'Street Training', a project developed by artist Lottie Child over the past seven years, is a participatory performance based on the idea that our surroundings have a profound effect on our thoughts, behaviour and ways of being - and that we can mobilise those aspects of our selves to have an effect on our environment. environment. The project encourages participants to better judge how to behave in public spaces, explore the limits of social and anti- social behaviour, and gain more knowledge of themselves and the local environment. Street Training has taken place in Linz, Sao Paulo, Berlin and London, most recently hosted by the South London Gallery. For some time the project has had its own life through open source web software and throu...
It could be argued that architecture has an inherent social responsibility to enrich the urban and s...
This book explores concerns for spatial justice as streets, squares, and neighbourhoods are continuo...
This paper addresses ways in which artists and cultural practitioners have recently b...
Peckham Street Training is a new collaboration between artist Lottie Child and net-art organisation ...
This paper contends that participatory action and public engagement are crucial elements in tactical...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis The control and shaping of pedestrian movement recurs as an aspect of securi...
In London street art is still formally perceived as an act of anti-social behaviour while it gains m...
Neighbourhood Planning in England aims to empower local communities by giving them greater local con...
Current urban planning often valorizes large scale interventions in the city, reducing the complexit...
This research investigates how street environments and culture are shaped by behaviour, design, and ...
This paper discusses learning from a project that set out to explore how the general public perceive...
Throughout the winter of 2015, young people from Westminster Academy, artist collective Febrik (Moha...
This paper will address spatial experience and issues of ownership, exchange and indeterminateness i...
It could be argued that architecture has an inherent social responsibility to enrich the urban and s...
For the “Street Art, the City and the Public: Changing the Urban Vision” session at International Vi...
It could be argued that architecture has an inherent social responsibility to enrich the urban and s...
This book explores concerns for spatial justice as streets, squares, and neighbourhoods are continuo...
This paper addresses ways in which artists and cultural practitioners have recently b...
Peckham Street Training is a new collaboration between artist Lottie Child and net-art organisation ...
This paper contends that participatory action and public engagement are crucial elements in tactical...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis The control and shaping of pedestrian movement recurs as an aspect of securi...
In London street art is still formally perceived as an act of anti-social behaviour while it gains m...
Neighbourhood Planning in England aims to empower local communities by giving them greater local con...
Current urban planning often valorizes large scale interventions in the city, reducing the complexit...
This research investigates how street environments and culture are shaped by behaviour, design, and ...
This paper discusses learning from a project that set out to explore how the general public perceive...
Throughout the winter of 2015, young people from Westminster Academy, artist collective Febrik (Moha...
This paper will address spatial experience and issues of ownership, exchange and indeterminateness i...
It could be argued that architecture has an inherent social responsibility to enrich the urban and s...
For the “Street Art, the City and the Public: Changing the Urban Vision” session at International Vi...
It could be argued that architecture has an inherent social responsibility to enrich the urban and s...
This book explores concerns for spatial justice as streets, squares, and neighbourhoods are continuo...
This paper addresses ways in which artists and cultural practitioners have recently b...