A temple contemporary gallery space

The immersive education you’ll receive at Tyler starts in class but coalesces as you begin to see how contemporary practitioners and scholars have built purposeful creative lives, translating their “voices” into transformational work and careers. 

Every year we welcome scores of renowned artists, scholars, architects, designers and professionals to share their cutting-edge work with the Tyler community and community at large through lectures, readings and demonstrations. Because we’re all here to learn. 

Critical Dialogues

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For more than 20 years, Tyler’s Critical Dialogue Series has brought hundreds of leading practitioners, scholars, curators and other arts professionals to discuss current issues in art and design.

Recent speakers
  • Julie Ezelle-Patton, 2025
    an award-winning poet, performance artist and educator, whose most recent chapbook, Flower Poem (Tender Buttons), was published in 2024.

  • Ilana Savdie, 2024
    a painter, who was raised between Colombia and Miami. She has exhibited all over the world, including a solo exhibition, “Radical Contradictions,” at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 2023. 

  • Franklin Sirmans, 2023
    an art critic, curator, writer and editor and director of the Perez Art Museum Miami. 

  • Mark Thomas Gibson, 2022
    program head of Painting at Tyler, co-curated the exhibition Black Pulp! with William Villalongo, an associate professor at the Cooper Union School of Art in New York. 

  • Nick Cave, 2019
    a multidisciplinary sculptor, dancer, performance artist and professor, has gained recognition for the wearable fabric sculptures from his Soundsuit series.

AED Presents

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Architecture and Environmental Design (AED) Presents is a combined series of architecture, landscape architecture and city planning lectures, featuring compelling firms and individuals practicing today.

Recent speakers
  • Chris Downey, 2025
    one of the few practicing blind architects in the world, who creates spaces that enhance the human experience with a focus on projects serving the blind, low-vision and broader disability communities.

  • Ximena Valle Diaz, 2024
    the founding principal of FIFTEEN Architecture + Design, a Philadelphia-based, design-focused architecture practice driven by the desire to affect positive change.

  • DIGSAU Architects, 2023
    an award-winning firm focused on mission-driven clients such as ReBuild Philadelphia and education, art, exploration and physical wellness non-profits.

  • Inga Saffron, 2023
    a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and the Philadelphia Inquirer’s architecture critic. 

Knowles Alumni Lecture

The Knowles Architecture Alumni Lecture was established in 2013 in honor of Brigitte Knowles, professor emerita of Tyler's Department of Architecture and Environmental Design. Initiated by alumni of the program, the lecture series welcomes visionary creatives from fields across the built environment to share innovative work. 

Recent speakers
  • Susan Jones, FAIA, 2025
    of atelierjones is the recent recipient of one of five Architectural Record 2024 Women in Architecture Design Leadership Awards and is a national leader in the mass timber industry.

  • Principal Shawn Evans and Senior Designer Garron Yepa, 2024
    of MASS Design Group focus on community-based design and cultural heritage preservation, especially in indigenous communities.

  • Olalekan Jeyifous, 2022
    an award-winning Nigerian-born visual artist trained in architecture, whose work considers the relationships between architecture, community and the environment. He has exhibited at the Studio Museum in Harlem, the Guggenheim in Bilbao Spain and the Museum of Modern Art. 

  • Sharon Johnston, 2021
    A design critic in Architecture, FAIA, in Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, is a partner of Johnston Marklee & Associates in Los Angeles. Her firm has been the recipient of more than 30 major awards and has worked on projects worldwide. 

Robert Z. Shuman Lecture

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The Robert Z. Shuman Lecture series is an annual lecture given by a visiting architect and is funded by MGA Partners Architects. 

Recent speakers
  • Masafumi Yukimoto (BSArch ’98), 2024
    an adjunct assistant professor at Temple University’s Kyoto Campus and founder of the Komy Studio in his hometown of Takasaki, Japan, focusing on process, materials and fabrication experimentation. 

  • Ray Brower (BSArch ’82), 2021
    a principal of Perkins Eastman, working in the firm’s healthcare practice. An expert in strategic facility planning, he has worked on health systems and hospitals around the world.

Queer Materials Lab Lecture

These lectures are presented by artists-in-residence within Tyler’s Queer Materials Lab, which provides a space, an archive, a workshop, a research site and an ever-evolving collection of materials through which queer, transgender, gender non-conforming and non-binary identifying people may examine and engage with the idea that materials can be "queer," either through their location, their history, their tactile qualities or their maker. 

