Materialism continues the commitment of our first two issues on Property and Service to examine foundational yet overlooked concepts in architecture and landscape architecture. In our estimation, these disciplines are haunted by materialism. We see its specular presence invoked in design research’s emphasis on large-scale flows and sites of material production, in the renewed focus on ‘performance’ and the rehabilitation of functionalism, in the centrality of ‘material’ as an expressive layer of tectonics, and through the import of non-human actors into discussions about spatial design. Each of the above invokes matter as its base.
While matter and materials are at the center of both study and practice, designers rarely call themselves materialists. And, while discourses of materialism have tended to focus on humans, when ‘materials’ are discussed within architecture and landscape architecture practice, they typically refer to that which isn’t human. As such, materialism’s philosophical and political economic legacies, not least of which would include the inquiry into the nature and condition of freedom and autonomy, are silenced. This issue of Scapegoat analyses the cost of this forgetting as it conjures the ghosts of materialism.
Features:
AK Thompson: Matter’s Most Modern Configuration: Rivera, Picasso, and Benjamin’s Dialectical Image
Andrew Payne: What’s the Matter with Materialism?
Scapegoat Says: Coinage and Code: A Conversation w/ David Graeber
Curt Gambetta: Material Movements: Cement and the Globalization of Material Technologies
Kirsty Robertson: Erasing Environment: The Soldier of the Future and Utopian Textiles
Eric Cazdyn: The Semi-ology of Disaster: or, Toward a Non-Moralizing Materialism
Jane Bennett and Alex Livingston: Philosophy in the Wild: Listening to ‘Things’ in Baltimore
Una Chadhuri: Queering the Green Man, Reframing the Garden: Marina Zurkow’s Mesocosm (Northumberland UK)
Projects:
Marc Roig Blesa and Rogier Delfos: Werker Magazine
Société Réaliste: Commonscript
LAAC Architects, Stiefel Kramer Architecture: Landhausplatz
100 Landschaftarchitektur Thilo Folkerts and Rodney LaTourelle: Jardin de la Connaissance
Kika Thorne, Prinzessinnengarten, and b_books: a bar IST a garden IST a café IST a reading room
Owen Hatherley: Not Concrete
James Khamsi: Wrapped up in Tyvek
Agitating Architecture: A conversation with Catie Newell of Alibi Studio
Dan Handel, Justin Fowler: Counter-plots
Byron White and Jeff Powers: Canada’s Oil Sands: Scales and Perspectives
Reviews:
Francesco Gagliardi: No Order No1
James Macgillivray: Unter Kontrolle
Scott Sørli: Feminist Practices
PRD