Hinges of correlation: Spatial devices of social coexistence
(2015)
author(s): Espen Lunde Nielsen
published in: Journal for Artistic Research
This project investigates the coexistence of and the correlation between the inhabitants within my apartment building, using artistic practices and my own lived experience. These everyday spaces form the primary interface between the individual and the larger social entity of the city. Consciously, or partly unknowingly, one interacts with others through spatial demarcations, using embedded spatial devices (such as squeaking floorboards, peepholes, mailboxes, etc.) that project life and the presence of other people through sound, light, or matter. Most of these devices are partly unintended, often serve other practical functions, and go unnoticed – but nevertheless hold a latent spatial potential for a recalibration of the social dimension of the city and an architecture to come. This exposition features a combination of photography, 3D laser scans, and creative writing, followed by a written account of the practice.
critical place-making [score]
(last edited: 2021)
author(s): christian scott
This exposition is in progress and its share status is: visible to all.
This research catalogue exposition, becomes an exploration of place/place-making via critical reflection and engagement with methods. A review of placemaking from a personal perspective and narrative, from a site-responsive practice that involves walking, sound, poetry.
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what are the practices, and normative assumptions that lead the practices and policies of placemaking in Montreal—among planners, city officials, urban studios, non-profits.
What is the role of play—as method—to make this processes more inclusive and diverse, in order to make more resilient and just cities.