{"title":"在制品:进展中的工作|实践中的妇女","authors":"Lindsay Harkema","doi":"10.35483/acsa.am.111.50","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"What happens when independent women designers form a collective practice rooted in co-creation rather than singular authorship? How could feminist values inform and inspire a shared design approach? Which professional conventions should be unlearned in order to foster more mutually supportive spatial practices? The history of feminist practice in architecture offers more than a century of women-led collective initiatives. But their marginalization has prevented feminist values from being normalized in the profession and the built environment at large. Still today, women-led collaborative practices are considered novel. WIP: Work In Progress | Women In Practice is feminist design collective composed of two entities: a supportive community of women design professionals and a collaborative practice shared between individual members. WIP is a work in progress, subject to adaptation by and for its participants. Within the shared practice, WIP Collaborative, team structure and work methods are adjusted to the needs of specific projects, including scope, community and stakeholders, and the interests of WIP members involved. To date WIP has completed a range of projects and events in the public realm that foreground embodied experiences, equity, access, and inclusivity, including public space installations, community focused design research, and collective happenings. Learning from other feminist practices and workers cooperatives past and present, WIP Collaborative is democratically organized so that all participants contribute to its trajectory and creative process. WIP’s projects reimagine public environments by challenging, expanding, and transforming their norms. They explore issues of embodiment – physical, sensory, and emotional experiences of the body – and create environments of choice that support the spatial and experiential preferences of a diverse population. By embracing a plurality of human needs and a co-creative design approach, WIP operates outside the norms of conventional design practice in pursuit of a more vibrant shared future.","PeriodicalId":243862,"journal":{"name":"In Commons","volume":"8 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"WIP: Work in Progress | Women in Practice\",\"authors\":\"Lindsay Harkema\",\"doi\":\"10.35483/acsa.am.111.50\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"What happens when independent women designers form a collective practice rooted in co-creation rather than singular authorship? 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Within the shared practice, WIP Collaborative, team structure and work methods are adjusted to the needs of specific projects, including scope, community and stakeholders, and the interests of WIP members involved. To date WIP has completed a range of projects and events in the public realm that foreground embodied experiences, equity, access, and inclusivity, including public space installations, community focused design research, and collective happenings. Learning from other feminist practices and workers cooperatives past and present, WIP Collaborative is democratically organized so that all participants contribute to its trajectory and creative process. WIP’s projects reimagine public environments by challenging, expanding, and transforming their norms. They explore issues of embodiment – physical, sensory, and emotional experiences of the body – and create environments of choice that support the spatial and experiential preferences of a diverse population. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
当独立的女性设计师形成一个植根于共同创作的集体实践,而不是单一的作者,会发生什么?女权主义价值观如何影响和激发一种共享的设计方法?为了促进更多相互支持的空间实践,应该摒弃哪些专业惯例?女权主义建筑实践的历史提供了一个多世纪的女性领导的集体倡议。但她们的边缘化阻碍了女权主义价值观在整个行业和建筑环境中正常化。直到今天,女性领导的合作实践仍被认为是新颖的。WIP: Work In Progress | Women In Practice是一个女权主义设计团体,由两个实体组成:一个是女性设计专业人士的支持性社区,另一个是个人成员之间的合作实践。在制品计划是一项正在进行的工作,需要参与者进行调整。在共享实践中,WIP协作、团队结构和工作方法根据具体项目的需要进行调整,包括范围、社区和涉众,以及所涉及的WIP成员的利益。迄今为止,WIP已经完成了一系列公共领域的项目和活动,这些项目和活动的前景体现了体验、公平、可及性和包容性,包括公共空间装置、以社区为中心的设计研究和集体活动。从过去和现在的其他女权主义实践和工人合作社中学习,WIP协作是民主组织的,所有参与者都为其轨迹和创造过程做出贡献。WIP的项目通过挑战、扩展和改变公共环境规范来重新构想公共环境。他们探索化身的问题——身体的身体、感官和情感体验——并创造可选择的环境,以支持不同人群的空间和体验偏好。通过拥抱人类需求的多样性和共同创造的设计方法,WIP在传统设计实践的规范之外运作,追求更有活力的共享未来。
What happens when independent women designers form a collective practice rooted in co-creation rather than singular authorship? How could feminist values inform and inspire a shared design approach? Which professional conventions should be unlearned in order to foster more mutually supportive spatial practices? The history of feminist practice in architecture offers more than a century of women-led collective initiatives. But their marginalization has prevented feminist values from being normalized in the profession and the built environment at large. Still today, women-led collaborative practices are considered novel. WIP: Work In Progress | Women In Practice is feminist design collective composed of two entities: a supportive community of women design professionals and a collaborative practice shared between individual members. WIP is a work in progress, subject to adaptation by and for its participants. Within the shared practice, WIP Collaborative, team structure and work methods are adjusted to the needs of specific projects, including scope, community and stakeholders, and the interests of WIP members involved. To date WIP has completed a range of projects and events in the public realm that foreground embodied experiences, equity, access, and inclusivity, including public space installations, community focused design research, and collective happenings. Learning from other feminist practices and workers cooperatives past and present, WIP Collaborative is democratically organized so that all participants contribute to its trajectory and creative process. WIP’s projects reimagine public environments by challenging, expanding, and transforming their norms. They explore issues of embodiment – physical, sensory, and emotional experiences of the body – and create environments of choice that support the spatial and experiential preferences of a diverse population. By embracing a plurality of human needs and a co-creative design approach, WIP operates outside the norms of conventional design practice in pursuit of a more vibrant shared future.