April 2, 2018
Stuart Weitzman School of Design
102 Meyerson Hall
210 South 34th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Associate Professor of Fine Arts (Emerging Design Practices), Orkan Telhan will be featured in Sensorial Urbanism, a forum facilitated by the Princeton Mellon Initiative in Architecture, Urbanism & the Humanities.
This conversation considers the intersections of microbes, design and the politics of dough. Some of the questions asked include: what are the biopolitics of biohacking and the microbiome? How does a renewed understanding of the relationships between food and political economy, mechanization, land politics redefine traditional narratives of design history? And how can we rethink spatial agency if we ascribe rights of our nonhuman compadres?
The intellectual ferment of this discussion will be staged around a table that brings together a large number of different types of bread. The vast "design variations" of this staple food attest not only to the different cultural settings that have shaped its various forms but also to the crucial roles of changing microbial systems and transforming geographies of grain.
The Spring 2018 Mellon Research Forum on the Urban Environment will focus on how architecture and cities are mediated, experienced, and represented through seemingly immaterial means. Questions include, how do theories of neurophysiology and urban form shape the way we map the inner and outer world? How do microbial landscapes determine our moods, food processes and even configurations of whole cities? And how do the ways that we smell the streets, represent the city in color, and hear urban life change the way we embody and redesign the city? Panelists will include architects, artists, scientists, designers and other scholars whose work seeks to unpack the aesthetic dimensions of immateriality in the city.
Organized by Evangelos Kotsioris (Princeton Architecture) and Phil Taylor ( Princeton Art & Archaeology)
Forum events held Monday, April 2, 2018, at 5:00pm at the Princeton School of Architecture South Gallery.