Azra Akšamija and sekou cooke STUDIO were two of the eight winners of the 2022 Emerging Voices competition, which recognizes North American designers with distinct voices and significant bodies of realized work.
Azra Akšamija presented on projects including Design to Live: Everyday Inventions from a Refugee Camp, T-Serai, and Memory Matrix. Through them, she presented some of the central questions to her practice addresses: What cultures get to be visible in public space? How can heritage preservation serve the healing of a community, instead of falling into empty symbolism, cultural appropriation, or nationalistic nostalgia? And, what do one-fit-all solutions to humanitarian aid miss?
RE-mixing previous lectures, Sekou Cooke shared his recent book Hip-Hop Architecture, as well as projects including Grids + Griots, and The Syracuse Hip-Hop Headquarters (SHHHQ). Through these, he expounded on the possibilities of Hip-Hop Architecture to humanize technology, open avenues for more meaningful interactions between people and buildings, and reformulate the architectural design process to incorporate more spontaneity.
The presentations were followed by a conversation with Ersela Kripa, which touched upon disciplinary methods, improvisation and adaptation in architecture, and ended by asking both practices: “what’s next”? Kripa is a founding partner of AGENCY, the director of the Texas Tech College of Architecture in El Paso.
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