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Al Manakh Gulf Continued Debate

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Wednesday 19 May, 2010, auditorium Netherlands Architecture Institute, Rotterdam. Open: 4:30 pm, start: 5 pm. Entrance fee: € 5, reduction fee € 3 (students, Friends of the NAi). Register here.

Speakers will include Ole Bouman, Hani Asfour, Rem Koolhaas and Reinier de Graaf, and Ronald Wall.

Following the release of Al Manakh Gulf Continued, a special issue of Volume Magazine, the NAi will organize a debate in collaboration with OMA, Archis/Volume and Pink Tank. Al Manakh Gulf Continued offers readers another view of urban development in the Gulf region. This time focusing on how the cities remain re-invent themselves and about their position related to the rest of the world.

Al Manakh Gulf Continued

Posted by Jeroen Beekmans on 17-05-2010
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Al Manakh 2 Launches in Abu Dhabi

Al Manakh Gulf ContinuedPublication

Thursday 13 May, 2010, Paris La Sorbonne University, Abu Dhabi. Start: 6 pm. For further details, please contact info@pinktank.ae.

Al Manakh 2

Posted by Timothy Moore on 10-05-2010
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New Magazines and Journals

AgendaPublication

The waning revenue of print-publishing in the arena of newspaper’s and magazine’s would suggest that the future looks grim for architectural journalism on paper, but the magazines and journals that have been launched over the last months would suggest otherwise. Why would one start a new publication when magazines are dying, and advertising revenues are down. Big advertising dependent boys like Domus are surely having a hard time right now. Although when one follows this argument: “When the markets are down and the economic indicators turn south, the architect begins to think, to write, to theorize. When the markets are up we “do” and don’t think much” which makes David Gissen wonder how to actually map this. Some of this seems to make sense, introducing this argument at least makes a good excuse to make a list of the periodicals that have captured my attention lately.

First up is Conditions, a Scandinavian quarterly and perhaps the best to prove the above theory, since it’s founded by three architects and not by historians, academics or full-time theorists.

1_conditions1coverphoto4

The driving idea behind beginning a new magazine for them as stated in their manifest:

In opposition to ignorance and superficiality this magazine is conceived in order to search for knowledge and predicaments of our continuously evolving society. It is organized in a fluctuating network of agents reflecting the present globalized state of a dynamic society, economics, politics and culture which are the motivators of architecture. Through a play of thoughts in an open ended forum, predefined “facts” will be unsecured and constantly reinvented. The forum will gather the architect, client, politician and the public, a communion of ideas creating conditions for evolution.

Clearly a reaction against the bubble before it bursted. Their first issue is themed: “A Strategy for Evolution” which already bolsters a contradiction between conscious planning and the unconscious processes unfolding in nature. The issue is not a making a single argument but presents a variety of voices, approaches and interpretations to the theme. Check out the table of contents of issue #1, and their call for submissions for their second issue “Interpretation & Copy”

While Conditions’ existence is dependent upon advertising the next series of publications are supported by institutions.

Bracket is an annual publication with their first issue on Farming coming up this Winter, so we’ll have to wait and see what will be delivered. I’m curious what kind of publication it will be, because it the brainchild of not the smallest names on the web: Archinect and InfraNet Lab. Bracket will cover:

(…) issues overlooked yet central to our cultural milieu that have evolved out of the new disciplinary territory at the intersection of architecture, landscape, urbanism and, now, the internet. It is no coincidence that the professional term architect can also now refer to information architects, and that the word community can also now refer to an online community. [bracket] is a publishing platform for ideas charting the complex overlap of the sphere of architecture and online social spheres.

P.E.A.R, Paper for Emerging Architectural Research is the most recent addition to architectural publishing, they had their launch in London roughly a month ago. I haven’t seen it yet, but they call themselves an architectural fanzine which sounds refreshing: “P.E.A.R. aims to re-establish the fanzine as a primary medium for the dissemination of architectural ideas, musings, research and works.”

pea-2

image003

New Geographies is a new journal published by Harvard University Press, while I haven’t held one in my hands yet, the first striking encounter was that their first issue had an identical title to one of Volume’s, namely “After Zero.” Besides titeling, New Geographies also seems to be in sync with Volume’s efforts to go beyond the disciplinary boundaries of architecture, and to seek out new terrains which are mostly bigger in scale (‘geographies’) for the application of architectural intelligence.

New Geographies journal aims to examine the emergence of the geographic —a new but for the most part latent paradigm in design today—to articulate it and bring it to bear effectively on the agency of design. After more than two decades of seeing architecture and urbanism as the spatial manifestation of the effects of globalization, it is time to consider the expanded agency of the designer. Designers are increasingly compelled to shape larger scales and contexts, to address questions related to infrastructural problems, urban and ecological systems, and cultural and regional issues. These questions—previously confined to the domains of engineering, ecology, or regional planning—now require articulation through design. Encouraging designers to reexamine their tools and develop strategies to link attributes previously understood to be either separate from each other or external to the design disciplines, those questions have also opened up a range of technical, formal, and social repertoires for architecture and urbanism. Although in the past decade different versions of landscape and infrastructural urbanism have emerged in response to similar challenges, this new condition we call “the geographic” points to more than a shift in scale. (more here … )

Finally there is the already a bit older Footprint, established at TU Delft’s DSD in Fall 2007 (thus a pre-crash publication) is a typical academic journal. What makes it special is that all content is available for free download (pdf), all you need is a free registration.

Of course this is just a list, that happens to end here. I’m curious to know if there are more recently initiated publications worthy of knowing about? Leave a comment!

Posted by Edwin Gardner on 20-07-2009
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Beyond Fiction

PublicationReviews

Drawings, photo-montages, renderings and models have always been powerful means to convey ideas, present scenarios and research the future. The publication Beyond Architecture provides us with a bulky collection of sometimes intelligent and mostly enchanting and simply stunning imagery of how artists are dealing in their work with architecture and the city.

A spread from 'Beyond Architecture'

A spread from 'Beyond Architecture'

For architects it is interesting to see ‘their’ subject approached by other disciplines. Many artists are using similar architectural techniques, but the difference lies in that for artists the drawing, model and photo-montage is the final product, where for the architect it is a means to an end i.e. to build. According to Lukas Feireiss the book: “charts novel ways of discovering and negotiating the potential of the urban in visual culture, thus also providing alternative and valid critical insights into understanding the city” Where architects in general produce their imagery as means to project the future, the artists in Beyond Architecture are investigating the potency and problematics of the present. The book presents the imagery without accompanying judgement or analysis. The absence of accompanying essays or a framing of the content is a missed opportunity and result in confusion. First of all confusion about the chosen title: Beyond Architecture. Beyond has become a buzzword, and especially when married to ‘architecture’ proven by the Venice biennale and architectural publications, and Volume feels personally addressed in this matter as well, with the ‘to beyond or not to be’ mantra on the cover. In the case of this publication from Gestalten publishers the relation between the title and its content remains unclear. Secondly, the missed opportunity concerns the theme of ‘fiction’ and ‘speculation’ is bubbling up in architecture today and not just in imagery but in architectural writing as well.

Out There, Architecture Beyond Building - 11th Venice Biennale curated by Aaron Betsky

2008: Out There, Architecture Beyond Building – 11th Venice Biennale curated by Aaron Betsky
Beyond, short stories on the post-contemporary edited by Pedro Gadanho

2009: Beyond, short stories on the post-contemporary edited by Pedro Gadanho (SUN)
Beyond Architecture, Imaginative Buildings and Fictional Cities edited by Lukas Feireiss and Robert Klanten

2009: Beyond Architecture, Imaginative Buildings and Fictional Cities edited by Lukas Feireiss and Robert Klanten (Gestalten)

One can read the operation of going beyond in many ways. One can go beyond the present (time), beyond the physical (space), beyond the disciplinary (professional) and one can go beyond many other area’s, but in general all the beyonds refer to the movement of crossing the boundaries of the familiar, from the known into the unknown. If we remain within the known, we’re not going beyond in any way. This is also where the notion of beyond has its connections to fiction, speculation and the experiment, but we have to realize that innocent fiction does not really exist. Within fiction there are intentions, agenda’s and signs of the time, either implicit (as coping mechanism/therapy) or explicit (as manifesto/utopia), so what are the intentions of all the beyonds that are circulating in architectural discourse? What are we looking for? What truths do we seek to find? Why is there a necessity to move beyond the familiar? This question is not addressed in anyway by the book, in this sense title and content seem to be completely disconnected. Volume’s slogan: ‘to beyond or not to be’ contains the existential drive associated with the flight forward, into the beyond. The subtext: legitimations of the architecture discipline shouldn’t be searched for in the known, but in engaging the unknown. In order to deal with the unknown we cannot merely trust on the disciplinary body of knowledge we already have, but we have to move beyond disciplinary boundaries to acquire other knowledge that hands us new instruments and tools for thinking and making in an rapidly changing world.

A spread from 'Beyond Architecture'

A spread from 'Beyond Architecture'

The merits of the book lies in that it illustrates that architectural imagination is not the sole privilege of architects and that we can find the amazing in the ordinary, in the existing, but this doesn’t necessarily mean that you’re going ‘beyond’ in any way. While the book correctly registers the emergence of fiction and speculation in architectural discourse, epitomized my blogs such as BLDG BLOG. These fictions are usually liberated from the utopian dimensions and activist manifesto’s formerly associated with photo-collages and grand urban vistas. Of course we have learnt our lessons concerning utopia, but is an attitude that is merely saturated with fascination enough to engage reality seriously?

A spread from 'Beyond Architecture'

A spread from 'Beyond Architecture'

Posted by Edwin Gardner on 16-06-2009
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Beyond Architecture

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Beyond Architecture
Imaginative Buildings and Fictional Cities

Beyond Architecture is the first publication of its kind to document the creative exploration of architecture and urban propositions in the contemporary arts. The projects collected in this book demonstrate how not only architects and designers, but also artists are taking architecture as a starting point for experimentation. They range from performance, installation art and crafted sculptures to architectural models, alternative ideas for living spaces and furniture, as well as illustration, painting, collage and photography. Through stunning photography, visuals and complementary texts, these visionary concepts reveal the hidden creative potential for architecture and urban environments in inventive ways.

Editors: R. Klanten, L. Feireiss

Release: February 2009
Price: € 44,00 / $ 65,00 / £ 40,00
Format: 24 x30 cm
Features: 208 pages, full colour, hardcover
ISBN: 978-3-89955-235-5

get Beyond Architecture

Posted by Edwin Gardner on 10-06-2009
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