Fem_Arc Studio

TYPE: Workshop

YEAR: 2020 - 2021

LOCATION: Berlin

Illustration of a floor plan of an office, and the route showing how the space is used at different parts of the day. Title ‘fem_arcSTUDIO’ in the top left corner.

In November 2020, Liz Crow, Zoe Partington, Noemi Lakmaier and Jos Boys collaborated with Fem_Arc in the creation of a week-long design workshop for their studio at Universität der Künste Berlin. From the start of the project, the aim was to explore the disruptive effects of the pandemic on everyday lives and spaces, as a means of engaging with difference; and to imagine spaces that could liberate and value diverse bodyminds, rather than merely going back to perpetuating a world designed for normative bodies and relationships. 

Through an online workshop, and a short design project, the aim was to learn critically and creatively from the experiences of lockdown. Everyday 'normal' lives have been shifted out of place by Covid-19; as what is conventionally public and private, inside and outside, visible and invisible, included and excluded has been re-mixed across assumed locations, spaces and encounters. This has produced an intense awareness, requiring the paying of new kinds of attentiveness to the simplest tasks, noticing dis/ordinary encounters with others, and with local built and natural spaces, and explicitly taking a position over issues of care an interconnectedness.  

To kick off the workshop, students made personal work about their diverse responses to the unpredictability and uncertainty of going to the shops or the park, or finding a place to have online meetings. This requires creative skills in navigation and negotiation - an expertise many disabled people would say they already have just by living in that 'normal' world. They then worked individually or in small groups on a creative provocation, developed from their initial studies. These were presented as audio files, as well as photos and short video clips. 

See more about this workshop using this link here.

* Link includes access to recorded talks and the resulting student work.

Gallery

Previous
Previous

Fran Wen (2020)

Next
Next

Matera, City of Culture