Martino Stierli is The Philip Johnson Chief Curator of Architecture and Design at The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York. He is the author of Las Vegas in the Rearview Mirror (2013), and Montage and the Metropolis (2018). Mechtild Widrich is Professor of Art History, Theory, and Criticism at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Widrich is the author of Performative Monuments (2014) and The Sites of History (2022).
‘Marking out a knowingly complex field of contemporary scholarship on “participation” in art and architecture, this volume is testament not only to the multiple valences of the term – artistic, social, political, civic, urban, economic, and more – and the distinct contexts in which participatory acts and forms of agency have appeared or been strategically mobilized, but also of the term’s rich and ongoing potential as a critical and artistic lens. Inviting us to continue to “think” through participation, it will be a welcome addition to contemporary debates on the ethical and political dimensions of art and architecture’. * Felicity D Scott, Associate Professor of Architecture and Director of the Program in Critical, Curatorial and Conceptual Practices in Architecture, Columbia University * ‘Intervening in vibrant debates on participation in the public sphere, Participation in Art and Architecture ranges widely over continents and cases: Sarajevo under siege, Sao Paulo between moving bodies and opened urbanism, the Acropolis and architectural erotics, Google Street View, Cairo, Mexico, and various European and American heterotopias. Tactics are examined in exhilarating historical detail, as theatrical and performative possession converts the spaces of the state into sites of contestation, and as design from the bottom up, immaterial labor, and theaters of memory are mobilized by users on the ground. This provocative collection hybridizes the disciplinary concerns of art and architecture, enriching them both’. * Caroline A. Jones, Professor of Art History, History Theory and Criticism of Architecture and Art Program, MIT School of Architecture and Planning *