Narrating urban acupuncture[s]

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Muller, B.
dc.contributor.editor Bakker, Karel A.
dc.contributor.other African Perspectives Conference Proceedings
dc.coverage.spatial Africa
dc.coverage.spatial Kisangani
dc.coverage.spatial Kumasi
dc.date.accessioned 2017-04-19T09:36:31Z
dc.date.available 2017-04-19T09:36:31Z
dc.date.created 2017
dc.date.issued 2010
dc.description.abstract Cities like Accra or Kinshasa, Kumasi or Kisangani, can – despite all large-scale transformations – still be characterized by the presence of small-scale appropriations of urban space. These ‘points’ / ’waypoints’ / ‘acupuncture points’ exist in time and space. They operate relationally and reactively, and induce radiating effects with minimal gestures. Thereby, they create networks of characteristic energy levels with catalytic effects on the urban fabric. Primarily of a commercial nature, they are located in the programmatic field between production and consumption. Artists and architects increasingly conceptualize and apply corresponding strategies, not for commercial purposes, but in order to generate new social and artistic space(s). They either leave behind the institutional framework for political, economic, and ideological reasons, or create a new framework where there has been no place for (contemporary) art and urban culture thus far. By means of (mostly small-scale) spatial, temporal, and programmatic interventions, urban space is activated and transformed. Urban actors – artists, audiences, and residents, respectively – are stimulated and empowered to experience and reflect their city differently. Negotiations on urban space and urban culture of this kind can have a lasting impact on both a discursive and physical level. Due to their contextual and net-like nature, they can even be read as tools for creating new platforms and hybrids of local and translocal activities. These approaches can also take dynamic phenomena into account, which is so relevant to capturing the essence of the African city – and which architecture, in the conventional sense, as well as the Western model of the art institution, can hardly accomplish. This presentation will not have the format of an academic paper; it is rather navigation through and narration of imagined, existing, and future urban acupuncture[s]. The focus will be on the analysis of the work of Studios Kabako / Faustin Linyekula in Kisangani, DR Congo. en_ZA
dc.description.sponsorship Department of Culture, Delegation of the Flemish Government in South Africa, Embassy of Belgium en_ZA
dc.description.uri https://africanperspectivesconference.wordpress.com/
dc.format.extent 10 pages en_ZA
dc.format.medium PDF en_ZA
dc.identifier.citation Muller, B 2010, 'Narrating urban acupuncture[s]', African Perspectives Conference Proceedings, 25-28 September 2009. en_ZA
dc.identifier.isbn 978-0-620-49356-7
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/59970
dc.language.iso en en_ZA
dc.publisher Department of Architecture, University of Pretoria en_ZA
dc.rights Department of Architecture, University of Pretoria © 2010 en_ZA
dc.subject Architecture en_ZA
dc.subject African city en_ZA
dc.subject Small scale architecture en_ZA
dc.subject Studios Kabako en_ZA
dc.subject Urban acupuncture en_ZA
dc.subject.lcsh Architecture--Africa
dc.title Narrating urban acupuncture[s] en_ZA
dc.type Conference paper en_ZA


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record