In partnership with AIA East Tennessee Chapter, please join KHP for a what promises to be a fascinating program with architectural historian Mary Anne Hunting, who will explore the crucial but often-overlooked role of women architects in the development of Modernism in the United States. Drawing on research from her new book, Women Architects at Work: Making American Modernism (Princeton University Press, 2025), Dr. Hunting will explore the work of Jane West Clauss, who studied with Le Corbusier before designing the mid-20th century development known as Little Switzerland in South Knoxville with her husband, Alfred Clauss, recently explored in the Knoxville Museum of Art exhibition, “Seeds of Regionalism.” Also highlighted is the work of Knoxville architect Elizabeth Wiley Dunlap. An alumna of the Cambridge [MA] School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, Dunlap was known for her work in the Knoxville area, including a striking home in Sequoyah Hills.
Cost: AIA members $15.00; non-members $25.00. Lunch is included. Registration and further information can be found HERE.





