December 3, 2021, 6:30pm
1920 rue Baile
Montréal Québec H3H 2S6
Canada
A conversation with Giovanna Borasi, Lev Bratishenko, Greg Lindsay, Marisa Moran Jahn, Paty Rios, Rafi Segal, Anne-Marie St-Jean Aubre, and Natalicia Tracy. Presented by the CCA, NewCities, MIT Future Urban Collectives, and Musée d’art de Joliette.
Care is on our minds. We’re still in a pandemic, the severity of which is increasingly felt unevenly around the world. Yet even before the pandemic, industrialized countries faced growing economic inequality and precarity, spiraling housing costs, and aging populations—who will live longer than ever. The so-called care crisis demands major shifts in policy, housing, labour, and how we think about social isolation.
Presented in conjunction with A Section of Now: Social Norms and Rituals as Sites of Architectural Interventions, an exhibition and companion book that explore architecture’s relationships to ongoing social change, the event features architect Rafi Segal and artist/filmmaker Marisa Morán Jahn. Together, they reflect on their joint project, Carehaus, the United States’ first intergenerational, care-based co-housing project that will open in Baltimore in 2023. At the invitation of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Washington, Jahn and Segal identify key infrastructure-oriented policy recommendations to support the integration of housing and care. Both Carehaus and the strategy they refer to as “care-based co-housing” aim to support the needs of older adults living with disabilities, working families, and caregivers. But beyond transforming the empirical, material, and urban conditions of care, Jahn and Segal harness the power of symbols to shift how we value care. Their collaboration asks, “What would it look like to celebrate care on a civic and architectural level?”
Carehaus draws on CareForce, Jahn’s decade-long collaboration co-designing art, policy toolkits, and creative media with the National Domestic Workers Alliance. One key collaborator who has helped champion Carehaus is Natalicia Tracy. A Brazilian-born immigrant to the United States, Tracy is a former nanny and survivor of labour trafficking who has helped build a movement for domestic workers rights that has spread nationally. In Fall 2021, Tracy was elected to serve as a senior advisor on labour to the President Joe Biden and Vice-President Kamala Harris. Tracy’s leadership is honoured in Jahn’s artwork, which is on view in the exhibition Souriez! Les émotions au travail/Smile! Emotions at Work at Musée d’art de Joliette until January 9, 2022.
In addition to the presenters above, the event will be introduced by Giovanna Borasi, CCA Director and curator of A Section of Now, with remarks by Dr. Paty Rios, Executive Director of NewCities. Respondents include Lev Bratishenko, CCA Curator Public, and Anne-Marie St-Jean Aubre, Curator at Musée d’art de Joliette. Following the presentations, Greg Lindsay, Director of Applied Research, NewCities, will moderate a discussion with in-person as well as virtual audience members.
The conversation takes place in-person at the CCA and is streamed live on the CCA’s Youtube channel. To attend the in-person event, with the option to visit the exhibition A Section of Now, please register here.
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