Showing posts with label academics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label academics. Show all posts

Monday, August 25, 2025

Architectural Practice In India: A Millennial Archaeology

monsoon 2025-26

At the threshold of the first quarter of the millennium, which also marks a generation since India’s economic liberalization, architectural practice in India is ripe for a critical re-evaluation. In this period, the country has gradually, yet starkly shifted from a socialist framework to a neoliberal state, where developmental politics has ramified architectural production into new directions and logics. Existing scholarship on the built environment in India has often focused narrowly on the aesthetics of form, the evolving identity of the architect, or the reception of modernism as inherited from the West. Architectural discourse has largely taken one of two paths: either documenting work deemed academically significant, or framing emerging practices in terms of identity—often measured against binaries such as modern versus indigenous/vernacular. Such approaches tend to posit the architect as a servant of academic canons or fixed ideals.

Architectural practice on the ground, as it appears now, is far more complex - one that exhibits reorientation of spatial ideals and values to reflect a rapidly evolving society increasingly shaped by media, consumerism, and aspirations of globalisation. Once trained architects step into the field, the idealism of modernism is quickly refracted through geopolitical urgencies and the pragmatic demands of practice. What is often overlooked is the inherent political exigency that compels practice to adapt—making the operations and expressions of architecture more malleable and responsive to emerging needs of the market - in its widest extensions. In such contexts, architects evolve new formats, languages, agencies, and strategies to negotiate their professional knowledge to remain relevant within the real-world demands of building reinterpreting spatial briefs through the vocabularies of capital, conservation, environment, real estate, and more.

‘Architectural Practice in India: A Millennial Archaeology’ seeks to examine how architectural practice in India has developed over the last three decades within the framework of the millennial shift in its political economy. What forces—of power, ambition, and institutional pressure—have shaped architectural production during this period and how does it reorganise the delivery of the built environment? What aspects of practice gain currency in the emerging market and how does the professional architect find reconciliations and directions in addressing these. In excavating these variegated forms of practice that shape the unevenness of our built landscape today, these discussions aim to explore tendencies such as the rise of managerial approach, the renewed focus on environmental and heritage concerns, the emergence of artisanal and communitarian agendas, the urgency of urbanistic thinking, response to media and the integration of computational and digital thinking that come to constitute distinct, yet composite strands of spatial practice today.

The new cycle of SEA City Conversations is conceived as a year-long series of panel discussions featuring architects and spatial commentators, whose own practices have decisively responded to the millennial shifts in the region, by means of slipping, fitting or pushing the envelopes of conventional formats of practice. Methodologically, the series will draw upon the professional biographies of practitioners from across the city whose trajectories have remained representatively pivotal in bringing and operating in such changing dynamics of practice. Through reflexive interrogation and collective debate over the upcoming year, the programme imagines to present itself as an open course for the city, and invite the public to participate in a collective architecture history-writing exercise that seeks to critically engage with the evolving realities of contemporary architecture in India.



Saturday, September 24, 2022

Spatial Diagrams

Spatial Diagrams
workshop at Wadiyar Centre For Architecture, Mysore
27-29 May 2022


Spatial diagrams help reveal the hidden systems and patterns of social relations within a built form that index historical modes of spatial organization. They may also hold certain cultural codings of ideological beliefs within societies, in other words, institutionalised forms of practices that get encrusted into built form. Such knowledge is essential in order to develop a critical appraisal of the built environment on the one hand, as well as devising contextual and meaningful conditions for inhabitation on the other. The contention of this workshop is that these diagrams can be harnessed off the rhythms of objects, images and stories through which people “produce” their everyday life. These artefacts are not static, rather they move in time and space producing “heterotopic” conditions. A critical engagement with these artifacts allows us to make meaning into these heterotopias and further articulate contemporary arguments for spatial inhabitation. A careful deployment of these artefacts may allow us to articulate new ways of organizing spatial relationships in space.

How can these ideas within the built environment be extracted, appreciated and harnessed towards spatial processes? This workshop will focus on deciphering building grammars, and formulating architectural languages that generate possibilities for the experimentation of innovative spatial types that compliment, interrogate as well as critically inform the practices of inhabitation in a given place. These possibilities shall be expressed as a series of diagrams that encapsulate the spirit of place and their spatial dispositions.


Methodology
· Creating an archive of stories, objects and images (physical) that indicate their understanding of the town of Mysore
· Making of collage to articulate spatial arguments
· Spatial Diagrams: Translation of collages into material manifests

Deliverables
· Archive of the place
· Collage iterations
· Spatial Models



Schedule

DAY 1. 27 May 2022, Fri

Session 1 / 11 am to 1:30 am
Introduction: The Location of Place

Session 2 / 2:30 to 4:30 pm
Place as Archive: Stories, objects and Images

Session 3 / 5 pm to 7 pm
Spatial Translations: Collage as Method*


DAY 2. 28 May 2022, Sat

Session 4 / 9 am to 11 am
Making Collages and Spatial Arguments

Session 5 / 11.30 to 1.30
Finalisation of Collages and Extraction of Spatial Values

Session 6 / 2:30 pm to 4:30 pm
Material Translations: Model as Diagram*

Session 7 / 5 pm to 7 pm
Conceptual Models Iterations


DAY 3. 29 May 2022, Sun

Session 8 / 9 am to 11 am
Refinements and Spatial Articulations

Session 9 / 11:30 am to 1:30 pm
Space Syntax Scale









 



















