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A Conversation Between Architects Silva Ajemian And Aslihan Demirtas

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  • A Conversation Between Architects Silva Ajemian And Aslihan Demirtas

    A CONVERSATION BETWEEN ARCHITECTS SILVA AJEMIAN AND ASLIHAN DEMIRTAS,

    Absolutearts.com
    http://www.absoluteart s.com/artsnews/2010/05/05/publish/2348910118.html
    May 5 2010

    "Remains Connected"

    moderated by experimental architect and theorist Lebbeus Woods.

    Tuesday, May 11, 6:30 PM

    Pratt Manhattan, room 213 adjacent to the gallery

    144 West 14th St.

    New York, NY 10011

    212 647-7778 www.pratt.edu/exhibitions

    Free and open to the public

    This event is the second in a series of public discussions organized
    in conjunction with the "Blind Dates" curatorial project which opens
    at Pratt Manhattan Gallery in November 2010.

    About the Participants:

    Lebbeus Woods (b. 1940 in Lansing, Michigan) has concentrated
    on theory and experimental work since 1976. He is the co-Founder
    and Scientific Director of RIEA.ch, an institute devoted to the
    advancement of experimental architectural thought and practice. His
    most recent books are Radical Reconstruction (Princeton Architectural
    Press, 1997), The Storm and The Fall (Princeton Architectural Press,
    2003), and System Wien (Hatje Cantz/MAK, 2005). He is a recipient
    of the Chrysler Award for Innovation in Design and his works are in
    public collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York;
    the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum; the San Francisco Museum of
    Modern Art; the Cartier Foundation for Contemporary Art, Paris; the
    Austrian Museum of Applied Art, Vienna; the Carnegie Museum of Art,
    and the Getty Research Institute for the Arts and Humanities. Lebbeus
    Woods holds the position that architecture and war are in a certain
    sense identical, and that architecture is inherently political. An
    explicitly political goal of his highly conceptual work is the
    instantiation of the conflict between past and future in shared
    spaces. One of the most striking examples of his work is his project
    on a possible future for the Korean De-militarized Zone. Conflict
    and crisis are the forces within which the architectural forms of
    Lebbeus Woods take shape. Lines and directions are traced out of a
    sheer will to create a new space from the broken forms that are left,
    for instance in the wake of the war in Bosnia. www.lebbeuswoods.net

    Silva Ajemian grew up in Lebanon and moved to New York City in 1996.

    She holds a Master of Architecture degree and a Bachelor of
    Environmental Design Studies from Dalhousie University, Canada. She has
    been practicing Architecture since 1996 and has worked with Michael
    Sorkin and Vito Acconci. Recipient of the Rosetti Scholarship she
    documented the architecture of public markets in London, and with
    a CIDA travel grant she worked on low cost and sustainable housing
    projects for local communities in Tumaco, Colombia, published by
    Tuns Press. With her partner, Jorge Prado, she founded todo design in
    2003, a multi disciplinary practice encompassing urban, architecture,
    furniture and graphic design www.tododesign.com. Their approach is
    simple: treat each project as a provocation. The resulting expression
    in material, spatial and philosophical terms aims always for the same
    result, to raise awareness of our surroundings, our interactions with
    it and its impact on us. Silva has taught architectural design at Kamla
    Raheja Vidyanidhi Institute in Mumbai, and at Dalhousie Univerisity
    in Halifax.Currently she is an adjunct professor at the New Jersey
    Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and a visiting critic
    at Pratt Institute, NYIT and Cornell University.

    Aslihan Demirtas holds a Master of Science in Architectural
    Studies from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Bachelor of
    Architecture from the Middle East Technical University, Turkey. She is
    a practicing architect since 1991 and has worked with I.M. Pei, as his
    lead designer for international projects such as the Museum of Islamic
    Art, Doha,Qatar. In 2007, she established her own practice in New
    York where she is working on local and international projects and has
    collaborated with IM Pei on a chapel project in Kyoto, Japan. As part
    of her research, Aslihan Demirtas has been studying architecture as a
    wider interdisciplinary understanding of building activity inclusive
    of landscape and infrastructure and ecology. Her research has been
    generously supported by the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture.

    She has published articles in journals and chapters in books by
    MIT Press, Bauhaus and Harvard Press. Aslihan Demirtas is currently
    teaching design studio at Parsons School of Constructed Environments
    where she runs collaborative design projects with non-profit community
    groups. She has taught at Fordham University and MIT and has lectured
    at GSD at Harvard University and Bauhaus University in Weimar, Germany.

    Abstract

    At Ani, a bridge once connected the two banks of the Akhurian/Arpacay
    River. Today, of the now collapsed bridge, only the abutments on the
    two sides of the river remain, one in Turkey and the other in Armenia.

    As the remains of the bridge exist in two territories, Ani exists in
    two worlds, at once an important historic Armenian capital and an
    archeological ruin in a military zone in Turkey at the border with
    Armenia. Two architects are seduced by the collapsed bridge. Their
    project consists of a series of visual, graphic and tectonic
    'conversations' set up to investigate and interpret the multiple
    existences of Ani, the river and its disconnected bridge. They start
    by revealing the lenticular existence of the place and develop by
    interweaving the resulting existences, references and projections. New
    York based architects/designers Silva Ajemian and Aslihan Demirtas
    work to reveal two stories, two forecasts. As they bridge from their
    respective approaches, they seek to interleave insights and articulate
    nested architectural and geographic narratives to create illusions
    of simultaneity and unfold possible realities.

    About Blind Dates:

    As an interdisciplinary and cross cultural curatorial undertaking
    Blind Dates tackles with the traces or 'what remains' of the peoples,
    places and cultures that once constituted the diverse geography of
    the Ottoman Empire (1299-1922). Taking the breakup of the latter's
    complex history as a point of departure, and considering the subsequent
    formation of nation states throughout the region, the exhibition is
    an attempt to explore the effects of various forms of ruptures, gaps,
    erasures as well as (re)constructions, including continuities within
    discontinuities, through the prism of contemporary lived-experiences.

    Blind Dates has been working with artists, intellectuals and cultural
    producers interested in deconstructing master narratives to give agency
    a chance, or to extend new 'ways of seeing' contentious historical
    accounts/events and their lingering effects on life today.

    By pairing artists and non artists for a series of private/informal
    discussions project co-curators, Defne Ayas and Neery Melkonian,
    have been 'matchmaking' to mediate encounters between distanced
    neighbors and their estranged cultures. The exhibition will be based
    on collaborations stemming from these critical encounters.
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