Hip-Hop Architecture makes its way to Los Angeles this summer
By Josh Niland|
Wednesday, May 24, 2023
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The notable Close to the Edge: The Birth of Hip-Hop Architecture exhibition, curated by architect, curator, and Director of the Master of Urban Design program at UNC Charlotte, Sekou Cooke, will travel to Los Angeles this summer with help from the Southern California Chapter of the National Organization of Minority Architects (SoCalNOMA).
Cooke has stated: “In aggregate, these projects reveal a collective vision for alternative forms of expression and practice, and serve to formalize work created over almost 30 years into an emerging canon of Hip-Hop Architecture.”
The show had previously been on display in New York, Minneapolis, Charlotte, and Atlanta, and will now occupy space in the historic Helms Design Center in Culver City from June until the end of September.
Since 2018, the traveling exhibition has showcased the work of more than 20 designers and architects, the exhibition traces the development of the movement through key figures such as Nina Cooke John, Michael Ford, Craig Wilkins, and Cooke himself over the past quarter-century plus.
The exhibition is being put on in partnership with Los Angeles’ Architecture & Design (A+D) Museum and is looking for volunteers and additional sponsors. Interested parties can sign up via the museum's Pledge Form link here. Information about Cooke's work and other curatorial projects can be found here.
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2 Comments
josegamez · May 24, 23 9:40 PM
Cooke is the Director of UNC Charlotte’s Master of Urban Design program. Not Syracuse. Please update the article.
Donna Sink · May 25, 23 4:07 PM
So it doesn't get lost in the text, here is the link to the interview Archinect Sessions did with Sekou Cooke. I re-listened to it recently, it's really full of good stuff! https://archinect.com/news/art...
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