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Response by FA and Forensis to Tageszeitung article

13 Mar 2024

Ovaherero Traditional Authority (OTA) and the Nama Traditional Leaders Association (NTLA) statement of solidarity with Palestinians and those working in their defence in Germany

16 Jan 2024

First Solo Exhibition from the Al-Haq Forensic Architecture Investigation Unit Opens at UCSC

12 Jan 2024

Eyal Weizman at the Berlin Biennale

23 Jun 2022

Forensic Architecture stands with Palestine (Whitworth exhibition statement)

17 Aug 2021

Statement on the IOPC’s refusal to re-open the IPCC investigation into the killing of Mark Duggan

01 Jun 2021

Introduction to EW Hrant Dink Memorial Lecture by Eyal Weizman, Boğaziçi University

10 Feb 2021

An update on the case of Tahir Elçi’s killing

21 Oct 2020

Relaunching our newsletter

18 May 2020

A Note on the Covid-19 Pandemic

15 May 2020

For Michael Sorkin

29 Mar 2020

Joint statement on the ongoing violence at the Greece-Turkey border

05 Mar 2020

A statement of solidarity with the UCU strike action

20 Feb 2020

"Homeland Security algorithm” prevents me from joining you today: A statement from Eyal Weizman

20 Feb 2020

Douma and the OPCW leaks

07 Feb 2020

A statement regarding our exhibition in the Khalil Sakakini Cultural Center, Ramallah

31 Dec 2019

A statement on the fifth anniversary of the enforced disappearances in Ayotzinapa

26 Sep 2019

Statement from Forensic Architecture and Praxis Films concerning the 2019 Whitney Biennial

23 Jul 2019

Eyal Weizman elected Fellow of the British Academy

19 Jul 2019

MatchKing: Warren B. Kanders, Sierra Bullets, and the Israel Defense Forces

14 May 2019

TRIPLE-CHASER: Forensic Architecture and Praxis Films at the 2019 Whitney Biennial

13 May 2019

Announcing Mtriage

29 Apr 2019

Statement from Forensic Architecture on the arrest of Julian Assange

16 Apr 2019

Forensic Architecture will exhibit at the Whitney Biennial 2019

27 Feb 2019

New: Current Vacancies Page

16 Oct 2018

Press coverage of Turner Prize 2018 announcement

27 Apr 2018

Forensic Architecture is nominated for the 2018 Turner Prize

26 Apr 2018

Forensic Architecture wins 2018 Princess Margriet Award for Culture

24 Apr 2018

New project launched on the Grenfell Tower fire

21 Mar 2018

Forensic Architecture a Finalist for the Vera List Center Prize for Art and Politics 2016-2018

31 Oct 2017

Our Response to the Hessen Parliamentary Inquiry

19 Sep 2017

Gallery: Forensic Architecture exhibition opening at The MUAC

12 Sep 2017

Ayotzinapa Case Launch

06 Sep 2017

FA Summer 2017 Newsletter

11 Aug 2017

Eyal Weizman to deliver 18th Neelan Tiruchelvam Memorial Lecture

17 Jul 2017

New preface to "Hollow Land" marks 50th anniversary of occupation

17 Jul 2017

New Exhibition Catalogue from Forensic Architecture

10 Jul 2017

Forensic Architecture selected as a Finalist for the INDEX: Award 2017

19 Jun 2017

Forensic Architecture accepts Peabody-Facebook Award at ceremony in New York City

30 May 2017

Listen Now: Eyal Weizman interviewed for The Funambulist

17 May 2017

Kassel_6.April.2006: German Press Coverage

04 May 2017

Forensic Architecture featured in Architect Magazine

02 May 2017

Saydnaya wins Peabody-Facebook Futures of Media Award for Interactive Documentary

02 May 2017

Saydnaya Wins Digital Dozen 2016 Award for Breakthroughs in Storytelling

12 Apr 2017

Forensic Architecture Featured in Wired Magazine

02 Jan 2016

Forensic Architecture in Mondoweiss

16 Mar 2015

James Burton reviews 'Forensis'

04 Mar 2015

Battir Wins Case Against the Wall

04 Mar 2015

Alberto Toscano Reviews 'Least of All Possible Evils'

04 Mar 2015

'Forensis' Reviewed in Artforum

04 Mar 2015

'Forensis' Reviewed in Radical Philosophy

02 Mar 2015

Forensic Architecture in the New York Times

10 Dec 2014

"Where the Drones Strike" wins Bronze Lovie Award

14 Oct 2014

Liquid Traces: The Left-to-Die Boat Case

22 Sep 2014

Forensic Architecture in the New Statesman

16 Sep 2014

The Architecture of Violence

05 Sep 2014

Forensic Aesthetics Masters Series

13 Jun 2014

Law on Trial - Panel Discussion on "Forensic Futures"

