Big City Forum in residence at Armory
What I talk about when I talk about community: Reframing practice in the public sphere
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
7–9pm
Armory Center for the Arts, 145 North Raymond Ave, Pasadena
This panel discussion brings together four practitioners from the
fields of art and architecture to discuss the complexity of social
engagement. Speakers will investigate the agency of art and design when
shaping spaces for a public. What I Talk About When I Talk About Community asks for more refined understanding of community, in order to reveal the politics, pitfalls, and pleasures of these practices.
Featuring:
Victor Jones,
principal of Los Angeles-based Fievre Jones, cultural activist, and
writer, whose research lies at the intersection of architecture, urban
design, and community building within cities. Recent design projects
include the Platform for Watts House Project (2011) and a skate park for
New Orleans' City Park (2009). His design work has been supported by
numerous grants, including the Graham Foundation, Artplaces, and the
Nathan Cummings Foundation. He is currently Assistant Professor of
Architecture at the University of Southern California.
Jennifer Su and Laura Noguera,
co-owners of Thank You for Coming, a communal restaurant/residency
program that “aims to give people with varying experiences and
backgrounds an opportunity to explore and execute ideas around sharing
food. Residents are invited to utilize our restaurant space as a
platform for public engagement and creative experimentation.”
James Michael Tate
received his Masters of Architecture from Yale University and Bachelors
of Environmental Design from Texas A&M University. He has
previously worked for MOS, Peter Eisenman, and Samuel Mockbee. Tate
co-taught a studio with Michael Maltzan at Rice University this past
spring; the experience motivated him to move to Los Angeles. Tate
designs, makes, writes, and participates in a variety of architectural
affairs. His current affinities include narratives, oppositional
dialectic blends, seeking refuge in unsettled territories between art
and architecture, the latent potentialities of history in contemporary
experiments, and the Korean taco food-truck.
Moderator:
Mimi Zeiger, editor and publisher of loud paper,
a 'zine and blog dedicated to increasing the volume of architectural
discourse. As writer and critic she covers art, architecture, urbanism,
and design for the New York Times, Domus, Dwell, and Architect, where she is a contributing editor. Zeiger is author of New Museums: Contemporary Museum Architecture Around the World; Tiny Houses; and Micro Green: Tiny Houses in Nature.
Big City Forum returns for a second annual residency at Armory Center for the Arts with a new series, entitled Transforming the Social,
which features six panel conversations that recognize and celebrate the
ability to create transformative moments within the scope of the built
environment and social space. Armory is pleased to have been hosting Big
City Forum in residence since 2012, which saw the launch of Mapping LA,
a series of four events exploring current creative practices that
inform the landscape and geography of Los Angeles. Through its
residency at Armory, Big City Forum is deepening its ongoing
investigation of social and civic space within the built environment of
the Los Angeles region. The residency builds upon a shared interest
between the Armory and Big City Forum in advancing public discourse on
the notion of social and civic engagement.
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