Robin Evans (1944-1993) was an architect, teacher and historian. He grew up in Essex, England, attending British state schools where he met his wife, teacher Janet Bance - before studying Architecture at the Architectural Association School of Architecture (the AA), gaining his Diploma and the Bristol Prize (1969). Evans studied the history of prison architecture for his doctorate. His essays and reviews were published in journals including Lotus, Cara Bella, Architectural Review and AA Quarterly. He lectured in Cambridge, England, AA, and the Bartlett School, University College London. Evans also lectured widely in the USA at Harvard, Columbia, Pennsylvania, Princeton, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and Cornell. Before his death he completed The Projective Cast: Architecture and Its Three Geometries (the MIT Press,1995). A history of architecture from Early Renaissance to post-modernity - Evans writes about architectural concern for the meanings of space and matter, perception and imagination. Evans's theories of projection have been extended by digital theorist Jules Moloney who argues they are the product of a paper-based history of architectural drawing. Projection and its analogues: The Arrested Image, Robin Evans (from The Projective Cast, MIT, 1995)
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