13 Jun 2014

"Timely Measures" - Symposium at SOAS, University of London

13 Jun 2014

Forensic Aesthetics Exhibited in Krakow

27 May 2014

New Research on Drone Targets in Pakistan

27 May 2014

"Constructions of Truth In A Drone Age": Forensis/HKW reviewed in Rhizome

01 Apr 2014

Forensis and HKW Press Coverage

24 Mar 2014

The Architecture of Public Truth – Conference at HKW

11 Mar 2014

UN SRCT final drone strikes report and platform released

11 Mar 2014

FORENSIS exhibition opening at HKW Berlin

10 Mar 2014

FA / SITU investigation into drone strikes informs report presented at UN

25 Oct 2013

Modelling Kivalina nominated for Human Rights Tulip Award

11 Oct 2013

Documentrary on Omarska

17 Aug 2013

Forensic Oceanography: Addendum to the Report on the Left-to-Die Boat

18 Jun 2013

Burden of Proof - On Contemporary Art and Responsibility

25 Mar 2013

UN SRCT Launches Drones Investigation

24 Jan 2013

10th Human Rights Festival - Interview with Thomas Keenan

14 Dec 2012

London Review of Books: Eyal Weizman's "Short Cuts"

24 Nov 2012

The Left-To-Die Boat - BBC Documentary

29 Oct 2012

The Last Pictures - Talk by Trevor Paglen

25 Oct 2012

Reading Images 01: Socialist Architecture

16 Oct 2012

Book Review by Joshua Simon: "A Culture of Things" in Domus

10 Oct 2012

Architecture as Political Intervention: Interview with Eyal Weizman

21 Sep 2012

Coverage: Geographical Imaginations

08 Aug 2012

Omarska Concentration Camp

06 Aug 2012

MARA at dOCUMENTA (13)

31 Jul 2012

Bruno Latour at the Centre for Research Architecture

25 Jul 2012

Memorial in Exile - Press Responses

20 Jul 2012

Syria: Torture Centres Revealed

03 Jul 2012

WatchTheMed Platform

02 Jul 2012

openDemocracy: "A memorial in exile in London’s Olympics: orbits of responsibility"

02 Jul 2012

A Memorial in Exile - Press Conference

20 Jun 2012

Forensic Oceanography Report - Press Responses

01 May 2012

Forensic Oceanography Report Released

11 Apr 2012

"Mengele's Skull" in Longform's guide to war criminal stories

21 Jan 2012

Forensic Oceanography report published in The Guardian

11 Apr 2011

Previous ArticleNext Article

For Michael Sorkin

29 Mar 2020

Locked down in stunned, helpless isolation with the exit sign switched off, I heard that Michael had died, without a warning or a goodbye. The contemporary prophet of public space and urban conviviality died in a hospital — one of the last places where physical proximity is still possible, indeed, unavoidable. The virus diagrams the kind of social interaction that Michael championed in a vibrant city that has now nearly totally closed down, the price of human contact having become too high.

On the evening when the horrible message arrived, the people of our London neighbourhood, seeking some form of communion, stood each at their own window to clap for the medical workers like those who were by Michael’s side in his last days, risking their lives to try to save his and ours. Michael was our family friend—Alma, my daughter, was spoilt being his god-daughter—and so we were at our window, simultaneously sobbing, clapping and hitting pots with wooden spoons, giving Michael the send-off we thought he’d appreciate. The rest of the mourning must be done in isolation—and my heart goes out to Joan who cannot benefit from the proximity of those that loved them dearly.

Michael was also my architectural godfather. In a number of small but crucially corrective interventions, he put me on my path. He read my books when they were still drafts, giving comments, helping to find titles and publishers. Only a few weeks ago he took the time to campaign for me when I was not allowed to travel to the United States, just as he often did for others less privileged.

We met in 1994, when, as a young admiring student at the Architectural Association, I was one of those campaigning for him to be the new director of the school. When Michael finally won the vote and got the post, he decided to decline it, opting instead to pursue his own singular path: he set up his studio, founding the research organisation, Terreform, the publishing imprint UR (Urban Research); and became the Director of Graduate Design at the City College, where he was Distinguished Professor. In short he constructed on his own a polymorphous entity through which to realise various aspects of his wide urban visions. At the same time, he continued to advocate his ideas in a stream of essays and books, and to sketch them in numerous visionary schemes and drawings. (Many of the latter are still unpublished, but Joan assures me that they will be coming out soon.)

