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Nola Reporter

Friday, November 15, 2024

Exhibit by Tulane architecture and psychology faculty and students explores monuments and memorials

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An exhibit highlighting monuments and memorials as a way of creating  more just and equitable spaces in New Orleans and beyond is now on  display at the AIA New Orleans Design Center, 1000 St. Charles Ave.

Titled Public Spaces & Scrutiny: How Do We Remember? the  exhibit is a collaboration between students and faculty at the Tulane  School of Architecture and the Tulane School of Science and  Engineering’s Department of Psychology.

The exhibit will be up through June 25th and is open to the public on weekdays from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m.

"We hope this exhibition can ignite conversations surrounding the design of public spaces and monuments.”

Tiffany Lin, an associate professor of architecture at Tulane

“We are lucky to have access to the AIA Design Center exhibition  space, aptly located in the shadow of the pedestal that used to  celebrate Robert E. Lee,” said Tiffany Lin, an associate professor of  architecture who spearheaded the project with Emilie Taylor Welty, a  professor of practice at the Tulane School of Architecture and social  psychologist Lisa Molix, an associate professor of psychology.

“Facing the Civil War Museum, our exhibit frames the silhouettes of  the four monuments removed in New Orleans with statistics that visualize  the daunting work ahead. We hope this exhibition can ignite  conversations surrounding the design of public spaces and monuments.”

The exhibit showcases research and student work, supported by an SOM  Foundation Research Prize, which was awarded to the Tulane  interdisciplinary team in 2020. The research focuses on monuments, what  they honor and how their design memorializes the truth — or fiction — of  the past. Grounded in research on the history and typologies of  monument design, and a recently conducted national survey, the exhibit  also explores ways to create more equitable public spaces in New Orleans  and beyond.

The work displayed offers strategies to bridge the gap between  architects and the general public, specifically when designing for urban  spaces marked by racial injustice.

“I hope folks leave this exhibit with a better understanding of how  the design of public space is a form of collective storytelling and are  excited about what stories we want to share, new ways of telling our  stories and by extension shaping our cityscape,” Taylor said.

Molix said the project breaks new ground by combining community-based  research and design processes with historical and contemporary  empirical data. “In short,” she said, “this work has improved our  understanding of how public spaces and monuments are perceived which can  directly inform future teaching and design."

Original source can be found here.

 

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