Events
Spring 2022 Sciame Lecture Series: Justin Garrett Moore
Archived Video
Difference and Design
Thursday, Feb 24, 2022
6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Online - Zoom meeting
This lecture is in the past and was presented via Zoom.
The speakers have kindly agreed to make a recording of this talk available here. See above or on YouTube.
Please join us for the third event of our Spring Lecture Series, titled "Difference and Design", featuring Justin Garrett Moore.
This lecture is part of the 2022 Spring Sciame Lecture Series, themed “Radical Black Space.”
SPEAKER
Justin Garrett Moore
Justin Garrett Moore is a transdisciplinary designer and urbanist. He serves as the program officer for the Humanities in Place program at The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, where his work focuses on advancing equity, inclusion, and social justice through place-based initiatives and programs, built environments, cultural heritage projects, and commemorative spaces and landscapes. He has extensive experience in architecture, planning, and design—from urban systems, policies, and building projects to grassroots and community-focused planning, design, preservation, public realm, and arts initiatives. He is also the co-founder of Urban Patch, a social enterprise focused on sustainable design and development projects in the United States and Rwanda.
https://mellon.org/
http://urbanpatch.org/
https://www.blackspace.org/
https://darkmatteruniversity.org/
Suggested Reading: https://urbanomnibus.net/2022/01/care-where/
Series Theme -- Radical Black Space: The Spring 2022 Sciame Lecture series, themed Radical Black Space, brings together architects, preservationists, planners, artists, and historians of color at a precipitous moment. The Movement for Black Lives demands that Americans from all walks of life confront racism and its sordid impact on constructed environments, and understand the rich, vital tradition of Black resistance, innovation, and creativity. Speakers will touch on many questions: How do the places and things made by African Americans disrupt the racial status quo in the United States? How is difference celebrated? How is equity imagined and achieved? What constitutes anti-racist spatial practice? Radical Black Space shows that the Black radical tradition is alive in art and architecture, and that having a handle on Black history is essential to understanding the present and shaping the future. Join us to find revolution in the everyday and to recognize the extraordinary places and objects that Black Americans make and the stories they tell about themselves. Radical Black Space is convened by Marta Gutman and Jerome Haferd.
Sciame Lecture Series with additional funding provided by the Bernard & Anne Spitzer School of Architecture Fund.
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