Urban
opportunity
education
information
community
action
arium
expression
understanding
participation
discourse
ritual
arium
responsibility
utility
opinion
voice
retreat
arium
exposure
process
insight
engagement
energy
arium
improvement
intelligence
platform
critique
evaluation
arium
example
health
design
landscape
ideas
arium
Mar 27
01:00 PM - 05:30 PM
This event is: Public

About the event

This symposium is occasioned by the Tom Burrows exhibition at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery. Since the 1960s, Burrows’ work has reflected on the connections between the spaces of political and artistic/material practice. His home and sculptural works on the Maplewood Mudflats, his documentation of squatting communities in Africa, Asia and Europe, and his ongoing production of abstract works in resin and porcelain share an attention to the ways in which socially meaningful forms emerge out of engagement with, and intervention in, spatial and material processes. The symposium will take up some issues suggested by such attention in two panels.

PANEL 1: SPATIAL TRANSFORMATIONS

Presenters:
Lorna Fox O’Mahony, Professor of Law and Executive Dean of Humanities, University of Essex
Alison B. Hirsch, Assistant Professor, School of Architecture, University of Southern California

In her article “Looking for the Utopian,” Andrea Anderson claims that the aesthetic of Burrows’ interventions in the Maplewood Mudflats was “dependent on the movements of the community as well as of nature.” How might (legal, architectural, artistic) interventions into landscapes enable their emergence or persistence as socially meaningful spaces: homes, communities, sites for performance and belonging? How might such spaces be both brought into being and threatened by movement, in the form of migration, of choreography, of historical change?

PANEL 2: ART AND CONTESTED SPACE IN VANCOUVER

Presenters:
Elke Krasny, Professor, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
Alexander Vasudevan, Assistant Professor, School of Geography, University of Nottingham

How might Vancouver’s (often highly conflictual) spatial histories be activated by artistic interventions? How have communities – especially communities that have defined themselves, or been defined, as marginal – shaped the city’s public spaces? What possibilities do practices of contestation, such as Vancouver’s long history of squatting, open for thinking and representing a city for which sovereignty and land title are constantly at issue?

Spatial Politics and the City is made possible with assistance from the UBC Curatorial Lecture Series, supported by the Faculty of Arts and the Audain Endowment for Curatorial Studies in the Department of Art History, Visual Art and Theory.

For further information please contact: Jana Tyner at jana.tyner@ubc.ca,
tel: (604) 822-1389, or fax: (604) 822-6689

Location: Liu Institute for Global Issues

49.26771, -123.259656

Liu Institute for Global Issues

6476 NW Marine Drive
Vancouver, BC
Canada