuer, Kevin Roche, and Edward Durell Stone. The tour will investigate their distinctive Brutalist buildings and how they are now being reimagined after serving generations of students well.
The walking tour will meet in the lobby of the Lincoln Campus Center (Marcel Breuer, 1970) and will traverse the campus grounds, viewing buildings such as the Randolph W. Bromery Center for the Arts (Kevin Roche, 1973) and its newly renovated Arts Bridge, Herter Hall (Coletti Borthers, 1968), Whitmore Hall (Campbell & Aldrich, 1967), Tobin Hall (Coletti Borthers, 1972), and the iconic W.E.B. DuBois Library (Edward Durell Stone, 1972).
This tour will be led by Timothy M. Rohan, Chair and Associate Professor, History of Art and Architecture Department, University of Massachusetts Amherst with assistance from Ludmilla Pavlova-Gillham, Senior Campus Planner.
Docomomo US Tour Day: Modernist Architecture Campus Tour: UMass Amherst (2022)
Held October 29th, 2022, 2:00pm-3:00pm at the Lincoln Campus Center Information Desk, 1 Campus Center Way, Amherst, MA
In the generation following the Second World War, the University of Massachusetts Amherst engaged in one of the most ambitious academic building programs in the United States. Following a 1963 master plan by renowned landscape architect, Hideo Sasaki, UMass Amherst employed some of the most distinguished architects of the time such as Marcel Breuer, Kevin Roche, and Edward Durrell Stone, who remade the campus in a distinct Brutalist style.
The walking tour will start in the lobby of the Lincoln Campus Center (Marcel Breuer, 1970) and will walk on the campus grounds, viewing buildings such as Randolph W. Bromery Center for the Arts (Kevin Roche, 1973), Herter Hall (Coletti Borthers, 1968), Whitmore Hall (Campbell & Aldrich, 1967), Tobin Hall (Coletti Borthers, 1972), and the iconic W.E.B. DuBois Library (Edward Durell Stone, 1972).
This tour will be led by Timothy M. Rohan, Associate Professor, History of Art and Architecture Department, University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Free and open to the public, no advance registration required
Visitor parking is available at the Campus Center Parking Garage; the rate is $1.75/hr. and it is open 24/7.
Paul Rudolph & First Church Boston (2022)
Hosted by First Church Boston
Sunday, May 1, 2022, at 2pm - First Church Boston 66 Marlborough St Boston, MA
On March 29, 1968, First Church Boston (Ware & Van Brunt, 1868) burned to the ground. In the ensuing months, the congregation choose Paul Rudolph to rebuild their church in part because his was the only proposal to include what remained of the existing gothic façade in the design. This panel discussion, held on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the building, will consider the design now and then and how it fits into the larger legacy of Rudolph’s work.
§ Kelvin Dickinson, President, Paul Rudolph Institute for Modern Architecture
§ Alice Friedman, Grace Slack McNeil Professor of American Art at Wellesley College
§ Eric Höweler, Co-founder, Höweler + Yoon Architecture LLP; Associate Professor in Architecture, Harvard
University Graduate School of Design
§ Timothy Rohan, Associate professor, Art and Architectural History, University of Massachusetts Amherst; author of
The Architecture of Paul Rudolph
§ Justin Beal, Moderator, Artist and author of Sandfuture
§ The panel will include a special contribution from Boston Globe architecture critic Robert Campbell.
UMass Amherst Campus Walking Tour: "Southwest Residential Area, Whitmore, Herter, Tobin, Lincoln Campus Center"
(2021)
Saturday, October 23, 2021, 4:00pm – 5:30pm. Start at the Randolph W. Bromery Center for the Arts Plaza at 151 Presidents Drive, Amherst
Free and Open to the Public; RSVP by filling out this form: https://form.jotform.com/umassbrut/umass-brut-walking-tour
Tour Guides:
• Lincoln Nemetz Carlson, PhD, Graduate Researcher, Campus Planning, University of Massachusetts Amherst
• P. Alexander Stoicheff, Graduate Researcher, Campus Planning, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Visitor Parking Options (visit Where to Park - Transportation Services - UMass Amherst):
Park at the Campus Center Parking Garage (cost is $1.75/hour), at a metered parking space on Presidents Drive or the adjacent visitors lot (cost is $1.50/hour). Meters are enforced from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Tour Description:
The UMass Amherst campus was established under the Morrill Land Grant in 1863. Today it is the flagship of the five-campus University of Massachusetts system, serving a community of over 36,000 in approximately 13.4 million square feet of buildings. Its most significant enrollment growth occurred after World War II with over 10 million square feet of space built within 20 years with a change in scale from rural to a more urban campus consisting of dense neighborhoods and towers, based on the 1963 master plan by Hideo Sasaki. Making UMass a veritable showcase of Brutalism at its zenith, UMass Amherst commissioned the landmark Fine Arts Center (1974) by Kevin Roche (recently renamed the Randolph W. Bromery Center for the Arts) and Lincoln Campus Center by Marcel Breuer (1970) as well other key structures by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, Edward Durrell Stone and Hugh Stubbins. The tour will start at the Fine Arts Center (Kevin Roche, 1973), and walk on the campus grounds, viewing Herter Hall (Coletti Borthers, 1968), Whitmore Hall (Campbell & Aldrich, 1967), Southwest Residential Complex (Hugh Stubbins & Assoc., 1965-68), Tobin Hall (Coletti Borthers, 1972), Dubois Library (Edward Durell Stone, 1972), Lincoln Campus Center (Marcel Brewer, 1970), and Lederle Graduate Research Center (Campbell, Aldrich & Nulty, 1971-1973).
