May 28–Jun 25, 2022

Conversations on Shadow Architecture

Address
1/75 McLachlan Avenue, Sydney 2011
Hours
Wed-Fri 11 am-6 pm, Sat 12 am-5 pm

Dominik Mersch Gallery is proud to announce the opening of Conversations on Shadow Architecture (C o S A), curated by Ineke Dane for the gallery’s annual Curator Award. C o S A is a multidisciplinary group exhibition with an accompanying catalogue, featuring the work of artists, architects and composers. Centred on Critical Spatial Practice (CSP)—which can be understood as a theoretical lens and practical mode to critically engage with the cultural, social and political potential of space and architecture—C o S A began as a thought exercise with practitioners whose work resonated with the various limbs of CSP. Here architecture (built and unbuilt, its absence as much as presence), politics, history, economies and the future are understood as inextricably linked through complex networks of spatial variables that affect the way we think, feel, move, make decisions and operate together.

C o S A invites audiences to engage with and read their daily surroundings, with the hope that this more entangled understanding will lead to new forms of empowerment for both the individual and diverse community ecologies. Rather than providing answers C o S A questions how the world around us choreographs our very being.

The project title borrows a term coined in 2012 by Warsaw-based architect Aleksandra Wasilkowska. In her book, Shadow Architecture / Architektura Cienia, Wasilkowska defines shadow architecture as spatial artefacts that emerge from the bottom up, functioning in the margins of systems and without the participation of an architect or bureaucracy. These forms of architecture are an analogue to the integration of the subconscious and the shadow archetype in Jungian therapy. Wasilkowska posits that only spontaneous and self-organised activities in official city structures and planning can create a healthy and inclusive environment. The term describes architecture that supports the shadow economy (informal, unofficially recorded or recognised) known to comprise a substantial percentage of circulating capital at any given time.

The contributors to C o S A were invited because their practices resonate with the non-hierarchical limbs of our thought exercise: creatives who disrupt the machine or reject the monotony of what’s practiced in the everyday. They step clear of the well-beaten track to provoke the core of our humanness—and its shadow—recalling the currency of fluid, liminal and responsive existence.

The accompanying catalogue to C o S A, designed by Marilena Hewitt of Platypus Publications, features a collection of responses from each exhibited practitioner, including text excerpts from leading thinkers in the field of CSP: Keller Easterling, Markus Miessen and Aleksandra Wasilkowska.