REINVENTING HARBOUR CITIES - URBAN PLANNING AND ART IN PUBLIC SPACE
Where: Reykjavik, Iceland. Nordic House
When: 25 April, 6p.m.-9p.m. and 10. May, 10a.m. - 5p.m.
Participants: Adriaan Geuze, West 8 (Rotterdam) | Charles Renfro (t.b.c.), Diller Scofidio + Renfro (New York) | James Corner (t.b.c), Field Operations (New York) | Jürgen Bruns-Berentelg, HafenCity (Hamburg) | Kjetil Thorsen, Snøhetta (Oslo) | Ólafur Elíasson (Berlin, Copenhagen) | Ute Meta Bauer, MIT (Cambridge) | Vito Acconci (New York)
The new Museum of Liverpool that has just opened on...
Harbour cities have long been formed by industrialization, shaped by international trade and constantly confronted with the untamed power of the ocean. Today, these cities compete on a global stage as they create new identities, new images to attract foreign business and tourists. As the industrial zones of business harbours are moving out of city centers to the outskirts of towns, prime waterfront areas are opening up for the development of commercial, residential, and leisure spaces. It is about revitalization of entire districts, a constant restructuring of city life, rejuvenating individual and community engagement with and within the urban environment, or in short: Reinventing Harbour Cities. Culture—measured in part by avant-gardist concepts and perspectives, architectural attractions and artist works—plays a significant role in creating cities’ new identities. Recently built concert houses and museums are emergent landmarks, parks and squares have become the stages for various art forms and performances, and all are important links to the social life of inhabitants and visitors alike.
Reykjavik, the largest city in Iceland and the world’s northernmost capital, has seen enormous economic and cultural growth in recent decades. As the harbour and public spaces within the city continue to develop, policymakers, corporations, urban planners, artists, and individuals have a shared responsibility to discuss how Reykjavik’s future will be shaped for all who live and work here.
This international conference aims to open such a discussion by focusing on urban development and the role of art in public spaces of harbour cities. The development, privatization, and changing identities of cities that have grown as a result of their seaside locations present critical challenges for urban planners as well as for artists living and working within these cities. As private companies and investors have increasing power in terms of reinventing urban landscapes both physically and culturally, this presents a crucial opportunity for artists to reconsider their own potential to help shape public space.
The conference will be organized by CIA.IS – Center for Icelandic Art in cooperation with Listaháskóli Íslands (Iceland Academy of the Arts) and the Nordic House. With generous support from: The City of Reykjavík, Icelandic Ministry of Culture, Portus Group, Goethe-Institut, SAS Hotel, 101 Hotel.
Program:
Christian Schoen (CIA.IS) with
Jóhannes Þórdarson (LHÍ, Dept. for Architecture and Design) and Kristján Steingrímur Jónsson (LHÍ, Dept. for Visual Arts)
Coordinator: Shauna Laurel Jones (CIA.IS)