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Rodrigo Guendelman conversó con Jorge Otero-Pailos, doctorado en Arquitectura del MIT, artista, preservacionista y profesor, que utiliza los residuos materiales de la modernidad -polvo atmosférico, contaminación, vías fluviales o huellas de sudor- para hacer visibles sus significados invisibles.
Jorge Otero-Pailos is an artist, architect, and educator whose work is concerned with the future meaning of the past. He joins Charles Waldheim to discuss his recent practice.
RadioCIAMS is pleased to present the third episode of "Unsettled Monuments, Unsettling Heritage", a podcast of CIVIC, the Cornell task force for the humanities and the arts. In this episode, a panel of Cornell faculty, all CIVIC fellows, speak with Prof. Jorge Otero-Pailos, Director and Professor of Historic Preservation at the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. The discussion centers on Prof. Otero-Pailos's contributions to the groundbreaking book that he co-edited, Experimental Preservation, exploring how an ethic of care can radically alter our ingrained notions of preservation. This podcast was hosted virtually and everyone participated remotely.
Columbia University’s Jorge Otero‐Pailos is a prolific architect, artist, educator and preservationist. He questions the invisibility of preservation and what an act of restoration is, looking closely at what is lost when for example buildings are cleaned. Topics discussed include preservation as memory, future and how it is, or isn’t, ‘overtaking us’.
Architect, artist, and experimental preservationist Jorge Otero-Pailos has created scents for Philip Johnson's Glass House, removed centuries of dust from the inside of Trajan's Column with latex, and is the newly appointed director of the Historic Preservation program at Columbia University's GSAPP, where he also began the "Future Anterior" journal. And this week, he joins us on the podcast to discuss ideas that he mulls over constantly in his work – what role should originality play in architecture? What's at stake when discourse and criticism come to rely more on representations than the in situ structure? And what role do media and virtual realities play in all of this? This episode is brought to you by BQE ArchiOffice. Check out their offer for Archinect Sessions listeners at bqe.com/startups.
This interview with Jorge Otero-Pailos, author of Architecture’s Historical Turn: Phenomenology and the Rise of the Postmodern (Minnesota Press, 2010). The conversation touches upon his education in Cornell and his early encounters with late architectural phenomenology in the 1980s and 1990s before turning to his efforts to historicize architectural phenomenology in his book.
Featuring: Eduardo Behrentz, Isabel Cuervo, Alejandro Echeverri, Beatriz Elena Rave Herrera, Milena Gomez Kopp, Maria Helena Botero Ospina, Jorge Otero-Pailos, Patricio del Real, and Ana Elvira Velez Villa Curated by Clara Irazabal and Alejandro de Castro Mazarro, Latin Lab, GSAPP
Featuring: Eduardo Behrentz, Isabel Cuervo, Alejandro Echeverri, Beatriz Elena Rave Herrera, Milena Gomez Kopp, Maria Helena Botero Ospina, Jorge Otero-Pailos, Patricio del Real, and Ana Elvira Velez Villa Curated by Clara Irazabal and Alejandro de Castro Mazarro, Latin Lab, GSAPP