The Beaux-Arts Atelier is a not for profit project of Richard Cameron & RWC Atelier, with the mission of advocating for beautiful design in the public realm.


The BAA grew out of the Institute of Classical Architecture and Art, of which Richard Cameron was a co-founder, and which supported its first three years of programming.

The students in those years (2011-2013) worked on projects for Federal Hall in lower Manhattan (the site of the inauguration of George Washington as the nation’s first president), Bowling Green, and St. Peter’s in Rome. Current projects include rebuilding Penn Station in the tradition of McKim, Mead & White—a focus for over 30 years—and work to complete the original vision of Charles McKim for the National Mall.

The education component of the BAA exists to revive the teaching of architecture as a fine art on the model of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. 

We invite you to visit the website of the newly lauched Beaux-Arts Atelier, and to peruse some of our archived materials below.


LECTURES & classes


THE EMERGENCE OF THE CLASSICAL SERIES (1-10)
MICHAEL DJORDJEVITCH

THE VIKING SERIES (1-4)
MICHAEL DJORDJEVITCH

APPROACHING THE RENAISSANCE SERIES (1-11)
MICHAEL DJORDJEVITCH


Michael Djordjevitch studied Architecture at the University of Toronto, receiving his B. Arch in 1981. He went on to work at the Royal Ontario Museum and also taught at the School of Architecture of the University of Toronto while taking courses in Art History. His principal teacher was Prof. Hans Luecke. In 1988, he was accepted into the history and theory program of the School of Architecture of Princeton University, receiving his Masters in 1991. The following year, he was received into the graduate program of the American School of Classical Studies in Athens, completing the course and becoming a Fellow of the School in 1993. Throughout the 90’s, he worked as one of the two architects for the Agora Excavations of the American School of Classical Studies in Athens. In 2001, be began teaching at the University of Notre Dame’s center in Rome. Following the completion of his term in 2003, he was invited to N.D.'s U.S. campus as a visiting critic. From 2011 to 2014 he taught Architectural Design, Theory, History, and the Orders at the Institute of Classical Architecture and Art's full time year long Architecture program, the Beaux-Art Atelier. In 2014-2015 Michael taught these same subjects at the Beaux Arts Academy in Utah and Rome.