Who defines the landscapes around us? What practices are employed as contemporary landscapes are produced? This issue argues that landscapes are made and remade through interrelations between people and the worlds around them - from geographers investigating the lives of urban wastelands to landscape architects projecting future cities, and from migrants navigating border systems to artists working with local residents. In contrast to tendencies to emphasise the physical forms of landscapes, with their potential to be redesigned and represented in drawings, this issue brings to the forefront the social constructedness of landscapes by focusing on a range of critical practices and daily actions. As conventional frames of landscape are challenged, other ways of measuring, mapping, imagining, designing, building and occupying them are revealed. For centuries, artists and designers have represented landscapes of power in paintings and have transformed them through their design proposals. But in recent years a number of researchers, designers, artists and activists have explored an expanded field of landscape, investigating populations fleeing conflict zones, reimagining cities facing ecological challenges, questioning territorial claims, and critiquing processes of urbanisation. This issue focuses on some of these individuals whose work and lives encompass a diverse range of practices, brought together through their critical redefinition of landscape relations.
Contributors: Pierre Bélanger, Harry Bix, Neil Brenner and Nikos Katsikis, Luis Callejas and Charlotte Hansson, James Corner, Gareth Doherty and Pol Fité Matamoros, Matthew Gandy, Christina Leigh Geros, Rania Ghosn and El Hadi Jazairy, Nina-Marie Lister, Richard Mosse, Kate Orff, Toya Peal, Neil Spiller, Tiago Torres Campos and Tim Waterman.
Featured practices: Advanced Landscape and Urbanism, Design Earth, East Anglia Records, Estudio Teddy Cruz + Fonna Forman, Furtherfield, James Corner Field Operations, Larissa Fassler, LCLA office, OPSYS and SCAPE.
About the Author: Ed Wall is the Academic Leader Landscape at the University of Greenwich. He is a Visiting Professor at Politecnico di Milano and City of Vienna Visiting Professor 2017 (SKuOR) for urban culture, public space and the future - urban equity and the global agenda. Ed studied landscape architecture in Manchester (MMU), urban design in New York (CUNY) and is a PhD candidate on the Cities Programme (LSE). He became a chartered landscape architect (CMLI) in 2001. He has written widely, and in 2016 he founded Testing-Ground Journal with Alex Malaescu. In 2009, Ed co-authored, with Tim Waterman, Basics Landscape Architecture: Urban Design, and in 2017 they co-edited Landscape and Agency. Ed has lectured at the University of Guadalajara, Central St. Martins, Kingston University and Alcala School of Architecture and has been a design critic at Columbia University, City College New York, the Architecture Association and the Bartlett. In 2007 he founded Project Studio. Award winning projects have been published and exhibited widely, including at: Architecture Foundation and Royal Academy, Biennale of Landscape Urbanism, London Festival of Architecture and the Van Alen Institute.