On this slow news day, I’d like to add that it’s my fifth year anniversary @ArchReview 🎂 I’m so proud of what the mag is becoming and the bright stars it has pulled into its orbit, in the editorial team, past and present, and the constellation of extraordinary contributors 🪐
This piece was like an archaeological dig into London’s financialised economy ⛏️spoiler: good things (like the Design District) are never philanthropic - they are always economic sleights of hand 👋 https://t.co/IUDw14n6Vt
A strong message from this year’s judges that the future is unapologetically zero carbon and relies on radical vision from within the state 💪 Carles Oliver Barceló from @ibavi is the winner of the AR Emerging awards 2022!
Flash sale: there’s 30% off all orders on the AR online shop until tomorrow 📚 https://t.co/6dPYLniPXo buying or gifting an issue helps support the work of editors and contributors, and maintain publications in print 🙏🏼
Glad to finally lay my hands on this interesting collection of short essays and interventions on publicness. Thanks @eabeaumont & @ArchReview for the invitation to participate. If you’re interested in a discussion of public space as commons: https://t.co/3y70njebev
As an aside, here’s Justinien I and Constantine the Great presenting their models of the Hagia Sophia and Istanbul to the Virgin Mary in what appears to be a pretty high stakes crit from 944
The crit is an uneven ground from which student projects are constructed, for just a few minutes, before dissipating. For @ArchReview’s education issue, I imagined the crit as a site of both learning and destruction https://t.co/m8ptJDPNZO
Standard renderings of public space as commons by architects and urban designers are often profoundly misleading. In this piece for @ArchReview I reflect on how vulnerable communities produce actually existing public space commons and why designers should learn from them.
This article has been online for a month now, but I just got a print copy, and I think we all need to appreciate the genius of the designers and typesetters at The Architectural Review here.
Making a magazine is hard work, but also so energising! Feeling proud and very grateful to have found so many passionate, talented and adventurous people to collaborate with and learn from ✨
On this slow news day, I’d like to add that it’s my fifth year anniversary @ArchReview 🎂 I’m so proud of what the mag is becoming and the bright stars it has pulled into its orbit, in the editorial team, past and present, and the constellation of extraordinary contributors 🪐
So glad for this international recognition & the visibility it brings to the work we've been doing on ground in India.
Thanks @GautamBhan80 for giving such powerful words to our multifarious practice. And to everyone who has supported & believed in what we do. Lots more to do!
‘Industrialised medicine reinscribes basic tenets of property rights onto the body by both atomising the body as a social unit and determining a diameter beyond which the contents of one’s body no longer belongs to them’ 🫀brilliant from @ztsamudzi in March’s @ArchReview
I've 2 pieces out today!
For @ArchReview, I wrote about Donald Rodney's palm sized-sculpture "In the House of My Father," John Moore's lawsuit against UC Regents, and surveillance medicine as atomizing selfhood & inscribing private property onto the body
https://t.co/2oo8tOPS2Y
Check out this amazing podcast about Gordon Matta-Clark and come by and visit our exhibition at Mönchsberg: 📍Out of the Box: Gordon Matta-Clark, through March 6, 2022.
CCA x AR Bookshelf podcast: Gordon Matta-Clark https://t.co/yQtMhfb21Z
all discussed through the peripheral ephemera of Matta-Clark’s practice - the outtakes, the travel snaps, his collection of books. Huge thanks to guests @fgarutti, Yann, Kitty and Laura, and to @juli_albani 👏 a privilege to weave this fantastic work into a new medium!
‘Matta-Clark was saying the margin should have been the centre’ 📌 very special to dwell on the edges of things with @ccawire for @ArchReview’s new podcast https://t.co/L2DKgXDMGw
Matta-Clark found value where others saw none, an idea this podcast takes for a walk, from alchemy to art markets to property and the privatisation of the city https://t.co/TIYlcZUvo6