Recent speakers
  • 2025 - Gerald Brown, 2025
    a multimedia artist based in Philadelphia who uses ceramic objects, found objects, sound and wall signage. She is an active member of the arts and ceramics community and co-founder of the Clay Siblings Project, which provides free ceramic workshops around the country. 

  • Abbey Muzza (MFA ’22, Fibers and Material Studies), 2024
    employs weaving and image making to explore narration, identity and abstraction. They are a Fulbright France Harriet-Hale Wooley Awardee and former Leroy Neiman Fellow at the Oxbow School of Art. 

  • Marcellus Armstrong, 2023
    is a Philadelphia artist, media programmer and educator interested in archives of Blackness, queerness and their relationship to materials. He is the director of programs and content at the Forman Arts Initiative.

Margo Margolis Visiting Artist Lecture

This initiative brings an emerging painter to Tyler's campus during the spring semester for public lectures, studio, visits and workshops. The series is named in honor of Painting Professor Emeritus Margo Margolis and is funded by an anonymous donor. 

Recent speakers
  • 2025 - Ronny Quevado, an Ecuadorian-born artist and New York resident, whose practice includes installation, drawings and prints through which he explores themes of identity, revisioning pre- and post-colonial symbols and reviving indigenous abstraction to create connections between the past and present. 

  • 2024 - Cynthia Daignault is painter, writer, curator and musician who lives in Brooklyn. The New Yorker has called her “a poet of a painter.” 

  • 2023 - Angela Dufresne is a painter, who uses space to create a cinema-like sense of motion, reimaging iconic film scenes with lesbian imagery to upend ideas about women and queerness. She is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and has exhibited throughout the United States. 

  • 2022 - Sarah Faux uses abstraction and color to explore traditional figure-drawing techniques, asking viewers to reconsider how they view the human body. She has in various locations in the U.S. and China and had her work reviewed in publications like Culture Magazine, Surface, Modern Painters and Hyperallergic, among others.

Jack Wolgin Visiting Artist

The Jack Wolgin Annual Visiting Artist and Lecturer is an endowed visiting artist program that brings pre-eminent artists and thinkers to campus to work with Tyler students and present a free public lecture each year.  

Recent speakers
  • 2025 – Sam Van Aken is a sculpture professor at Syracuse University and a contemporary artist  who crosses genres and disciplines to develop new perspectives on agriculture, botany, climatology, memory and technology’s impact. He is known for his Tree of 40 Fruit, a single tree that produces 40 types of stone fruit. 

  • 2023 – Hito Steyerl is a German filmmaker, moving image artist and cultural critic with solo exhibitions at Stedeljk Museum Amsterdam, Serpentine Galleries in London and the Venice Biennale, among other institutions. 

  • 2022 – Jennie C. Jones is a multidisciplinary artist whose work engages viewers visually, aurally and physically, often featuring architectural felt and acoustic panels, allowing people to explore embodied modes of perception. Other work features microsamples of Black avant-garde sonic movements. 

  • 2020 – Cecilia Vicuña is a poet, artist filmmaker and activist whose work addresses ecological destruction, human rights and cultural homogenization. Her multidimensional works begin as poems, an image that morphs into a film, a song, a sculpture or a collective performance. 

Jackson Lecture in Byzantine Art

Jackson Lecture Joseph R. Kopta

The Jackson Lecture in Byzantine Art, generously sponsored by Lynn Jackson and hosted by the Art History Department, is an annual event connecting the Tyler community to cutting-edge research on visual and material culture of the medieval Mediterranean.  

Recent speakers
  • 2025 – Dr. Benjamin Anderson (Cornell University) and Dr. Emily Neumeier (Tyler School of Art and Architecture, Temple University) spoke on "Hagia Sophia in the Long Nineteenth Century."  

  • 2023 – Dr. Andrea Achi (Metropolitan Museum of Art) gave a lecture entitled, “Byzantium and Africa (4th—15th centuries CE).”  

  • 2021 – Dr. Roland Betancourt (University of California, Irvine) spoke on “The Ethiopian Eunuch: Gender and Racialization in Byzantium.”  

