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On Enchantment

About the program

Program Location

Cochrane-Woods Art Center 157
University of Chicago
5540 S. Greenwood Ave

Edited by Ian Erickson, DISC is an experimental publication that explores media, technology, and environments through themed books, events, and products. DISC is editorially independent, para-institutional, and guided by an ever-changing advisory circle. In this lecture Ian will talk on themes of the forthcoming issue, Enchantment, in a meta-dialogue with Ben Denzer. This event is hosted in partnership with the UChicago Department of Art History as part of their Open Studio Sessions.

Join via Zoom.

BOOKSCAPES
CAB 5, READING ROOM LECTURES
on the futures and metaphors of books

This is a reading room installation and platform for exchanging ideas on the relationship between books and the built environment. Presented are case studies of thoughtful books, industry stakeholders, and imaginative manifestos which explore the book through the lens of ecological design practices and experimental media.

BOOKSCAPES features lectures, book talks, and workshops every Saturday
This lecture series is a part of CAB 5: This is a Rehearsal, curated by Floating Museum.
Bookscapes is organized by Marya Kanakis

Participant

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Bookscapes by Marya Demetra Kanakis. Photo: Alex Breskanu

Marya Demetra Kanakis

Chicago, United States

Website

Marya Demetra Kanakis is a Greek-American architect and editor. Spanning ecology, urbanism, media theory, and curation, her explorations critique ecologies of cities as a coexistence between humans and machines revealing new representations of nature through technology. From designing healthcare clinics, to completing urban design research for SOM, to working on sustainable housing projects for Kanye West – Marya’s work transcends scales of typical practice, revolving around her interests in science, technology, botany, books, and art. Her recent research, Grafted Natures: The Ecology of a Blurred Species proposes repositioning authorship in the anthropocene. She writes on the history of mankind as told through parallel histories of grafting (botanical and medical) exposing centuries of authorship in reconstructing nature – and translating this to the design of a book. Similar themes carry into formats of other work, such as video installations of 3d-scanned genetically modified crops. Current research interrogates new methods of publication design and bookmaking, culminating into proposals for new models of publishing houses. Her methodology for all projects involves spatializing bibliographies and extracting these logics into new associations. After completing her studies at Harvard Graduate School of Design, Marya returned to IIT to teach a studio on the topic of health and urbanism. Her work has been featured at exhibitions in Cambridge, Chicago, Venice, Milan, Rome, Mexico City, and Munich.

The City is the Site