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Architecture as a Medium

2019

Architecture as a Medium

2019

[ # ]

LOG-19-ARC-AM

LOG-19-ARC-AM

Project Details

Name

Architecture as a Medium

Category

Event

Workshop

Poster

Design

Year

2019

2019

Location

Berlin, Germany

Berlin, Germany

Team

Eleonora Popovska

and Aleksandar Vrangaloski as Archilog, with Gunnar Hartmann

About

How does architecture, obtain its context and significance?

How does architecture, obtain its context and significance?

[ Overview ]

Project Archive

“A tone of voice or a look in another’s eyes can activate powerful implicit memories. The person experiencing this type of memory may believe that he is just reacting to something in the present, remaining completely in the dark about what the rush of feelings that flood his mind and body really represents. Implicit memory is responsible for much of human behavior, its workings all the more influential because unconscious.”

― Gabor Maté, Scattered

“It’s a subtle thing, freedom. It takes effort; it takes attention and focus to not act something like an automaton. Although we do have freedom, we exercise it only when we strive for awareness, when we are conscious not just of the content of the mind but also of the mind itself as a process.’
We may say, then, that in the world of the psyche, freedom is a relative concept: the power to choose exists only when our automatic mechanisms are subject to those brain systems that are able to maintain conscious awareness. A person experiences greater or less freedom from one situation to the next, from one interaction to the next, from one moment to the next. Anyone whose automatic brain mechanisms habitually run in overdrive has diminished capacity for free decision making, especially if the parts of the brain that facilitate conscious choice are impaired or underdeveloped.”

― Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts

“It’s a subtle thing, freedom. It takes effort; it takes attention and focus to not act something like an automaton. Although we do have freedom, we exercise it only when we strive for awareness, when we are conscious not just of the content of the mind but also of the mind itself as a process.’
We may say, then, that in the world of the psyche, freedom is a relative concept: the power to choose exists only when our automatic mechanisms are subject to those brain systems that are able to maintain conscious awareness. A person experiences greater or less freedom from one situation to the next, from one interaction to the next, from one moment to the next. Anyone whose automatic brain mechanisms habitually run in overdrive has diminished capacity for free decision making, especially if the parts of the brain that facilitate conscious choice are impaired or underdeveloped.”

― Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts

[ Discover more ]

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Check out the Log! A record of my creative journey spanning over 15+ years, encompassing a curated selection of work, each project a chapter with its own unique story to tell. The archive aims to reflect the ebb and flow of my creative output in a transparent, chronological, and structured library, seeking an answer to the ultimate question: Who am I?—for we know, the answer to that inquiry is not 42.


Step in, explore, and if you feel inspired by what you see, let's create something meaningful together.

Check out the Log! A record of my creative journey spanning over 15+ years, encompassing a curated selection of work, each project a chapter with its own unique story to tell. The archive aims to reflect the ebb and flow of my creative output in a transparent, chronological, and structured library, seeking an answer to the ultimate question: Who am I?—for we know, the answer to that inquiry is not 42.


Step in, explore, and if you feel inspired by what you see, let's create something meaningful together.

Check out the Log! A record of my creative journey spanning over 15+ years, encompassing a curated selection of work, each project a chapter with its own unique story to tell. The archive aims to reflect the ebb and flow of my creative output in a transparent, chronological, and structured library, seeking an answer to the ultimate question: Who am I?—for we know, the answer to that inquiry is not 42.


Step in, explore, and if you feel inspired by what you see, let's create something meaningful together.