Mise-en-Scène—Design Research Through Multiple Lenses
Chris REED, Alysoun WRIGHT
Mise-en-Scène—Design Research Through Multiple Lenses
Mise-en-Scène is a design research project in the form of a book that expands the ways in which we think about the creative roles of publication and communication, and about our connections as a discipline to the issues and world around us. Taking from its title, Mise-en-Scène is an arrangement of the actors and sceneries that constitute our cities and lives.
This project is characterized by four features. Communication—Distinct from a design monograph, Mise-en-Scène is a collaboration between landscape architect Chris Reed and photojournalist Mike Belleme, directed towards a general audience. Arrangement—An arrangement of photographs, drawings, models, sketches, essays, literary excerpts, and community engagement quotes from designers, activists, and ecologists, offering greater multiplicity to the narrative and provoking new associations across cities, projects, and experiences. Perspective—A reflection of how Stoss Landscape Urbanism observes, investigates, and engages with our urban landscapes. Opportunity—Mise-en-Scène puts forth a new model of integrating interdisciplinary perspectives, as well as public audiences, within the formation of design research.
Built and speculative works, from Reed and the practice of Stoss, spatialize how these conditions coalesce—whether at the scale of a bench or the entirety of the city fabric. And through a foregrounding of human connection, rather than design, Belleme’s photography elucidates both the quotidian and fantastical occupation of these urban landscapes.
Urban Landscapes / Public Space / Cities / Photography / Landscape Architecture / Communication
[1] |
Reed, C., & Belleme, M. (2021). Mise-en-Scène: The Lives and Afterlives of Urban Landscapes. ORO Editions.
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[2] |
Cole, T. (2017). Blind Spot. Random House.
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[3] |
Jackson, J. (1980). The Necessity for Ruins: And Other Topics. University of Massachusetts Press.
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[4] |
Jackson, J. (1986). Discovering the Vernacular Landscape. Yale University Press.
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[5] |
Corner, J. (1996). Taking Measures Across the American Landscape. Yale University Press.
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[6] |
Misrach, R., & Orff, K. (2012). Petrochemical America. Aperture.
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[7] |
Maltzan, M. (2011). No More Play: Conversations on Urban Speculation in Los Angeles and Beyond. Hatje Cantz.
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