Open call for a mutinous workshop
August 15–21, 2018
1920 rue Baile
Montréal Québec H3H 2S6
Canada
To move beyond questions of survival in architectural publishing it is necessary to reconsider questions of purpose and models of practice. From an unknown point somewhere in a decades-long mess, this was never going to be easy, but changes in a habitat also produce blooms of new life, like microbes clustered insanely around volcanic vents.
In these challenging conditions, some are nostalgic for a possible past where architectural media was healthy enough to pursue ideas instead of business plans, and when architectural practice engaged with it seriously as a source of ideas. Others speculate about futures where editors don’t recycle the same ideas or the same people from a closed network, and when a fresh approach can find a public without the advantages of education or inheritance. And we prefer strategies for effective action immediately and propose to launch an expedition to look for them.
So we invite eight young architectural thinkers of any formal background to join us from August 15 to 21 at the CCA in Montreal for an intense week of research, interviews, discussion and analysis to better understand what paths editorial energies can take today and where alternative practice takes vigorous and inspiring forms. We will look for original case studies inside and outside architecture. Based on interviews with key contemporary protagonists operating with unusual models of editorial practice, those who are redefining “the reader,” developing tactics to affect architectural practice, accounting creatively, and especially expanding the traditional role of the publisher, the residency will produce an online manual for avoiding another magazine.
How to is a series of accelerated annual residencies that bring together small teams at CCA to produce a new tool—which can be physical, digital, or somewhere in between—and rapidly begin to address a specific opportunity or need. How to: not make an architecture magazine is directed by Lev Bratishenko, Curator, Public, CCA and architect and writer Douglas Murphy.
How to apply
To apply, please send an email to howto [at] cca.qc.ca with around 400 words of convincing motivation, and a CV. The workshop takes place August 15–21, 2018, and is free. Participants can request to have costs of attendance (travel, accommodations, food) reimbursed up to 500 CAD. The primary language of the week will be English but all are welcome. And, you definitely do not have to agree with everything in this call to be selected as a participant.
Application deadline is July 2, 2018. For further information, please visit: cca.qc.ca/howto
About the CCA
As an international research centre and museum that operates from the fundamental premise that architecture is a public concern, the Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA) investigates and explores the grey zones of contemporary culture, contemporary society, and contemporary architecture to critically expose its contradictions and define a new agenda for architectural practice and scholarship. Led today by Director Mirko Zardini with Chief Curator Giovanna Borasi, the CCA houses one of the most important architectural collections in the world. It produces research, exhibitions, publications, public programs, and digital initiatives as a means to explore the role of architecture in larger questions affecting society today.
The CCA was founded by Phyllis Lambert in 1979 as a new type of cultural institution, with the specific aim of increasing public awareness of the role of architecture in contemporary society and promoting research in the field. To learn more about the CCA and to hear from us, subscribe here.