Brut Bites (2021)
Held at Amherst History Society (April 1-May 3, 2021)
The Amherst History Society partnered with the Public History Department of UMass, to introduce a series of lectures on the evolution of architectural design on the UMass campus.
April 12 : UMass Then/Now (click title to see video)
Speakers: Ron Michaud and Ludmilla Pavlova-Gillham
Description: The UMass campus has always been a place of dynamic change. By pairing archival photographs with contemporary images, retired faculty member Ron Michaud and Senior Campus Planner Ludmilla Pavlova-Gillham will invite participants to reflect on how the campus has changed over time. What’s been lost? What’s been gained?
April 19: The History and Cultures of the Southwest Residential Area (click title to see video)
Speaker: Timothy M. Rohan
Description: Completed in 1968, the towers of the Southwest Residential Complex have made a big impact on our local landscape. What is the history of this large complex, which can house up to 5500 students? What does it tell us about modern architecture, the campus, the community, and the region in the 1960s and after? How did its diverse communities create their own unique cultures within this “big city”-like environment?
April 26: Unbuilt UMass: A History of Campus Master Plans (click title to see video)
Speaker: Ludmilla Pavlova-Gillham
Description: The UMass campus is familiar to many, but was it always going to look the way it does today? How has the campus been envisioned over time? What forces and priorities shaped the plans that we recognize today, and what other plans were never realized? Peek inside the history of campus master plans with Senior Campus Planner Ludmilla Pavlova-Gillham to explore the evolving vision for the UMass Amherst campus, from its beginning to the present.
May 3: The History of the Randolph W. Bromery Fine Arts Center (click title to see video)
Speakers: L. Carl Fiocchi and Margaret Vickery
Description: Since its founding in 1975, The Randolph W. Bromery Center for the Arts (formerly Fine Arts Center) has been a central force in the cultural, social and academic life of the Town of Amherst, the University, the Five College campuses, and the Pioneer Valley. This uncompromisingly modern concrete building consists of several distinctly different units which are combined to form a powerful architectural sculpture. It was conceived as a gateway to the campus at the south end of the pond and its monumental arcade serves as a pedestrian link between the east and west campus on what was formerly Ellis drive. The complex contributes to both positive and negative perception of Brutalist concrete buildings and its history is marred with celebrations as well as expressions of discontent. The presenters will discuss the history of its development and address the myths and perceptions related to its aesthetic and environmental appeal (and lack thereof). The audience will be invited to share memories of its impact on life in Amherst and the surrounding community.
Docomomo US Tour Day 2018
Recap: UMass Amherst + Brutalism - Origins, Evolution, and Future - Engaging Public Dialogue: Event Recap
October 20th 2018, 50+ students, faculty and staff, among industry professionals and the general public gathered on the UMass Amherst campus to learn and discuss the university’s brutalist architectural history.
UMass Dartmouth Tours
Docomomo US Tour Day 2020
Tour for Society of Architectural Historians 72nd Annual International Conference 2019
A Visionary Campus Exhibition, 2018 (Art History Capstone)
Tour for New England Architectural Historians, 2017
Tour for Providence Preservation Society, 2017
Symposiums
UMASSBRUT SPONSORED SYMPOSIUMS
Symposium to be Announced Soon (fall...2025
Symposium - Teaching and Learning with Our Campus Modernist Architecture (2024)
Held October 25th, 2024. 12:30 - 5:30pm at John Olver Design Building, UMass Amherst, 551 N Pleasant St, Amherst, MA 01003
Sessions Program:
12:30 pm - Welcome by Timothy Rohan, Assoc. Prof. & Chair, History of Art & Architecture, UMass Amherst. Room 170.
1:30 pm - Student Presentations, John Olver Design Building Gallery
2:00 pm - Researching and Mounting an Exhibition of Campus Buildings by Prof. Kristina Wilson, Art History, Clark University.Room 170.
2:30 pm - UMass Dartmouth: Working with Students in the Archive to Research Campus Buildings by Prof. Anna Dempsey, Art History, UMass Dartmouth and Allison Cywin, Librarian, UMass Dartmouth. Room 170.
3:15pm - Bringing Paul Rudolph into the 21st Century - Replacing the Windows at UMass Dartmouth's SENG Building by Michael Lauber, FAIA, Principal and Peter Herman, AIA, Principal, Ellenzweig. Room 170.
Symposium Brutalism + the Public University: Past, Present, and Future (2021)
Friday, October 22 at UMass Dartmouth - Saturday, October 23, 2021 at UMass Amherst
A two-day symposium will take place across two UMass campuses in celebration of our Brutalist heritage and sponsored by UMass Brut. The topics will include architectural history, urbanism and design, public art, and concrete restoration technologies and sustainability. Our goal: to bring together scholars and practitioners to discuss the significance of our Brutalist campus architecture and thus elicit a public discussion about the importance of its preservation. Registration required.
UMASSBRUT SYMPOSIM & CONFERENCE PARTICIPATION
The Association of Preservation Technology Northeast Chapter (APTNE) 2024 Annual Meeting & Symposium Architectural Tours . Thursday, February 29 - Saturday, March 2, 2024. University of Massachusetts Amherst
Ludmilla Pavlova-Gillham, FAIA, will lead two tours at the APTNE Annual Meeting and Symposium. Tours are only open to APTNE conference registrants. UMass Campus Walking Tour: Brutalist Heritage and History. Thursday, February 29th at 3:00pm
UMass Bromery Fine Arts Center Bridge Tour March 2nd at 9:00am led by Sam Batchelor and Ludmilla Pavlova-Gillham
Saturday,