Soapbox is a weekly series delivering a curated set of lectures, talks and symposia concerning contemporary themes but explored through the archives of lectures past and present. With the plethora of lectures, talks, symposia and panels occurring world wide on a daily basis, how can we begin to keep up and if not, find them once they are gone? Soapbox looks to assemble a selection of recent, archived and outlier lectures surrounding a given theme. Soapbox looks to curate this never-ending library of ideas into an engaging and diverse list of thoughts and provocations. Soapbox is just that, a collection aimed at discovering the occasional needle in a haystack.
1. Hip Hop Architecture: The Post Occupancy Report of Modernism | Mike Ford | TEDxMadison
2. Designing a Just City - Hip Hop Architecture, a Keynote Conversation
3. The Architecture of Hip Hop | Craig Wilkins | TEDxDetroit
4. Why I'm an architect that designs for social impact, not buildings | Liz Ogbu | TEDxMidAtlantic
5. Virgil Abloh’s Lecture at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design
6. Hip Hop Architecture
Anthony Morey is a Los Angeles based designer, curator, educator, and lecturer of experimental methods of art, design and architectural biases. Morey concentrates in the formulation and fostering of new modes of disciplinary engagement, public dissemination, and cultural cultivation. Morey is the ...
3 Comments
I do not know what the meaning of the word "Architect" means anymore. every industry and pr rep has adopted the word. I guess hip-hop owns it now too. do a search, even better, do a job search and type in the word architect. it apparently has to do with IT not designing buildings. Just like the youth gender identity crisis: it's confusing and diluted with no clear parameters to help create singular identity and design direction.
Do you really spend time worried about this?
The world is fuzzy. I like it that way.
Block this user
Are you sure you want to block this user and hide all related comments throughout the site?
Archinect
This is your first comment on Archinect. Your comment will be visible once approved.