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Francesco Garutti

    Komuna fundamento
    The Things Around Us: 51N4E and Rural Urban Framework
    CP138: Gordon Matta-Clark selected by Yann Chateigné, Hila Peleg, Kitty Scott ENGL
    Our happy life
    • 2021

      "The architectural offices 51N4E and Rural Urban Framework operate at the seams of urbanization, with projects situated in transitional settlements in Ulaanbaatar, in the new vernacular of rural China, in the transforming centres of Western European cities and in Albania's shifting public spaces. Comparing their research and design processes, The Things Around Us questions the extents and certainties of architecture against backdrops of unstable planetary urbanization, insecure economies and ecologies, and indeterminate notions of citizenship."--Page 4 de la couverture

      The Things Around Us: 51N4E and Rural Urban Framework
    • 2020

      CP138: Gordon Matta-Clark selected by Yann Chateigné, Hila Peleg, Kitty Scott ENGL

      Ausst. Kat. Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montréal, 2020

      • 248pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      Scholars delve into the CCA's Matta-Clark archive, expanding the scope of the artist's endlessly generative oeuvre This book unpacks the comprehensive Gordon Matta-Clark collection at the Canadian Centre for Architecture (CP138) in Montreal, opening it up to provisional readings from various perspectives. Yann Chateigné reorganizes Matta-Clark's library into areas of inquiry, from alchemy to psychoanalysis, as a framework for gathering traces?--written and drawn?--of his thinking. Hila Peleg reassembles hours of discarded film footage, challenging the notion of documentation and returning to view the physical and social contexts?--the relational space?--of Matta-Clark's interventions. And from hundreds of travel photographs, Kitty Scott constructs a panorama of Matta-Clark's visual notes on the world around him?--a foil to his artworks.

      CP138: Gordon Matta-Clark selected by Yann Chateigné, Hila Peleg, Kitty Scott ENGL
    • 2019

      Our happy life

      • 328pagine
      • 12 ore di lettura

      The architectural implications of the intangible guidelines of happiness indexes, the new marketplace of emotions. and the relentless ideology of positivity.How do we design our cities when our most intimate experiences are incessantly tracked and our feelings become the base of new modes of production that prioritize the immaterial over the material? Since the 2008 financial crisis, lists of well-being indicators, happiness indexes, and quality-of-life rankings have gone viral. Concurrently, the emotional data presented in these surveys―including perceptions on questions such as loneliness, friendship, and intimate fears―feed an expanding political agenda of happiness and a new form of market whose most decisive asset is “affect.”Our Happy Life investigates the architectural implications of this trend by dissecting and questioning the political, economic, and emotional conditions that generate space today. Organized as a visual narrative with critical readings by Will Davies, Daniel Fujiwara, Simon Fujiwara, Ingo Niermann, Deane Simpson, and Mirko Zardini, the book reveals architecture, city, and landscape as contested surfaces, caught between the intangible guidelines of happiness indexes, the new marketplace of emotions, and the relentless ideology of positivity.

      Our happy life
    • 2012