“Often to understand, we have to look into emptiness.”–Michelangelo Antonioni
The contentious conversation of space and its regulation of human thought and behaviour has been debated by geographers, historians, architects, sociologists, anthropologists, political philosophers, cultural theorists, and urban strategists, to name a few. Perhaps this plurality of opinion is reflective of the …
The contentious conversation of space and its regulation of human thought and behaviour has been debated by geographers, historians, architects, sociologists, anthropologists, political philosophers, cultural theorists, and urban strategists, to name a few. Perhaps this plurality of opinion is reflective of the multitude of conflicting spaces we embrace and embody as we navigate through the world. In our methods of conceptualising space, we expose the dialectical tensions that emerge as we find meaning for our …