IoA Sliver Lecture Series Architecture and Technology: Martin Tamke
Martin Tamke
IoA Sliver Lecture Series
Architecture and Technology
Martin Tamke is Associate Professor at the Centre
for Information Technology and Architecture (CITA) in Copenhagen.
He is pursuing a design led
research in the interface and implications of computational design and its materialisation. He joined the newly founded research
centre CITA in 2006 and shaped its design based research practice. Projects on new design and fabrication for wood and fiber
based materials led to a series of research projects and digitally fabri-cated demonstrators that explore an archi-tectural
practice engaged with bespoke materials and behaviour.
Martin initiated and conducted research projects in the
emerging field of digital production in the building industry and architectural computa-tion. The research connects academic
and industrial partners from architecture and engineering, computer and material science and the crafts. Currently he is involved
in the EU framework 7 project DURAARK, the Danish funded four year Complex Modelling research project and the adapt-r and
InnoChain PhD research networks.
“Technology is the answer ... but what was the question?” (Cedric Price,
1966)
The Greek term téchne, is a term which up until today in European philosophy, coined the notion of Art, Science
and Craft. The history of technology could be described as the history of inventions in form of tools and techniques. At the
same time, it is closely connected to the history of science, economics and social agendas - a history of the very human condition
itself. Weather viewed through the topic of energy, information, productivity, machines, or social development, today most
of the world is accommodating a “technically civilized life” to some extent.
“It is the moral, economic, and political
choices we make, not the machines we use”, Lewis Mumford argues, “that have produced a capitalist industrialized machine-oriented
economy, whose imperfect fruits serve the majority so imperfectly.”
This years’s IoA Sliver Lecture series "Architecture
and Technology“ is trying to gather professionals to present versatile notions of technology and its impact on the discipline
of Art and Architecture. The invited lecturers will present their take on technology and reflect on the potentials which it
bears or what conventions it questions and how to approach those creatively/artistically.
Upcoming IoA Sliver
Lectures:
May 23: Liam Young, SCI-Arc
June 6: Ruth Schnell, Martin Kusch, Angewandte