news
June 2022
Publication
To wrap up the project, we wrote an article: 12/13/18/19: The Making of Blind Spot. It is part now of the edited book from the conference Remote Practices. Edited by Lilian Chee (NUS) and Matthew Mindrup (School of Architecture Design and Planning of the University of Sydney)
8 december 2020
Filming space of lockdown
The Fall series of BLIND SPOT - Spaces of Lockdown will end with a round table conversation with artists and filmmakers - Nina de Vroome, Rafal Morusiewicz and Guilherme Maggessi, Henrietta Williams and Merijn Royaards, Professor Penelope Haralambidou (the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL) and Professor Lilian Chee (National University of Singapore)
Call for Reponses
Blind Spot - Spring 2021
If you are enjoying the Fall 2020 session of Blind Spot Space of Lockdown, Stay in touch for our new call - out soon!
film
12/13/18/19
Last week we introduced our new project Blind Spot - Spaces of Lockdown at the symposium Remote Practices Architecture in Proximity, organized by the Department of Architecture of the National University of Singapore and the School of Architecture Design and Planning of the University of Sydney.
Presentation 08.10.2020
Remote Practices Architecture in Proximity
We will be presenting the project Blind Spot - Spaces of Lockdown at the conference Remote Practices Architecture in Proximity. The symposium is organized by Department of Architecture, School of Design and Environment, National University of Singapore & School of Architecture Design and Planning, The University of Sydney.
call for responses
Blind Sport - Spaces of Lockdown
About the seen but not yet felt. The present initiative stems from the desire to come together again, see what our solitude holds in common, and how this encounter could be the beginning of a new conversation.
issue 01
Notes from the editors
W A T E R a patient expanse, an unexpected surge. It doesn’t stay long, until it has a reason to stick around or flow some more…
call for papers - WATER
How does film mediate water, and in what ways does this ‘secret element’ affect the filmic flow of sound and image? Bodies of water —from the oceanic to the man-made — shape landscapes and the built environment, affecting our orientation within them. Film has the capacity to outline that which seems to have no contours or silhouettes, and this issue of film place collective editions seeks to explore the relationship between water and film, as it intersects with questions of space and the environment.