OUT NOW: paper “Critical Zones and Thought Exhibitions,” in SPOOL: Landscape Metropolis #11

Happy to announce that my paper on Critical Zones and Thought Exhibitions is now available, open access, in Spool 12/2 (2025), thread “Landscape Metropolis #11: Representing the More-Than-Human.” This issue was edited by Anna Neuhaus, Saskia de Wit and Inge Bobbink – to whom I am grateful for the invitation.

From the journal editorial:
In the thread Landscape Metropolis, SPOOL addresses the interrelation between urban, infrastructural, rural, and living formations as a dynamic, intertwined, and layered landscape structure. Triggered by the profound changes of the Anthropocene, the complexity of the metropolitan landscape asks for reorientation when addressing physical space as well as spatial investigation and theory, in terms of aesthetic appreciation, designerly concepts, guidelines for planning and governance, and design theoretical understandings.

From the paper abstract:
The exhibition Critical Zones [ZKM Karlsruhe] utilized the spatio-aesthetic capacities of an exhibition to test, in the mode of an embodied thought experiment, a relational understanding of the world inhabited and shaped by interdependent lifeforms—a world that only artificially, through Western hegemonic thought and actions, can be separated into somewhat detached spheres of ‘nature’ and ‘culture’, where inhabitants of the latter demote the former to resources to be extracted. This paper discusses the spatio-aesthetic experimentation enabled by the exhibition to challenge such dichotomous separations. It investigates the curatorial concept by focusing on two central works: CZO Space (2020) by Alexandra Arènes & Soheil Hajmirbaba and Flash Point (Timekeeper)(2018) by Sarah Sze. As ‘cosmograms’ (John Tresch, Bruno Latour), both works describe a relationship to a world that is not one of coherence and dominance but that respects its particularities and assemblages.