
Zoom Program – Sunday, January 11, 2026; 1-2:30 PM Pacific
Join SAH/SCC for a look at The Monument of Tomorrow. Creative Conservation and the Spanish War (Penn State University Press, 2025). Author Miguel Caballero explores how modernist architects during the Spanish War (1936-1939), also known as the Spanish Civil War, experimented with ways of protecting monuments, buildings, and art at a time when there were not yet international protocols for protection from the new form of war. They had to figure out how to protect historic buildings when destruction came from war planes above. World War II came immediately after, and a lot of what was learned in Spain was applied to the protection of historical buildings in the rest of Europe. Caballero’s research incorporates surviving monuments, architectural plans, propaganda posters, and literary works, including novels, plays, and poetry.
The book is one of five finalists for the Charles Rufus Morey Book Award given by the College Art Association (CAA). Winners will be announced February 2026.
Caballero holds a Ph.D. from Princeton University (NJ) and is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Northwestern University (Evanston, IL) with affiliations in Art History, Global Avant-Gardes and Modernisms, and Critical Theory. His research and curatorial work focus on early 20th-century avant-garde art, architecture, and literature. Caballero has curated two exhibitions related to his research, one in the Institut Valencià d’Art Modern (IVAM) in Valencià, Spain, and another in the Shchusev Museum of Architecture in Moscow, Russia.
Authors on Architecture: Caballero on Spanish Monuments—Sunday, January 11, 2026; 1-2:30 PM Pacific. $5. Pay via PayPal; or use link below to pay by check. Zoom link sent upon registration.

