Call for submissions: Concrete Geometries
The ‘Concrete Geometries’ Research Cluster at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London is seeking submissions of work from the fields of art, architecture, sciences and humanities that explore the relationship between spatial form and social or aesthetic processes. The deadline for submissions is 12th April 2010.
http://www.concrete-geometries.net/
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Concrete Geometries:
Spatial Form in Social and Aesthetic Processes
Over
the past decade architecture has witnessed a revolution in design and
fabrication tools available to the discipline that has changed the way
we imagine space forever. Digital design methods for form finding and
implementing have produced an influential body of work, preoccupied
with the development of novel, complex and heterogeneous spatial form.
This form, simply referred to as ‘geometry’, is often evaluated through performance driven issues
emphasising the environmental and structural parameters that shape it. Yet, throughout history, the
emergence of new spatial forms and with them new architectural styles, bear significance beyond
advances in technology but in relation to what they offer to the human condition in terms of aesthetic
and social processes – issues currently under-represented by the discourse.
‘Concrete Geometries’ is a work-in-progress term derived from the notion of ‘concrete’ as ‘existing in
reality or in actual experience’ or ‘capable of being perceived by the senses’ and the abbreviation
‘geometries’ for the constructed environment. ‘Concrete Geometries’ like Concrete Science, Concrete
Music or Concrete Art is interested in the particular and immediate, concerned with actual use or practice.
‘Concrete Geometries’ is an attempt to expand this current debate.
Set up as a cross-disciplinary Research Cluster at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in
London,
‘Concrete Geometries’ investigates the intimate relationship between
spatial form and human processes - be they social or aesthetic - and
the variety of new material entities this relationship might
provoke.
By bringing together art, architecture, sciences and humanities, we
hope to connect fields of knowledge that are currently fragmented
through disciplinary boundaries.
The call is structured into two thematic fields
A: Geometry and Perception
B: Geometry and Social Processes
The cluster wishes to address such questions as:
How is spatial form socially and experientially relevant?
How does it choreograph human processes?
Can it stimulate emotional or behavioral responses or create particular aesthetic experiences?
Can social cultures be pattered through formal configurations of space?
How can the articulation of a space support acts of inhabitation, appropriation or other types of
direct engagement?
How do we perceive space visually and bodily?
What
social or aesthetic consequences does the formal articulation of space
have for our everyday lives and for the production of reality?
What kind of associations emerge between spatial form and social actors?
To
advance this research, we are seeking submissions that provide
practical or theoretical contribution. Submissions may include works of
art or design, architectural projects or case studies, urban studies,
research papers, scientific experiments and other forms of inquiry that address the objectives outlined.
10
Projects and 10 Texts will be selected by the curatorial board for
inclusion in an exhibition, symposium and publication at the
Architectural Association School of Architecture in 2010.
The
call is open to students, practitioners and researchers from the fields
of Architecture, Art, Design, Urban Design, Geography, Neuroscience,
Behavioral Psychology, Spatial Cognition, Social Science,
Ethnography, Anthropology and other disciplines concerned with such questions.
Deadline for submissions: 12th April 2010
Notification of participants: 3rd May 2010
Exhibition: 12th May - 29th May 2010
Public Symposium: October 2010
Curatorial board:
+ Alain Chiaradia, Urbanist, Director Design Economics Partnership
+ Prof. Dr. Alexa Färber, European Ethnologist, Humboldt University Berlin
+ Olaf Kneer, Director Concrete Geometries Research Cluster, The Architectural Association
+ Kieran Long, Author, Editor and Architecture Critic
+ Prof. Dr. R. Beau Lotto, Neuroscientist, Institute of Ophthalmology, University College London
+ Marianne Mueller, Director Concrete Geometries Research Cluster, The Architectural Association
+ Stefano Rabolli Pansera, Director Beyond Entropy Research Cluster, The Architectural Association
+ Michael Weinstock, Director Emergent Technologies, The Architectural Association
Submission formats:
All material to be submitted by email only. Submissions in English language only.
Please place the word “submission” in the subject line of your email.
Maximum email size is 15MB.
Text-based submissions:
+ Abstracts: maximum of 300 words including title / Manuscripts: maximum of 5000 words including title.
Text
should be submitted as an attachment in Microsoft Word .doc or .rtf
format and can be accompanied by relevant images in PDF or JPEG format
+
Short biography, including the author’s name, mail, e-mail address and
phone number and the thematic field you wish to contribute to.
Please note that any writing should be accessible to a general audience.
Image-based submissions:
+ Maximum of 10 images or drawings per project
+ drawings to be submitted PDF format, images as JPEGs.
Guide size A4 width at 300dpi resolution
+ Statement: maximum of 600 words including title describing the work as an attachment in Microsoft Word .doc or .rtf format
+
Short biography, including the author’s name, mail, e-mail address and
phone number and the thematic field you wish to contribute to.
All material should be emailed to:
For further information visit www.concrete-geometries.net
or email info@concrete-geometries.net
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