ON SITE r e v i e w
call for articles on site review 38 winter 2020/21 lines borders walls breaches
37: drawing summer 2020
The here and thereness of things
On Site review is published by Field Notes Press, which promotes field work in matters architectural, cultural and spatial.
edges division defence
F I E L D
demarcation membranes rupture
hedges fences
gates rivers floods
N O T E S
For any and all inquiries, please use the contact form at www.onsitereview.ca/contact-onsite Canada Post agreement 40042630 ISSN 1481-8280 copyright: On Site review. All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopied, recorded or otherwise stored in a retrieval system without the prior consent of the publisher is an infringement of Copyright Law Chapter C-30, RSC1988. back issues: https://issuu.com/onsitereview/docs editor: Stephanie White design: Black Dog Running printer: Emerson Clarke Printing, Calgary distribution: online: onsitereview.ca print: onsitereview.ca/contact-us
difference apartheid [mé]tissage greenbelts freeways crossings
Proposals due October 31, 2020 Mention how your proposal relates to the theme of this issue (above). Remember, we are a journal about architecture, landscape, infrastructure, urban design, all as conducted on site. Send to www.onsitereview.ca/contact-us Finished articles due December 31, 2020 Images: 300dpi, at least 2000pixels wide, copyright clearance secured if not your own work. Length: 500 - 5000 words For every barrier, there is a way to cross it. Breaches, or ruptures, or checkpoints, or other breakages show both the strength and weakness of the barrier, wall, fence, cliff face. Clearly this can all be taken as a huge metaphor; it can also be an investigation of specific sites. how wide is a line? Between this and that, here and there, often turns out to be a zone in geographic and ethnic reality. Think of this issue at any scale, and in any way, environmentally, geographically, architecturally. Other issues, social, political and personal will, no doubt, unfold in these specific investigations.
http://www.francisalys.com/greenline/
The Green Line Sometimes doing something poetic can become political and sometimes doing something political can become poetic. Jerusalem, June 2004 Video in collaboration with Philippe Bellaiche, Rachel Leah Jones, and Julien Devaux 17:34 min
©©Francis Alÿs
This project appeared in On Site review 30: ethics and publics , guest edited by Thomas-Bernard Kenniff
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on site review 37: drawings
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