Congratulations to Ann-Melody Akanji from Year 2, BA Architecture on her display at the Royal Academy

Ann-Melody Akanji from Year 2, BA Architecture took part in RA Young People’s Programme: We Built This City as part of ‘John Hejduk: London Masque’. The works produced as a part of this programme are currently on display at the Royal Academy of Arts, London.

In Ann-Melody’s own words the display is:

“a selection of drawings and an experimental model exploring the themes surrounding John Hejduk’s London Masque and architecture of the imagination as part of a group exhibition. Mark Hampson (Head of Material Processes at RA/Senior Fellow at the RCA) led the week of making and challenged our understanding of architecture as an extension of personal creativity and agency.”

Congratulations to Peter Barber on becoming a Royal Academician!

Many congratulations to Peter Barber, Reader in Architecture, MArch Design Studio 12 tutor, alumnus, and the UKs leading building and campaigning social housing architect who has been elected a Royal Academician.

For more information please go here.

Featured image: Peter Barber RA, Donnybrook Quarter, 2005 (via Royal Academy)

MArch DS15 graduate Michelle Barratt’s painting selected for this year’s Royal Academy Summer Exhibition

Huge congratulations to Michelle Barratt, a DS15 graduate from 2020 whose painting Room was selected to be featured in this year’s Royal Academy Summer Show. The painting was a part of Barratt’s MArch project Technical College, Barking.

Royal Academy Summer Exhibition 2021 features over 1, 000 works selected by the coordinator Yinka Shonibare and a panel of artists under the theme of ‘Reclaiming Magic’.

The exhibitions will be open from the 22nd of September 2021 to the 2nd of January 2022.

London Festival of Architecture Symposium: “Thresholds or barriers? Perspectives on boundaries and architecture” _ June 14, 13:00-19:30, Royal Academy

When: Friday, 14th of June, 13:00 – 19:30

Where:  The Benjamin West Lecture Theatre, Burlington Gardens, Royal Academy of Arts, Piccadilly

This year’s LFA symposium organised in collaboration with the Royal Academy offers a rich exploration of the role and application of boundaries in architecture and placemaking. This day long symposium brings together a rich mix of speakers to explore the architecture of both tangible and intangible boundaries. The symposium will conclude with a keynote in-conversation-with between Farshid Moussavi RA (Director of Farshid Moussavi Architecture and Professor in Practice of Architecture at Harvard Graduate School of Design) and Eyal Weizman (Director of Forensic Architecture and Professor of Spatial and Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths, University of London) discussing the boundaries that both have faced in their work, both past and present, drawing upon their experiences in practice. The conversation will also touch upon questions around the agency of architecture in bridging spatial and social boundaries, as the discussion dives into the notion of boundaries as something to explore and challenge.

For more information and full list of speakers please visit the RA website via the following link:
https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/event/thresholds-barriers-perspectives-boundaries-london-festival-architecture-symposium

LFA has kindly reserved 5 free tickets for the School of Architecture + Cities students and members of staff. The tickets will be distributed on “first come-first served” basis. Those who are interested should email Rosa Rogina rosa@londonfestivalofarchitecture.org

Otherwise, to book tickets please visit here.

Royal Academy: “Cities and Colonialism” – Yara Sharif (DS22 tutor) in conversation with Ana Naomi de Sousa, Aya Nassar and Léopold Lambert, Monday, December 3, 18:30-19:30

When: Monday, 3rd of December 2018, 6.30 — 7.30pm

Where: The Benjamin West Lecture Theatre, Burlington Gardens, Royal Academy of Arts, Piccadilly

How have the urban spaces of Lisbon, Cairo and Jerusalem been shaped by colonialism? Join our panel as we discuss the impact of colonialism on contemporary urban landscapes.

Architecture has been used politically, to shape identities, form behaviours and as a tool to channel power. However, architecture also has the potential to subvert politics and to reappropriate space.

In the second event in The Space of Colonialism series, we look at the political potential of architecture through the lens of colonialism and the city. With a focus on Lisbon, Cairo and Jerusalem, we will explore how post-colonial politics continue to transform the built environment and shape public space in these different geographical contexts.

Our panel will examine how a colonial state can demolish and construct parts of a city to assert control, organising cities into spaces in which citizens are permitted or excluded. Join us for a discussion on the city as a stage for anti-colonial struggles.

The Space of Colonialism series is guest curated by Léopold Lambert and The Funambulist, a bi-monthly magazine dedicated to the politics of space and bodies.

Speakers:

Ana Naomi de Sousa is a filmmaker and writer, whose work addresses history, spatial politics and identity. She has directed documentaries, including The Architecture of Violence; and Angola – Birth of a Movement, and was co-producer of the Rebel Architecture series for Al Jazeera English. She has collaborated with Forensic Architecture, most recently on the interactive documentary Saydnaya.

Aya Nassar is a PhD student at the University of Warwick, UK. She works on ordering urban space and the politics of space in Cairo. Her research looks particularly at ‘Fire’, ‘Mud’, ‘Cement’ and ‘Dust’ as key material/metaphoric elements of space that have acted on the city, to see how they can enrich our understanding of the politics of post-independence Middle East and the production of urban spaces through postcolonial statecraft.

Yara Sharif is an architect and holds a PhD from the University of Westminster. Her book Architecture of Resistance: Cultivating Moments of Possibility within the Palestinian/Israeli Conflict investigates the relationship between architecture, politics and power, and how these factors interplay in light of the Palestinian/Israeli conflict.

Léopold Lambert (chair) is a Paris-based architect and the editor-in-chief of The Funambulist.

For more information: https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/event/the-space-of-colonialism-cities-and-colonialism