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E. Ece Emanetoğlu presents Watermelons and Walls: Building Infrastructure in Sur

TOO FAST TOO SLOW

11 Architectural Moves

 

April 5–26, 2019

Opening reception: April 5, 6–8pm

 

40 Wooster Street

New York, NY 10013

+1 (646) 470-7552

 

Architecture works hard to keep up to speed. In environments that are quickly changing, on borders that are stealthily shifting, and among publics that are increasingly more than human, the discipline swings between representation and agency until it becomes hard to see. A quick look around suggests that its oscillation has either sped up beyond useful limits or ceased altogether. In other words, architecture is somehow both too fast and too slow.

 

To help architecture find its rhythm again, AWP* asks 11 designers: can architecture be made to move lithely with the present in an effort to remain an agile and relevant agent of social and cultural production? In the search for agency, the projects respond to this question by slipping between visual and material contexts, synced to their pace and situated in unusual places—in the middle, along the edge, over water, out there, in the shadows, through the air, amidst data, on unstable ground—in a critical display of architecture's versatility. In the search for representation, the work moves between image and material, circulating through time-consuming genres and formats to slow down—or speed up—architecture's incorporation into visual culture at large.

 

Following these themes, the exhibition is organized in two parts: Environments and Apparatuses. Environments bring exterior worlds into the gallery, simulating the effects and affects of sites and atmospheres. They are built up and take you places. Apparatuses sample, mediate, and image materials to demonstrate that the difference between architecture and environment is not a thin line, but a space held wide open for interaction. In a field with differences too uncoordinated to make a difference, AWP asks "when" rather than "how" in the search for shared criteria.

 

*AWP (Agency for Work and Play) is the platform through which the Princeton School of Architecture Post-Professional M.Arch class explores issues relating to architecture through an interdisciplinary lens.

 

 

 

TOO FAST TOO SLOW

 

Indefinite Boundaries: Projections of Immaterial Space

Kenny Chao

Advisors: Stan Allen + Cameron Wu

 

Watermelons and Walls: Building Infrastructure in Sur

E. Ece Emanetoğlu

Advisor: Paul Lewis

 

THERE IS NO MIDDLE

Deborah Garcia

Advisors: Michael Meredith + Stan Allen

 

Uncertain Grounds: Rethinking Settlement in the Anthropocene

José Ibarra

Advisors: Hayley Eber + Spyros Papapetros

 

this tower was reconstructed on the Green Line

Rami Kanafani

Advisor: Mónica Ponce de León

 

Turning the Last Page: Knowledge Exchange and Political Crossings in Hong Kong 2046

Jessica Leung

Advisor: Mario Gandelsonas

 

Visual Guide to A House, Museum

Erik Tsurumaki

Advisor: Paul Lewis

 

Climate as a Medium

Zherui Wang

Advisor: Elizabeth Diller

 

Balancing Act / Social Piling

Ece Yetim

Advisor: Hayley Eber

 

A Floating Urbanism

Sophia Zhu

Advisor: Stan Allen

 

Clip-on Urbanism: A Maker’s Survival Guide to Shenzhen

Zhonghui Zhu

Advisor: Mario Gandelsonas

 

Princeton School of Architecture 2019 Post-Professional Master of Architecture Thesis is coordinated by Professor Jesse Reiser.

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Uploaded on April 15, 2019
Taken on April 5, 2019