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COURTYARD CONVERSATIONS: Negotiating Space Together

Datum
Time
Event Label
Symposionistic gathering
Organisational Units
Art and Architecture
Location Description
Schillerplatz 3
1010 Vienna
2nd Courtyard

We invite you to the final reviews of the Gender & Space (IKA) studio, presented as a symposionistic gathering with invited guests featuring engaging talks, discussions, installations, and interventions on the themes of feminist spatial practices, queer use, inclusivity, accessibility, feminist infrastructural critique, or commoning. Together with the students Hof Initiative, we are continuing to revitalize the courtyard and explore ways to create a vibrant community space.

Gender & Space Studio /IKA,
Petra Hlaváčková & Nicole Sabella
with 
Arundhati Arun, Mahaut Beyret, Sara Hawy, Bharvi Kankaria, Jessica Cortina López, Nora Maleh, Rogin Mougoui, Alex Salem, Kora Witt

Guests

Ewa Majewska is a feminist theorist of culture, associate professor at the SWPS University in Warsaw. She taught at the UDK Berlin, University of Warsaw; she was a visiting scholar at the UC Berkeley; ICI Berlin and IWM in Vienna. She published seven books, incl. Feminist Antifascism (Verso, 2021), as well as numerous articles and essays in journals, magazines and collected volumes. Her research focuses on archive studies, dialectics of the weak; feminist critical theory and antifascism. She co-curated the exhibition of Mariola Przyjemska at the Zachęta National Gallery of Art in Warsaw (2022-2023). In 2023 she received the Emma Goldman Award from the Flex Foundation for her research work on equality.

Maria Topolčanská is an architect and architectural theorist. She is Rector Emerita of the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague (2022–2024), where she has been lecturing since 2017. She is engaged in research and publishing in the field of contemporary architecture and is a supervisor of theoretical and artistic PhD students. She studied architecture at FAD STU in Bratislava and Metropolis Master in Architecture and Urban Culture at ETSAB in Barcelona. She is interested in exploring the political dimensions of architectural practice and housing theory in contemporary cities, as well as forms of pedagogy and publishing in the fields of art and architecture.

Emilia Castañeda Rossmann is a political science graduate (Contemporary Latin American Studies, Universidad Complutense de Madrid), with a strong focus on the intersection between academic research and applied socio-political practices. Her academic work centers on gender-based violence, decolonial feminist political theory, and the territorial dimensions of violence in Latin America, with particular attention to organized crime related femicides, feminist resistance in border regions, and body-territory frameworks. She has experience in feminist and anti-violence initiatives, contributing through research, communication, and collective organizing.

Catcalls of Vienna
Initially, starting in New York City in 2016 as a local “Chalk back” initiative, today it grew up to a movement tackling gender-based street harassment worldwide. The Catcalls of Vienna collective was founded in July 2020 by a group of local activists. Their Instagram serves as an online platform, where victims of street harassment can share their experiences, including recalling the verbal/physical assaults and the place where it happened. Chalking on the ground the very quotes of catcallers with the hashtag #stopstreetharassment the initiative reclaims public spaces and makes street harassment visible.