  • 2018 – Dr. Michael W. Cothren (Swarthmore College) gave the talk, “Surveying Islamic and Gothic Art and Architecture: Reflections of a Textbook Author.”  

Art History Distinguished Alumni Lecture

The Art History Department's semi-annual Distinguished Alumni Lecture is offered to an alum of an Art History Department program, whose professional achievements bring luster to the mission and scope of the department. 

Recent speakets
  • 2018 – Laura L. Watts is professor emerita in art history at Daemen University in Amherst, New York, and has taught for more than 30 years on subjects including modernism, contemporary art, and visual literacy. Her book, Italian Painting in the Age of Unification (Routledge, 2021) won the Visual Arts Award from the American Association of Italian Studies.  

  • 2021 – Laura Igoe (PhD ’14, Art History) is the Gerry and Marguerite Lenfest Chief Curator at the Michener Art Museum in Jenkintown, Pennsylvania. She specializes in American art and material culture of the long 19th century. 

  • 2022 – Peter Lukehart (MA ’80, Art History) is the associate dean at the National Gallery of Art. His talk, “By Honor of by Merit: Women in the Accademia di San Luca, 1600-1700,” looked at the roles women played in the accademia by addressing contested ideals about participation and membership for academics of either gender. 

History Theory Talks

The History Theory Talks is an intimate series focusing on pressing issues in architectural history and theory as it relates to design, environment and politics.  

Laurie Wagman Visiting Artist Series

The Laurie Wagman Visiting Artist and Artist-in-Residence Series, presented by Tyler’s Glass program, reflects Tyler's emphasis on interdisciplinarity and research combined with practice. Artists bring their diverse backgrounds, experience and expertise to the studio, speaking to students, offering demonstrations and stimulating the exchange of new ideas.  

Recent speakers
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  • Nisha Bansil
    a glass artist working in New York and the Catskills where she creates commissioned and personal works that deconstruct and reassemble organic forms. She works at The Metropolitan Museum of Art as a conservation mount maker and preparator.  

  • Earth Aengel
    an international artist and curator that uses glass, metal and body wax to create from their own non-binary, gender-fluid trans experience, navigating fantastical queer ecology through the dysphoria of hetero-centric capitalism.  

  • Layo Bright
    a Nigerian-born sculptor whose works explore themes of migration, inheritance, legacy and identity through hybrid portraits, textiles and mixed media.  

  • Sebastian Duncan-Portuondo
    explores ideas of home, exile and belonging. In site-specific and client-based projects, he uses mosaics, stained glass and colored light to create vibrant environments that reinforce public identities. 

  • Jiyong Lee
    a Korean-born artist who uses a special glass technique called “cold working” to create his unusual, segmented sculptures inspired by the growth of cells. He is a professor of art and head of the glass program at Southern Illinois University.  

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Design and Illustration Speaker Series

A crowd of people sat, listening to a presentation.

The D&I Speaker Series introduces students to a wide range of designers, illustrators and makers, who are actively engaged with urgent questions in creative practice today. The series helps students see the many directions a design or illustration career can take, while also encouraging them to think critically about the values, histories and narratives shaping the field. Featuring leading voices across disciplines, each talk bridges classroom learning with real-world experience and creates space for connection and inspiration.  

Recent speakers
  • Andrea Pippens, 2025
    a visual storyteller who works across various forms of media for clients such as the Malala Fund, Instagram, Apple, Sephora, Five Below, national Geographic and the USPS national Kwanzaa stamp. She is the illustrator of the Young, Gifted and Black book series. 

  • Mary Kate McDevitt (BFA ’08, Graphic and Interactive Design, Illustration), 2025
    a Vermont-based illustrator and lettering artist, who has created hand-lettering and illustrations for Target, Chronicle Books, Smucker’s and Macy’s. She is the author of the Hand-Lettering Ledger, Illustration Workship and Every Day is Epic.

  • Chuck Styles, 2024
    a Philadelphia-based visual artist and creative director, has worked in partnerships with Vice President Kamala Harris, HBO, Marvel, the Chicago Bulls, the Chicago White Sox among many others. 

  • Steve Perry of Bailey Brand Consulting, 2024
    gave a talk entitled, “The Art of the Artificial: Agency Insights on the Use of AI,” sharing his firm’s approach to addressing AI creatively, how it impacts creative work and triggered lawsuits.