Making Room is an anthology of texts on art, media and aesthetic practice in the context of squatting, occupation and urban-space activism. It includes pieces by activist researchers working between the academy and the movements they write about, as well as journalistic first-person narratives by squatters, original photography and interviews with artists, theorists and activists involved in struggles over urban space and creative production in the city. Topics include brief histories of squatting in the UK, Germany and the Netherlands; the creation of Temporary Autonomous Zones; Puerto Rican occupations in New York; the influence of the Situationists on French squatting; and activism and camping at Documentas 10, 11 and 13. Throughout, cul...
In this common urban landscape, developing through privatization, segregation, gentrification and co...
Participatory Art Installation: The place of, and spaces for, art therapy are radically shifting ...
Social Housing—Housing the Social: Art, Property and Spatial Justice examines ongoing transformation...
My doctoral research is a feminist, utopian exploration of three squats through field research and a...
The following article presents the Young Tenants, a project that gave young Berlin adults the opport...
This PHD project has been based on 100% studio practice; the original title for the research program...
In September 2011, Nikolaus Hirsch and Markus Miessen invited protagonists from the fields of archit...
Squatters, through the 'illegal' occupation of (urban) spaces, tempt to problematize the conventiona...
This research sets out to explore a distinct and original form of activist practice, which I name Dw...
The current crisis of neoliberalism has triggered a wave of social movements over the past years. Cr...
This piece aims to provide critical distance to the notion of the commons, increasingly used in acad...
Thesis (PhD) -- University of Melbourne, Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning, 2005.At th...
Artists in Residence explores a number of contemporary socially engaged art projects in cities acros...
To date, there has been no comprehensive analysis of the disperse research on the squatters’ movemen...
Proposing that space shapes publics and publics (re)shape their own spaces, this dissertation explor...
In this common urban landscape, developing through privatization, segregation, gentrification and co...
Participatory Art Installation: The place of, and spaces for, art therapy are radically shifting ...
Social Housing—Housing the Social: Art, Property and Spatial Justice examines ongoing transformation...
My doctoral research is a feminist, utopian exploration of three squats through field research and a...
The following article presents the Young Tenants, a project that gave young Berlin adults the opport...
This PHD project has been based on 100% studio practice; the original title for the research program...
In September 2011, Nikolaus Hirsch and Markus Miessen invited protagonists from the fields of archit...
Squatters, through the 'illegal' occupation of (urban) spaces, tempt to problematize the conventiona...
This research sets out to explore a distinct and original form of activist practice, which I name Dw...
The current crisis of neoliberalism has triggered a wave of social movements over the past years. Cr...
This piece aims to provide critical distance to the notion of the commons, increasingly used in acad...
Thesis (PhD) -- University of Melbourne, Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning, 2005.At th...
Artists in Residence explores a number of contemporary socially engaged art projects in cities acros...
To date, there has been no comprehensive analysis of the disperse research on the squatters’ movemen...
Proposing that space shapes publics and publics (re)shape their own spaces, this dissertation explor...
In this common urban landscape, developing through privatization, segregation, gentrification and co...
Participatory Art Installation: The place of, and spaces for, art therapy are radically shifting ...
Social Housing—Housing the Social: Art, Property and Spatial Justice examines ongoing transformation...