Hosted by ‘T’ Space / Steven Myron Holl Foundation
For the fourth year, the ‘T’ Space Summer Architecture Residency Program will host a virtual lecture series featuring practicing architects, scholars, and esteemed arts and design professionals. Register for these free public events, including the 2023 Residents’ final review with invited critics, via the links below. Past lectures and final review recordings can be viewed on our YouTube Channel.
Lecture: Erik Kiviat, ecologist and researcher—July 6 at 11am ET—register
Lecture: Torkwase Dyson, interdisciplinary artist—July 7 at 11am ET—register
Lecture: Diana Agrest, architect, writer, and educator—July 11 at 11am ET—register
Lecture: Leah Kelly, neuroscientist and educator—July 17 at 11am ET—register
Lecture: Ann Hamilton, visual artist—July 18 at 11am ET—register
Lecture: Hamed Khosravi, architect, writer, and educator—July 19 at 11am ET—register
Lecture: Marina Tabassum, architect and educator—July 20 at 11am ET—register
Roundtable: Sanford Kwinter, architectural theorist, writer, and educator, Michael Maltzan, architect, Julia van den Hout, architecture and design writer, editor, and curator, José Aragüez (moderator), architect, writer, and educator—July 24 at 11am ET—register
Final review: Light + Polychromy project presentations with invited critics—July 27 at 2pm ET—register
The 2023 ‘T’ Space summer programs are made possible with leading support provided by Elise Jaffe + Jeffrey Brown and Steve Pulimood. Support is provided by the J.M. Kaplan Fund, Leica Geosystems, the Al Held Foundation, the Pratt Family Fund, Archive Fine Art, Inc. and its affiliates Art Crating, Inc. & ACLA, LLC, Richard Armstrong, Arlene Shechet, Joan and Martin Camins, Stan Allen, Margo and Anthony Viscusi, Donna Moylan and Dr. Ben Chu. Additional support is provided by community members of ‘T’ Space. We are grateful to all of our contributors who help to make ‘T’ Space possible.
‘T’ Space is a project of the Steven Myron Holl Foundation (SMHF), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Founded in 2010, SMHF acts as an instrument of communication on urgent issues concerning architecture and art to stimulate critical and theoretical exchange of ideas in today’s cultural and technological conditions, and to educate and entice alternative thinking, broader discourse, and deeper research on current issues of art and architecture.