James P. Warfield Papers, 1936-2018

Overview

Scope and Contents

Biographical Note

Subject Terms



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Collection Overview

Title: James P. Warfield Papers, 1936-2018Add to your cart.

ID: 12/2/39

Primary Creator: Warfield, James P. (1942-2019)

Extent: 9.3 cubic feet

Arrangement:

Series 1: Personal Files, 1936-2012

Series 1 contains Professor Warfield's curriculum vitae followed by personal files arranged chronologically. Materials include ephemera from Professor Warfield's student days at UIUC in the early 1960s; annual faculty accomplishment sheets (1976-2005); Fine and Applied Arts Outstanding Faculty Award materials (1994); Professor Warfield's portfolio for the ACSA Distinguished Professor Award (2001); and Professor Warfield's drawings (1975-2004) for his Art to Order card enterprise.

Series 2: Publications, 1966-2005

Series 2 contains publications authored and coauthored by Professor Warfield, arranged chronologically, including "La Arquitectura en Zincantan" (1966). Professor Warfield included some correspondence, notes, and photographs in his publication files.

Series 3: Subject Files, 1962-2018

Series 3 contains Professor Warfield's subject files arranged chronologically. This series contains materials relating to his professional work and research interest in vernacular architecture, including that of Mexico, southern China, the American Midwest, the Mediterranean, and other sites around the world. It is comprised of field notes and research files; grant proposals; correspondence; committee work; travel and study abroad materials; conference papers; exhibition materials; Ricker Reader (1973 and 1976-81) and Ricker Notes (1982-87); Woman's Day student architecture design challenge materials (1980-83); and primary research materials (e.g., building surveys in Chinese, 1985-87).

Series 3 also includes research notes, course materials, and correspondence from Professor Warfield's 1963 Columbia-Cornell-Harvard-Illinois Summer Field Studies Program with American cultural anthropologist Evon Z. Vogt (1918-2004). In addition, it contains materials related to Professor Warfield's longstanding relationship with Tongji University in Shanghai, China, including the Tongji University and UIUC Summer Program in Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Urban Planning, established and coordinated by Professor Warfield (1988, 1997, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010, and 2012).

Series 4: Teaching Materials, 1972-2012

Series 4 contains Professor Warfield's course materials arranged by course number. This series includes syllabi, handouts, lecture notes, and assignments for architecture courses taught at UIUC, including ARCH 199 - Architecture as Gateway to Culture (ca. 2012) and ARCH 572 - Traveler's Inn (2010).

Series 5: Architecture Projects, 1966-2006

Series 5 consists of Professor Warfield's building plans and project files, including Nuttall Middle School in Robinson, Illinois (1972); St. Malachy's School in Rantoul, Illinois (1989 and 2002-05); Arby's Restaurant in Decatur, Illinois (1977); and Friend's Meeting House in Urbana, Illinois (2002-04). Building plans and project files are arranged in alphabetical order by building name. This is followed by architecture-related subject files (ca. 1966-84) arranged in chronological order.

Date Acquired: 07/16/2019

Subjects: Architectural Design, Architecture Department, Vernacular Architecture

Scope and Contents of the Materials

James ("Jim") Perry Warfield (1942-2019), Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) Distinguished Professor, held positions as lecturer (1972-73), assistant professor (1973-76), associate professor (1976-86), professor (1986-2003), and professor emeritus (2003-19) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) School of Architecture. Professor Warfield was a specialist in vernacular architecture and studied sites around the world, including Yangtze River water towns in China, Mediterranean villages in Europe, round barns in the American Midwest, and Zinacantan dwellings in Mexico.

The James P. Warfield Papers contain drawings by Warfield; awards and honors; publications; professional and sabbatical research (e.g. local surveys of Chinese water towns in Chinese); grants and fellowships; materials relating to his exhibitions; conference papers; correspondence; committee work; architecture project folders and plans; and travel and study abroad materials, including the Tongji University and UIUC Summer Program, established and coordinated by Professor Warfield (1988, 1997, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010, and 2012). Also included is his collection of UIUC Architecture Department publications Ricker Reader (1973 and 1976-81) and Ricker Notes (1982-87). In addition, the collection contains Professor Warfield's research notes and final report from his field study of Zincantan vernacular architecture (1963), which was undertaken under the auspices of American cultural anthropologist Professor Evon Z. Vogt (1918-2004) and included in Vogt's publication Zinacantan: A Maya Community in the Highlands of Chiapas (1969).