Drawing on the vocabulary of 1970s New York activism, he expanded the spectrum of architectural and urban action: sit-ins, town-hall-meetings, petitions, appeals, the writing of codes and bills of rights. Learning from his struggles with the kind of New York developers that now run the US, he brought his sense of urban justice, and feisty activism to Palestine, Northern Ireland and the US-Mexico border. Since architecture was part of the problem, it owed a certain debt and Michael encouraged architects to pay up by inventing solutions.

In 1998, an impish trickster, Michael seduced a group of Palestinian and Israeli architects and other intellectuals to a conference on occupied and segregated Jerusalem at a lake-side villa in Bellagio, Italy. It was here that I first met Suad Amiry, Rashid Khalidi, Omar Yusuf, and Ariella Azoulay. We listened together as Michael insisted, more optimistically than most of us, that we could use architecture to do something about this injustice, although he understood that, by itself, unaccompanied by the fundamental political changes we must all struggle for, architecture could do very little. His subsequent book-projects on Palestine “The Next Jerusalem”, “Against the Wall”, and “Open Gaza” demonstrate what he meant.

He was right, at a time when the grip of architecture tightens all around us, when the builders of walls, towers, and digital surveillance systems are in charge, and when authoritarianism is using the global health emergency to encroach on our civil liberties—we all need to channel something of Michael and continue the fight. He will now bring his to gods and angels. Go on Michael, give them hell!

Eyal Weizman
29.3.2020

ClosePrevious ArticleNext Article

For Michael Sorkin

29 Mar 2020

Locked down in stunned, helpless isolation with the exit sign switched off, I heard that Michael had died, without a warning or a goodbye. The contemporary prophet of public space and urban conviviality died in a hospital — one of the last places where physical proximity is still possible, indeed, unavoidable. The virus diagrams the kind of social interaction that Michael championed in a vibrant city that has now nearly totally closed down, the price of human contact having become too high.

On the evening when the horrible message arrived, the people of our London neighbourhood, seeking some form of communion, stood each at their own window to clap for the medical workers like those who were by Michael’s side in his last days, risking their lives to try to save his and ours. Michael was our family friend—Alma, my daughter, was spoilt being his god-daughter—and so we were at our window, simultaneously sobbing, clapping and hitting pots with wooden spoons, giving Michael the send-off we thought he’d appreciate. The rest of the mourning must be done in isolation—and my heart goes out to Joan who cannot benefit from the proximity of those that loved them dearly.

Michael was also my architectural godfather. In a number of small but crucially corrective interventions, he put me on my path. He read my books when they were still drafts, giving comments, helping to find titles and publishers. Only a few weeks ago he took the time to campaign for me when I was not allowed to travel to the United States, just as he often did for others less privileged.

We met in 1994, when, as a young admiring student at the Architectural Association, I was one of those campaigning for him to be the new director of the school. When Michael finally won the vote and got the post, he decided to decline it, opting instead to pursue his own singular path: he set up his studio, founding the research organisation, Terreform, the publishing imprint UR (Urban Research); and became the Director of Graduate Design at the City College, where he was Distinguished Professor. In short he constructed on his own a polymorphous entity through which to realise various aspects of his wide urban visions. At the same time, he continued to advocate his ideas in a stream of essays and books, and to sketch them in numerous visionary schemes and drawings. (Many of the latter are still unpublished, but Joan assures me that they will be coming out soon.)

Drawing on the vocabulary of 1970s New York activism, he expanded the spectrum of architectural and urban action: sit-ins, town-hall-meetings, petitions, appeals, the writing of codes and bills of rights. Learning from his struggles with the kind of New York developers that now run the US, he brought his sense of urban justice, and feisty activism to Palestine, Northern Ireland and the US-Mexico border. Since architecture was part of the problem, it owed a certain debt and Michael encouraged architects to pay up by inventing solutions.

In 1998, an impish trickster, Michael seduced a group of Palestinian and Israeli architects and other intellectuals to a conference on occupied and segregated Jerusalem at a lake-side villa in Bellagio, Italy. It was here that I first met Suad Amiry, Rashid Khalidi, Omar Yusuf, and Ariella Azoulay. We listened together as Michael insisted, more optimistically than most of us, that we could use architecture to do something about this injustice, although he understood that, by itself, unaccompanied by the fundamental political changes we must all struggle for, architecture could do very little. His subsequent book-projects on Palestine “The Next Jerusalem”, “Against the Wall”, and “Open Gaza” demonstrate what he meant.

He was right, at a time when the grip of architecture tightens all around us, when the builders of walls, towers, and digital surveillance systems are in charge, and when authoritarianism is using the global health emergency to encroach on our civil liberties—we all need to channel something of Michael and continue the fight. He will now bring his to gods and angels. Go on Michael, give them hell!

Eyal Weizman
29.3.2020