Site-Writing

Shared Remains (April 2018)
  • Mariza Daouti | London

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  • Shared Remains (April 2018)
  • Mariza Daouti | London
  • David Harvey has observed that despite the increased deterritorialization of culture and ethnicity, identities that have an attachment to places resist the pressures of globalization, and indeed their elaboration ‘has become more, rather than less important in a world of diminishing spatial barriers to exchange movement and communication’.


    The project looks at the Parthenon sculptures as a shared cultural object, dispersed among 8 European institutions. The particular case of the Parthenon sculptures, raises issues of identity, ownership, heritage, nationality, that are reflected on the structure and the development of the project. Fragments of the Parthenon can be found in Athens, Copenhagen, Würzburg, Rome, Vienna, Munich and Paris, which altogether constitute a ‘dismembered entity’; a term that encompasses the contradiction of completeness and fragmentation that also characterizes the project. The dissipation of the fragments among a heterogeneous landscape indicates an ontological transformation about the state of the cultural object, which does not imply culture as a ‘self-contained, bounded and unified construct’, but as a hybrid one. Their physical location – within Europe, and indeed, within the European Union – is significant in this sense, because it is precisely this idea of the shared ground, and consequently, of the shared cultural identity and of a common heritage, that constitutes and maintains the dispersal of the fragments. Starting from an account of the displaced cultural object, the project is telling a story about people and their situatedness in terms of the cultural processes that stem from an identity that they share.


    Biography

    Mariza Daouti (b.1991, Greece) holds a Diploma in Architecture from the National Technical University of Athens and an MA in Architectural History (Distinction) from the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL during which time she developed the project ‘Shared Remains’ for the module “Theorising practices/practising theory: architecture, art and urbanism”. 

    Her projects investigate aspects of architectural theory by contesting issues of identity, place and politics. By employing unconventional tools and media to perform unprecedented and multiple meanings, the projects aim to resist the limits of the discipline and allow space for diverse engagements. 

    Mariza has worked as an architect in Athens, Nicosia and Barcelona and is currently based in London. Besides her experience in architectural practices, Mariza worked as the lead editor for the Greek architectural online magazine Archisearch during 2017-2018, while she has been an editor and researcher for Non Architecture since 2018.


    Practices

    By constructing a spatial response as a sonic environment which lives in digital space, site-writing becomes an open-ended dialogue that enables the simultaneity of the intersecting meanings stemming from the account of the dispersed cultural object and the utterances of the ‘displaced’ people, to create a space of unity and co-existence.


    Keywords
    Displacement, cultural heritage, national identity, freedom of movement

    References

    Oliver Laric, Yuanmingyuan 3D, 2014, KODE Art Museums of Bergen Norway

    Hito Steyerl, ‘Is the museum a battlefield?’, lecture at the 13th Istanbul Biennial, 2014

    Lito Kattou, Battlespot 1, HD video, 2016


    Other projects
  • Signal/Noise: Ambient Text in the Urban Landscape (ongoing project)
  • Site Stories: explorations of urban spaces through drawing and animation (25–29 April 2022)
  • Rainbow Palace, Bergen, Norway (March 2022)
  •  Acanthus, (March 2022)
  • Unter der Hohen Brücke. 
digging in a ditch, writing for a place 
(2021)
  • ‘Reading-writing alongside HALL08,’ HALL08 (2021)
  • Nothingness Beyond Blossom (2021)
  • Angelo Ciccaglione, ‘The back of the dust-machine, where the visitors pour the dust in,’ Rotterdam (2021)
    The Deposition of Dust (July 2021)
  • Skye Edge (April 2021)
  • Corvid-19 (15 March 2021)
  • 1_5
    Glòries_(Eixample). A dispositive for very slow aesthetic observation, (January 2021 –)
  • As Lightning to the Children Eased (January 2021)
  • Station F (October 2020)
  • It’s Just a Matter of Time (2020)
  • 1
    Inscription: the Journal of Material Text – Theory, Practice, History,
    issue # 1: ‘beginnings,’ (2020)
  • Homekeeping-image_sml
    Homekeeping (2020)
  • City Embers (2020)
  • Between Our Words I will Trace Your Presence (February 2020)
  • What Remains (2019)
  • Situated Writing as Theory and Method (2019)
  • Parts Apart Read Together (2019)
  • Fields of Awareness, (2019, 3min 18 secs)
  • A Non-Aligned Narrative in and Around KSEVT, (2019)
  • 21 Orientations: An Atlas of Geographic Promiscuity (2019)
  • The Windowless Hotel Room (2018)
  • Spaces of Grief (2018)
  • Soft Landing (2018)
  • Shared Remains (April 2018)
  • Poetic Water Boundaries: towards a possible borderless sea, (2018)
  • Metropolitan Salem, Liuerpul (9 June – 18 August 2018)
  • Things Come Apart (21 – 24 March 2018)
  • Learn to Read Differently (2018)
  • Il Balcone. A site-writing performance (2018)
  • History begins with the vanity of kings (2018)
  • Dear Mr. Jung: Inhabiting Carl Jung’s ‘The Red Book’ (May 2018)
  • A Lunar Perspective, (2018-2020)
  • Heaton Hall: A Palimpsest (2017)
  • Location (+) (2017)
  • There’s Sand in My Infinity Pool (2017)
  • Talking Quilts (April 2017)
  • fifteen ways to cross the desert (2017)
  • Between Landscape and Confinement: Situating the Writings of Mary Wollstonecraft (2017)
  • Agency at the threshold, (2017)
  • A Ficto-Historical Theory of the London Underground (2017)
  • The Glorious Tomb to the Memory of Nothing (2016)
  • The Arrival’s Reader; A Visual Literary Criticism on The Arrival by Shaun Tan (2016)
  • Reading as Art (27 August-19 November 2016)
  • Re: development (London: Silent Grid, 2016)
  • Kjemikerens død [The Death of the Chemist] (23 – 26 May 2016)
  • Kingsland High Street (2016)
  • Foray in a Modern Reserve: An Impounding Portrait of Landuse (2016 – 2018)
  • Fall of the Derwent (2016)
  • Away from Home – Home from Away (April 2016)
  • Penguin Pool (2015)
  • Geography Lessons: Liberian Landmarks 1953-2013 (2015)
  • Women’s Anarchist Nuisance Café (2014)
  • The Writing on the Wall (after Rembrandt) (2014)
  • The Italic I (2014)
  • Designing Architecture as a Performing-Ground (2014)
  • Urban Literacy (2013/2014/2016)
  • The Disappearance: Manfredo Tafuri’s The Sphere and the Labyrinth (April 2013)
  • Folded Ground: Escape from Cape Town (2013)
  • Phantom Railings (2012 – 2017)
  • In The Emptiness Between Them (2012)
  • 10/08/12 (multispecies event) (2012)
  • An Arcades Project (2011)
  • Tideline (2010-2012)
  • The Museum of Breath (2010)
  • Slab (2010)
  • One wound. Two wounds. The body as site for writing (2010)
  • The Fluid Pavement and Other Stories on Growing Old (2006)
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