As of March 2021, photographs and original born-digital files relating to Professor Warfield's scholarship, travels, teaching, and architectural practice can be accessed online through a website maintained by his family: https://www.jameswarfield.us/.

Series Arrangement: Series 1, Personal Files (1936-2012), Series 2, Publications (1966-2005), and Series 3, Subject Files (1962-2018), are arranged chronologically. Series 4, Teaching Materials (1972-2012), is arranged by course number. Series 5, Architecture Projects (1966-2006), is arranged alphabetically by project name, followed by project-related subject files in chronological order.

Biographical Note

James ("Jim") Perry Warfield (1942-2019), Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) Distinguished Professor, held positions as lecturer (1972-73); assistant professor (1973-76); associate professor (1976-86); professor (1986-2003); and professor emeritus (2003-19) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) School of Architecture. He specialized in vernacular architecture and studied sites around the world, including Yangtze water towns in China, Mediterranean villages in Europe, round barns in the American Midwest, and Zinacantan dwellings in Mexico.

Warfield was born on March 20, 1942, in Granite City, Illinois, to parents Vivian and Eldon Warfield. He earned a bachelor's degree in architectural engineering (1965) and a master's in architectural history (1972) from UIUC. He went on to teach at UIUC for forty-six years (1972-2018), including fifteen years after his 2003 retirement as professor emeritus. Warfield was appointed to the UIUC Honors Faculty in 1995, and he held a number of visiting positions, including as visiting critic at California Polytechnic State University's School of Architecture and Environmental Design (1977, 1980 and 1984); visiting tutor at Glasgow University's Mackintosh School of Architecture (2003 and 2005); and advisory professor at Tongji University's College of Architecture and Urban Planning (2012-19). He lectured widely and his academic publications include "The Vernacular as a Source of Linguistic Enrichment" (Language in Architecture, 1980); "The Yangtze Watertowns" (Landscape Design, 1990); and multiple contributions to the Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World (1997).

Travel was an important part of Warfield's research and teaching practice throughout his career. As an undergraduate in 1963, he accompanied Harvard professor and cultural anthropologist Evon Z. Vogt on a research trip to Chiapas, Mexico. Warfield's descriptions and drawings of the local vernacular architecture were cited in Vogt's book Zinacantan: A Maya Community in the Highlands of Chiapas (1969). In 1966, Warfield undertook US Peace Corps training at the University of Washington and was stationed in Bolivia in the late 1960s. During 1971 and 1972, he researched vernacular architecture in Western Europe as a Francis J. Plym Travelling Fellow. At UIUC, Warfield was known for bringing students on vernacular architectural tours to local sites in Illinois and Indiana and on study abroad programs to places such as Turkey, Scotland, and Greece. He established the UIUC Summer Program in Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Urban Planning at Tongji University in Shanghai, China, in 1988. Warfield received the American Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) Distinguished Professor Award for 1997-98.

Warfield was also a practicing architect, draughtsman/sketch artist, and photographer, who designed 65 built structures over the course of his career. His artwork was exhibited locally on the UIUC campus and around the world. He also published written accounts of his travels, including his 2009 memoir, Roads Less Traveled.

Warfield married Rochelle Wilson in 1964 and they adopted four children: Joseph Glennon, Mark Alan, Anna Martina (McQuillan), and Christina Lee (Fisher). He died on January 14, 2019.

Sources:

James Warfield website, accessed March 2021, https://www.jameswarfield.us/.

"James P. Warfield" (obituary), The News-Gazette, January 27, 2019, accessed April 16, 2020, https://www.news-gazette.com/obituaries/james-p-warfield/article_e3851618-370f-5621-bee9-2b428abac90b.html.

"The School of Architecture Mourns the Passing of Emeritus Professor James Warfield," January 29, 2019, accessed December 16, 2020, https://arch.illinois.edu/node/856.

ACSA Awards Archive, accessed December 16, 2020, https://www.acsa-arch.org/awards/awards-archive/#dp.

Subject/Index Terms

Architectural Design
Architecture Department
Vernacular Architecture

Administrative Information

Repository: University of Illinois Archives

PDF Box/Folder List

URL: https://files.archon.library.illinois.edu/uasfa/1202039.pdf

PDF finding aid for James P. Warfield Papers, 1936-2018 (12/2/39)


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