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On Auschwitz and The Evidence Room (pt. 2) / Anne Bordeleau and Donald McKay
Architecture Off-Centre
English - May 05, 2022 17:53 - 1 hour - 91.3 MB - ★★★★★ - 4 ratingsDesign Arts Science Social Sciences design politics architecture cityplanning landscape urbandesign Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Self-explanatory in its nomenclature, The Evidence Room was first presented at the 2016 Venice Biennale as a room with architectural evidence from Auschwitz to assert the existence of the gas chambers used for committing genocide in the Nazi concentration camp. It presents three monuments – a door, a wall hatch and ladder, and a gas column along with a number of plaster casts as proofs of the crimes against humanity and underscores the culpability of architects in creating these instruments of murder.
Anne Bordeleau and Donald McKay are two of the four principals who worked on The Evidence Room. Anne is an architect, a historian and professor at Waterloo Architecture. Her research interests include the epistemology of the architectural project, as well as the historiographical and practical bearing of investigating the relations between architecture and time.
Donald McKay, Professor Emeritus, served as a full-time faculty at Waterloo Architecture until 2018. Currently living between France and Canada, McKay is developing A Photographic Atlas of Cimetière du Père Lachaise, writing, and serving as managing editor of CHALK BOOKS.
Details about The Evidence Room - https://evidenceroomfoundation.com/