Wednesday, September 07, 2022

Spatial Mapping Workshop

August 27-28, 2022
for Symbiosis School for Liberal Arts
Conducted by Anuj Daga

Background

Maps are primarily used by a vast majority of the urban population for navigation today. Most of us use them through our phones to move across places, book our rides with competitive fares, find places of interest around us to hang out or eat, or even decide whether to venture out after checking the amount of traffic enroute our destination. While we feel these services by various free apps convenience us (which they indeed do), it is precisely our location in space and time that feeds in their system to generate the geography of congestion, leisure, occupation or rest. Thus, we get mapped into the very object we are consuming.

Cartographic maps - the ones you see on Google Maps or such other services - emerged during the colonial period during the 1700s as a way of accurately (read: scientifically) surveying the extent of land. However, until today, they have remained as the key instruments through which spaces are imagined, represented and reorganized for people at large. The instrument of the cartographic map has been institutionalized as a way of defining and redefining territory by most planning and design bodies across the world. While maps give information about an environment to its users, they also control the way in which we come to inhabit spaces today. The spatial turn of the mid-20th century brought many disciplines of the humanities to critically consider the role of space and place within the social sciences through the interrogation of cartography. Subsequently, it has raised the key concerns regarding who-s and how-s of claiming space within a city/region.

This workshop will open up the ways in which cartographic maps record spatial information and understand what it may disclose about the way we inhabit our space. It introduces the participants to different forms of map making practices across history and potentials and problems of cartographic maps. Further, through mapping exercises, we will make our own maps that will dialogue with institutional maps. What latent aspects of inhabitation can mapping reveal to us? How does space construct power structures that our routines get scripted into? Lastly, how can the knowledge of spatial mapping enable social scientists to interrogate or invent ways of thinking about space?


OBJECTIVES

The workshop will aim at understanding:
● How space is represented in/through maps
● How to read spatial information using maps
● How to make one’s own maps
● How to draw conclusions from a map regarding space and behaviour.



SCHEDULE

DAY 1 / 27th August 2022 / Sat

Session 1 / 9:00 am - 11:00 am
Cartography and the Spatial Turn
What is a map and how does it represent geography? This session will open up the map as a conceptual tool by bringing various perspectives of participants into conversation and steer towards a historical evolution of technical maps that we access today. It will establish the categorical relationship between space and its representation.


Session 2 / 11:30 am to 1:30 pm
Maps and Forms
What are the different forms of maps across time? What do they tell us about space and human relationship with their surroundings? How can these readings be used? This session will look at maps as active tools of interacting and intervening into space. It will ask participants, in groups, to identify ideas that they would like to explore/study by map making.


DAY 2 / 28th August 2022 / Sun

Session 1 / 9:00 am - 11:00 am
Making Maps
In this session, participant groups will workshop their data into the maps and prepare visual representations of space. The session will collate all data within a map and prepare grounds for speculation through this evidence.

Session 2 / 11:30 am to 1:30 pm
Drawing Conclusions
Each student group will present their findings to each other and open up new directions/questions for further inquiry.


Saturday, March 12, 2022

Poster: Long Questions

Poster: Forests of Imaginations





For the longest time, the forest has been the motif for the unknown, the veering away from which has defined the civilizational foundation of the contemporary world. Ironically, the looming disbelief in the projections of modernity has pushed many to return to the forest - figuratively and literally. In its form, the forest stands as a critique then, to the clarifying visions of modernity on the one hand but lurks as a revivalist recluse on the other. As an ever changing ecosystem of possibilities that is agile and adaptive to emerging transformations, the forest is a place of quiet agreements that allows coexistence/overlap of multiplicity of biodiverse forms. It offers no single route for navigation, no clear perspective of destination, no directed illumination for focus. It is precisely these refracted conditions that allow a variety of life forms to thrive together within its ambit.
 
What could it mean to return to the forest as an enterprise of the future? How do we prepare ourselves to inhabit the forests of the future? ‘Forests of Imaginations’ aims at interrogating the continued physical and intellectual disciplining of the territory, as much as nuancing the territory of the discipline itself. This conference seeks to tease methods and possibilities to inhabit futures skipped or sidelined in the aggrandizing narratives of tomorrows. In picking up the leftovers, reconsidering the philosophical truncations while also treading the at-hand tools of the contemporary, what deviations could we productively exploit and orchestrate in order to imagine and inhabit our upcoming times? These imaginations themselves would constitute a forest that may allow us to lose ourselves in a rediscovery of the self. Through such an investigation, one may be able to articulate spatial insights that could help us meander into the landscapes of tomorrow. These shall prepare architecture to become meaningful within a field of shifting perspectives of inhabitation, altering visual densities, creeping digital fragments and transforming ecological futures.

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

The Screen Classrooms

Under its 'Pan Scroll Zoom' series curated by Fabrizio Gallanti, the archive 'Drawing Matter' decided to publish some pedagogical reflections on online teaching during the COVID year.


The Screen Classrooms

Read full note here

OR

https://drawingmatter.org/pan-scroll-zoom-9-the-screen-classrooms/