Speakers: Christopher Kennedy and Aidan Ridyard
Richard Twentyman (1903-1979), the brother of the sculptor Anthony Twentyman, was a successful West Midlands architect based in Wolverhampton, known particularly for the thirteen churches and chapels he designed between 1937 and 1973. In this talk based on their research into Twentyman’s life and career, the speakers select a sample of his churches and the art within them to illustrate his distinctive architectural evolution from an early monumental phase, to more modernistic approaches and later innovative design. They suggest the British and European influences on Twentyman’s work and locate his architecture in the changing social, economic, and religious contexts of this period.
Chris Kennedy, a former Birmingham University professor in applied linguistics, subsequently developed his interests in design and architecture by gaining postgraduate qualifications in Design and Architectural History from Oxford University. He stumbled across a church designed by Twentyman and set out to find more about him. Aidan Ridyard is Managing Partner at Burrell Foley Fischer Ridyard Architects, a member of RIBA with Conservation Accreditation, with several notable public buildings to his name in the UK and overseas. A chance meeting between Chris and Aidan at a meeting of the Twentieth Century Society revealed their shared interest in Twentyman (Aidan’s father was vicar at Twentyman’s All Saints, Darlaston), resulting in a self-published book on Twentyman and his churches.
Their book is available for purchase at richardtwentyman.com and at the talk at the reduced rate of £20. If you don’t have cash on the evening, you can still take a copy away with you, and send payment by bank transfer.
Organised by the Architecture Section