Sound is Always There with Elizabeth Diller | RESONATE

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  • Опубліковано 10 кві 2018
  • “As architects, you really want to be the driver of content.” - Elizabeth Diller
    Elizabeth Diller talks sound and space, elucidating the importance of sound in architecture and the evolving role of the architect in an increasingly multidisciplinary world. Looking towards the future presents unique challenges, she argues. “Time is really, really difficult for the architect,” she says. “The conventions of architecture are to make buildings that last-to make them enduring.” Here, she contemplates how to design buildings that transcend time, while accommodating the continuous evolution of the activities and art forms that will exist within them.
    Elizabeth Diller is a founding partner of Diller Scofidio + Renfro. She has designed many contemporary cultures and art spaces with the The Shed in New York City being one of their most anticipated built projects. Other achievements include the Broad in Los Angeles, the ICA Boston, and the renovation of New York’s Museum of Modern Art planned in 2019. Diller's work together with her partners Ricardo Scofidio, Charles Renfro, and Benjamin Gilmartin always seeks to push the boundaries and have earned them a reputation as enfant-terrible of contemporary architecture.
    RESONATE: Thinking Sound & Space was a conference on architecture, art and sound powered by MAAT and reSITE. It took place on 12 February 2018 at MAAT Museum, Lisbon, Portugal in collaboration with Meyer Sound. Video co-produced by reSITE & Canal180
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    reSITE is an international nonprofit platform based in Prague. We work at the intersection of architecture, urbanism, politics, culture, and economics. We act as a catalyst for social action and innovative leadership.
    We encourage an exchange of ideas about making cities more livable, competitive and resilient. We protect and promote public space, architecture, and sustainable development in cities.
    Why? To stimulate action for sustainable urban design and therefore better cities. We stand for public space.
    www.reSITE.org

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