
Open Lecture with Lidia Gasperoni
On Monday, May 30, between 18:00 and 19:30, the third Open Lecture of the Spring Semester 2022 will take place. Our Guest, Lidia Gasperoni from Technische Universität Berlin will present her recent project. The title of the presentation is "Experimental Diagrams in Architecture". Following the presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions and discuss.
The Open Lecture will take place in a hybrid format, on campus at Salzufer 6, 10587 Berlin in Studio 1, and via Zoom.
Below are the details for joining via ZOOM.
Click here to join the Zoom Meeting.
Students across all disciplines are invited to participate in an interdisciplinary exchange. Be inspired and get to know new perspectives!
About the project: "Experimental Diagrams in Architecture"
By Lidia Gasperoni
After its golden age in the last decades of the 20th century, diagramming is still an experimental practice today, but it focuses on the synthesis of complexity and on new disciplinary territories on the edge between humanities, art, architecture, urban planning and landscape. The manual, edited by Lidia Gasperoni - presents experimental diagrams through sensing, analyzing and transforming space. The contributions critically delineate diagrammatic behaviors in architectural history, present the design practices of offices such as AZPML and ishigami + associates, take the medium to its extreme consequences, and outline future trajectories.
About Lidia Gasperoni
Lidia Gasperoni is a research and teaching associate at TU Berlin (Chair of Architectural Theory). She studied Philosophy in Rome, Freiburg, Breisgau and Berlin and obtained the doctorate degree from the TU Berlin in 2015. Moreover she is teaching philosophy with a focus on aesthetics and spatial theory at the TU Berlin since 2014, developing interdisciplinary seminars between philosophy and architecture in cooperation with other researchers at the Institute of Architecture, TU Berlin. She also has been teaching also at the UdK and at the University of Kassel. In her current research, she explores the role of aesthetic practices and media in design processes.