Alan Powers (born 1955) is a British teacher, researcher and writer on twentieth-century architecture and design.
Powers was raised on the borders of Hampstead Heath and in Suffolk. His father Michael was an architect member of the Architects' Co-Partnership, UK. Powers trained as an art historian at the University of Cambridge, gaining an undergraduate degree and a PhD.
As a writer Powers has been prolific, writing reviews, magazine articles, obituaries of artists and architects and is author of more than twenty books. He has concentrated on 20th century British architecture and architectural conservation. He has also written books on the design of book jackets, shopfronts, book collectors, and the artist Eric Ravilious as well as monographs on Serge Chermayeff, and the British firms of Tayler and Green and of Aldington, Craig and Collinge. He is joint editor of the journal Twentieth Century Architecture, published by the Twentieth Century Society, and joint series editor of the series of monographs, "Twentieth Century Architects", a collaboration between RIBA, English Heritage and the Twentieth Century Society.
Powers has curated several exhibitions, including "Modern Britain 1929–39" (Design Museum, 1999), "Serge Chermayeff" (Kettle's Yard, 2001), "Eric Ravilious" (Imperial War Museum, 2003), "Mind into Matter" (De La Warr Pavilion, 2009), "Eros to the Ritz: 100 years of street architecture" (Royal Academy, 2012/3), "Ardizzone, a retrospective" (House of Illustration, 2016–17), and "Enid Marx" (House of Illustration, 2018).
Powers was Professor of Architecture and Cultural History at the University of Greenwich, London 1999–2012.[1] In 2011–12, Powers was awarded a Mid Career Fellowship by the British Academy to study "Figurative Architecture in the Time of Modernism", a study of non-modernist architecture in Britain. He currently teaches at the London campus of New York University and the London School of Architecture,[2] and has served as external examiner at several schools and universities. However, he usually writes as an independent scholar.
Powers is Chairman of Pollock's Toy Museum Trust, London. He was Chair of the Twentieth Century Society 2007–2012, and remains involved in the Society's campaigns for education and conservation.
In 1982, he was elected as a member of the Art Workers' Guild[3] and in 2020 was elected to Master.[4] In 2008 Powers was elected to an Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) in recognition of his standing as one of the pre-eminent experts in the history of 20th-century architecture.
Powers has published his own illustrations in magazines, especially The Spectator during the 1980s, and regularly exhibited watercolours and prints, mostly of architectural or topographical subjects. A selection are gathered in the 2018 book Alan Powers, The Art of an Art Historian.