Screen-based images of domestic architecture are omnipresent, and constitute a historical legacy of how the field is represented over time: its dreams and fantasies, but also its stereotypes, discrepancies, inequalities, and segregations. Considering the onscreen image as a space of fiction that’s also a testament to what it omits, Luísa Sol proposes an atlas of the audiovisual imaginary of domestic architecture. Architectures of Inclusion and Exclusion would enable the detection of underrepresentations, while also formulating a demand for a wider narration of architecture.
Architectures of Inclusion and Exclusion would enable the detection of underrepresentations, while also formulating a demand for a wider narration of architecture.