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Honorary
Doctorate Citation
University
of Melbourne, April 2005
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Gregory
Burgess graduated from the Faculty of Architecture, Building
and Planning at the University of Melbourne in 1970. For the
past thirty-two years he has led the Melbourne architectural
practice known as Gregory Burgess Architects, for which he
is the principal designer. Over this period he has established
an international reputation through a body of work including
housing, community, cultural, educational, health, religious,
commercial and urban design projects. Most notable among these
buildings are the Eltham Library, Melbourne Theological College,
Brambuk Aboriginal Cultural Centre, Box Hill Community Arts
Centre, Uluru-Kata Tjuta Aboriginal Cultural Centre, Horsham
Church of Michael and St John, Woolamai Surf Club, Twelve
Apostles Visitor Centre and Myer Music Bowl Refurbishment.
For this work Mr
Burgess has received over forty professional and community
awards, including the Sir Zelman Cowen Award (awarded annually
for the best building in Australia), the Victorian Architecture
Medal (for the premier Victorian Architect) and the RAlA Gold
Medal (Career Award for the premier Australian Architect).
He has received international awards for the most innovative
architecture in the Commonwealth and for the most outstanding
architecture in the Asia Pacific. His architectural work has
been exhibited at major galleries and museums in London, Amsterdam,
Tokyo, Edinburgh and all Australian cities. It has been widely
published in professional books and journals, including most
major international architectural journals.
Gregory Burgess
has been a regular guest lecturer and critic in the Faculty
of Architecture, Building and Planning at the University of
Melbourne and has taught at many other Australian architecture
schools. He has been a regular invited speaker at international
conferences on architecture and architectural education. Peter
Davey, editor of the eminent international journal Architectural
Review, has included Burgess among a select group of architects
on the global stage who "... tend the flame of hope and
carry the lamp of truth in a world that seems increasingly
to have no values other than profit and the market in its
grossest form". His work has been widely studied and
critiqued within the academy where it is regarded as at the
cutting edge of architectural practice in several main ways.
At an aesthetic
level Mr Burgess' work is exquisitely beautiful and radically
innovative; at once both avant garde and popular, it is an
architecture that catches the public imagination. Mr Burgess
has also been at the forefront of community architecture,
a practice of involving local communities in more than a token
manner and demonstrating that common interests are not served
by the lowest common denominator. Gregory Burgess' work engages
in architecture as a social art-raising the bar of community
life, constructing new possibilities for social life and social
identity. This work also celebrates architecture as an ecological
art; pushing the cutting edge of sustainability at more than
a technical level; integrating social and environmental sustainability.
These different threads of Gregory Burgess's work are exemplified
in a number of works for and with Aboriginal communities where
the task of architectural design is fraught with the tensions
of national politics, cultural tourism and the struggles of
Aboriginal communities for social justice and reconciliation.
The architecture of Gregory Burgess as a social and ecological
art of placemaking has long been at the forefront of new constructions
of Australian identity and Australian life.
This honorary Doctorate
acknowledges the significant artistic, social, environmental
and intellectual contribution of Gregory Burgess.
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