More recently, as a Visiting Professor, he taught at the University of Washington and Whitman College classes on Northern Renaissance, Brazilian visual culture, and theories of art from Neoclassicism to Postmodernism. In the Department of Oriental Studies at the University of Rome, he has also taught courses on the activity of European painters in India, China and Japan from the sixteenth- to the eighteenth-century. He has taught for twelve years in the Department of Art History at the University of Rome courses on Renaissance Art Literature and Visual Culture as well as classes on Methodologies of Art Criticism. Professor De Mambro Santos is an expert in Italian and European Renaissance and Mannerism. Post-Doctoral, Istituto Italiano di Scienze Umane – Palazzo Strozzi, Firenze (Italy)ĪRTH 116-Introduction to Renaissance and Early Modern Art ARTH 121-Art Historical Inquiry: What is Art About? ARTH 263-Baroque and Neoclassical Visual Culture ARTH 267-Renaissance Visual Culture ARTH 275-Art Literature and Criticism ARTH 362-Theories and Methodologies of Art History ARTH 496-Senior Seminar in Art History Research and Teaching.Ph.D., Università degli Studi di Bologna (Italy).A., M.A., Università di Roma “La Sapienza” (Italy) A decision on the application is expected by the beginning of December. “This ambitious endeavour encompasses not only the replacement of the traditional pitch but also the creation of an entire ecosystem designed to elevate the sports experience for all,” it states. The design and access report says the upgrade would make it ‘innovative and dynamic’. “It is presently laid out as solely as a football pitch and is therefore not ideally suited for other sports.” “The existing grass pitch slopes markedly and is unable to accommodate more than a few hours of use each week before the surface becomes worn and unplayable,” it states. It would also improve provision for Oldham Rugby League Football Club Foundation managed provision for junior boys and girls, the rugby league club’s women’s squad, and community rugby league clubs. The new 3G pitch will also help accommodate training for the Club’s 16 boy’s teams for nine to 16-year-olds, along with the new and improved pitches developed on the Clayton Playing Fields. The new changing areas at the 'Little Wembley' pitch (Image: Oldham Athletic Football Club) One of the existing recent floodlights has recently ‘fallen over’, the supporting documents say.Ī planning statement submitted with the application states: “The driver for the proposal is to provide a better quality, more durable facility to serve the needs of the range of community girls, boys, junior and youth teams run by and associated with OAFC and the Oldham Athletic Community Trust (OACT), its community recreation-based football activity and its use for other sports, principally rugby league.” The 3G surface will enable more ‘intense use’ of the pitch, and ‘outmoded’ floodlights will be replaced with ‘modern, more sensitively designed’ sports lighting, and a ball-catch fence. READ MORE: More of the latest Oldham news and stories READ MORE: Dangerous concrete identified at another Greater Manchester college The Oldham Athletic Football Club first team would not be a regular user of the Little Wembley pitch.īut it would provided a training and playing area for the nine mini, junior and youth girl’s teams of Oldham Athletic Girls and Women, the 12 mini, junior and youth teams run by partner community club – Santos FC, as well as local schools, Oldham College and students on the Latics club development programme. Under the plans lodged by The Latics, the pitch would be upgraded into a full size football and rugby league compliant 3G pitch.Īnd a new single storey building would also be constructed housing changing rooms, a classroom-office area, toilets and café and refreshment area. The grass pitch known as ‘Little Wembley’ at Oldham Athletic club, next to the main stadium, accessed off Hilbre Avenue, is used for football and rugby training. A grass pitch at Oldham’s Boundary Park stadium is to be replaced with a 3G multi-sports surface which will allow more youth and rugby teams to train.
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