Articles

  • Oct 21, 2024 | untappedjournal.com | Jesse Dorris |Julie Lasky |Redefining “Iconic” Architecture |Sophie Lovell

    One afternoon, when Mikyoung Kim was a teenager, she sat on the bench before her piano. Her architect father and ceramicist mother, both recent immigrants to America from South Korea, had taken out a loan to purchase the instrument when she was 5, and she’d practiced intensely every day since. Her body became a right angle enfolding the form of the piano, her fingers forming more angles across its keys.

  • Oct 7, 2024 | untappedjournal.com | Julie Lasky |Redefining “Iconic” Architecture |Sophie Lovell |Marianne Thode Krogh

    “Send us bright one, light one, Horhorn, quickening and wombfruit.” This incantation, at the beginning of the “Oxen of the Sun” chapter in James Joyce’s Ulysses, describes babies being born at a Dublin maternity hospital on a June day in 1904. In epic terms, the sentence relates to an island in Homer’s Odyssey populated by cattle that are the special horned creatures of the sun god, Helios. In Biblical terms, it enacts the process of words made flesh.

  • Sep 23, 2024 | untappedjournal.com | Sophie Lovell |Andrew Russeth

    It is time to stop the use of the word iconic as if it were a desirable attribute, because it isn’t. This infuriatingly ubiquitous adjective gained traction in the design and architecture world in the early aughts to describe a consumer object, building, or person as a symbol of a particular ideology or way of life—one that happened to be defined and perpetuated by the rise of a global postindustrial elite. This was particularly true in the case of architecture.

  • Sep 23, 2024 | untappedjournal.com | Sophie Lovell |Marianne Thode Krogh |Zach Mortice |Redefining “Iconic” Architecture

    It is time to stop the use of the word iconic as if it were a desirable attribute, because it isn’t. This infuriatingly ubiquitous adjective gained traction in the design and architecture world in the early aughts to describe a consumer object, building, or person as a symbol of a particular ideology or way of life—one that happened to be defined and perpetuated by the rise of a global postindustrial elite. This was particularly true in the case of architecture.

  • May 4, 2024 | newswav.com | Sophie Lovell

    Design thinking should be substituted for " food thinking" to enable humans to create properly holistic systems that no longer cause ecological chaos, writes Sophie Lovell. Design has become unfit for purpose. Humanity shares one small planet with a large number of other lifeforms and catastrophes happen to everything and everyone on it.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →