Princeton University
School of Architecture Building
Saturday, May 18
2–6pm
org-for-spatial-practice.tumblr.com
Manifesto of the Organization for Spatial Practice
1. Architecture has abdicated its capacity for social agency.
1A. During the 2008 (-ongoing) financial crisis an equally devastating architectural crisis occurred, pulling the curtain away from the alignment of architecture and capitalism:
Architecture has become a form of capitalism.
1B. Redefiniton of Architecture: (noun) 1. an investment vehicle for the transformation of one unit of currency into multiple units of currency 2. a product resulting from the accumulation of capital to the threshold where it becomes material form.
1C. We have arrived at a state in which architecture has neutered itself, incapable of activism within the conditions of the market under the regime of neoliberal capitalism.
1D. Architecture is notoriously slow and client-initiated, while activism is fast, agile, and self-initiated. Architecture is an indirect action, alienated (since Alberti) from construction, while activism works with Direct Action. Architecture creates power and capital for someone else, whereas activism makes a power claim and asserts an authority to control power and capital.
2. This is a situation beyond redemption.
2A. Rather than attempting to separate architecture and capital, a new discipline will emerge to fill the void left when architecture fully vacates its claim to the production of socially engaging and culturally progressive spatial situations.
2B. Emerging with the political mission of exploring methods of non-capitalist economies, this new discipline is equally tangent to the current disciplines of architecture, performance, installation, graphic design, publication, curating, analytical criticism, and administration—which is called Spatial Practice.
3. The inaugural project of this discipline is a Potlatchevent, on Saturday May 18, 2–6pm, in a pavilion designed to occupy the School of Architecture at Princeton University.
3A. The Potlatch is a ceremonial gift-exchange performance event, originating in Northwest Native American and Pacific Island cultures—in which social status is determined by how much wealth is given as gifts to others, as opposed to accumulated for oneself—where an individual, family, or community commits economic suicide by gifting as much of their wealth as they are willing, to everyone else. This small-scale iteration is used as a model for shifting cultural attitudes towards gift exchange, rather than pecuniary exchange.
3B. The Potlatch Pavilion is an inflatable environment, temporary and agile, in which the ceremonial gift exchange will unfold as a social ecosystem.
Potlatch event and pavilion
Sympathetic members of the public are invited to bring a gift to a stranger to the Potlatch Pavilion, the inaugural event of the discipline of Spatial Practice. For general convenience, please make gifts smaller than 11″ on one side. Examples of some thoughtful gifts might include, but are not limited to: your cherished Philodendron, that hand-made earth-wear pot, your heirloom trinket box, or your well-read copy of The Fountainhead.
The Potlatch Pavilion will also be inflated on Thursday, May 23rd and Friday, May 24th.
School of Architecture Building
Princeton University
Saturday, May 18
2–6pm
N.B. This is an independently initiated event in the framework of the Spring 2013 School of Architecture thesis projects. The event will be filmed and shown on May 23rd and 24th. Further information can be found here.