Announcing the 2020 Exhibit Columbus Symposium to take place online – New Middles: From Main Street To Megalopolis, What Is The Future of The Middle City?
Exhibit Columbus—which launched in 2016 to celebrate the design legacy of Columbus, Indiana, through its annual exploration of architecture, art, design and community—today announced its third national symposium. The 2020 Exhibit Columbus Symposium New Middles gathers thinkers, designers, architects, artists, and landscape architects to discuss the question: “What Is The Future of The Middle City?” The Symposium, which will take place virtually over six weeks beginning September 15 and running through October 29, will pose this important question from Columbus, Indiana—in the middle of the U.S. heartland and rooted in the Mississippi River watershed.
The 2020 Symposium consists of a series of conversations and online events including Thematic Conversations, presented in partnership with Dezeen, and Columbus Conversations with ongoing Public Engagement throughout the fall. The symposium considers the theme New Middles through the lens of four topic areas: Futures and Technologies, Resiliency and Climate Adaptation, Arts and Community, and Indigenous Futures and Radical Thinking. Each bi-weekly topic is structured as a call- and-response between Tuesday “Thematic Conversations” hosted by Dezeen featuring national and international thought leaders, and Thursday “Columbus Conversations” that localize the topics, bringing Miller Prize recipients into discussion with community experts and stakeholders around future forward initiatives being undertaken in Columbus during its bicentennial year.
The Thematic Conversations will feature such design leaders as: Marcus Fairs, Co-Founder and Editor in Chief of Dezeen; Iker Gill and Mimi Zeiger, 2021-21 Curators of Exhibit Columbus; and more than 15 leaders—both professionals and academics—in the the fields of architecture and design, ecology and urbanism. The Columbus Conversations will build upon and localize these discussions, and will highlight this year’s J. Irwin and Xenia S. Miller Prize recipients and members of the local community including Heather Pope, Director of Redevelopment for the City of Columbus, Cindy Frey, President of the Columbus Chamber of Commerce; and more.
“As a program, Exhibit Columbus continues to be both locally responsive and globally engaged. We are excited to launch the 2020 Symposium online and believe it will allow us to connect this theme and the story of Columbus to a much larger and international audience,” said Anne Surak, Director of Exhibit Columbus. “We’ve created each conversation to be smartly accessible to a wide variety of audiences, including, designers, artists, civic leaders, enthusiasts, and students at the university and high school levels.”
This series of conversations builds on Columbus’s role as a historic host and speculative think tank on design, asking the city and sister mid-sized cities to consider the role of design and architecture as civic catalysts, especially when faced with the most pressing issues of our time: from community health to climate change impact, from equity and social justice to emergent technology.
These dialogues serve as foundational research for all New Middles participants—a kind of Exhibition Design Brief and “Community Design Brief” that identifies topics, themes, and writings for community partners while growing exhibition participants’ understanding of Columbus’ culture and context as they conceptualize their commissioned installations for the fall 2021 exhibition. These resources will grow through the 2020-21 cycle of Exhibit Columbus, and be publicly accessible and archived through our website to allow audiences to continue learning more from this thematic cycle of programming.
For licensed architects, attending the symposium conversations will count as AIA Continuing Education Units.
Schedule
Tuesday, September 15, 2:00-3:00 pm EST
Thematic Conversation: Futures and Technologies New Middles: Futures and Technologies brings together futurists Dan Hill and Radha Mistry to discuss how strategic foresight and storytelling influences design. This conversation is premised on an idea attributed to science fiction writer William Gibson: the future is already here, it’s just not evenly distributed. What new normal realities from education and equity, to mobility and manufacturing will shape what’s next? Whose voices are represented? How might we extrapolate emergent technologies and contemporary conditions facing the Midwest into a speculative future of the middle?
Radha Mistry, Autodesk, San Francisco, CA
Dan Hill, Vinnova, Stockholm, Sweden
Moderated by Marcus Fairs, Co-Founder and Editor in Chief, Dezeen
Thursday, September 17, 12:00-1:00 pm EST
Columbus Conversation: Futures and Technologies Columbus has long been a place of invention, but how are shifts in technology and manufacturing changing our city’s future? Miller Prize recipients Jennifer Newsom and Tom Carruthers of Dream the Combine join local experts and community leaders in a dialogue about how innovation drives designs of the future.
Cindy Frey, President, Columbus Indiana Chamber of Commerce
Jennifer Newsom and Tom Carruthers, Dream The Combine, Minneapolis, MN
Moderated by Donna Sink, Rowland Design, Indianapolis, IN
Tuesday, September 29, 2:00-3:00 pm EST
Thematic Conversation: Resiliency and Climate Adaptation New Middles: Resiliency and Climate Adaptation asks designer Iñaki Alday and landscape architect Kate Orff to reflect on how their practices are responding through landscape architecture and research to local and planetary climate crises. This conversation stems from the question: How is the Mississippi Watershed and the plains ecosystems and habitat impacted by a changing climate? The COVID-19 pandemic raises issues of how might middle cities and landscapes address global health challenges. What future- oriented ecological strategies will serve middle city landscapes and communities moving forward?
Kate Orff, SCAPE, New York, NY
Iñaki Alday, Tulane University/aldayjover architecture and landscape, New Orleans, LA
Moderated by Iker Gil, 2020-21 Curator, Exhibit Columbus
Thursday, October 1, 12:00-1:00 pm EST
Columbus Conversation: Resiliency and Climate Adaptation What is Columbus’ past and future relationship with its own ecology and resiliency? Miller Prize recipients Belinda Tato and Jose Luis Vallejo of Ecosistema Urbano join Heather Pope, City of Columbus Director of Redevelopment, and landscape architect Rachel Kavathe in a dialogue that looks at Columbus’ historic relationship to its waterways and future ecological initiatives through the Riverfront Redevelopment Plan, and the introduction of pollinator parks to our community.
Rachel Kavathe, Loci Creative, Columbus, IN
Heather Pope, City of Columbus, IN
Belinda Tato and Jose Luis Vallejo, Ecosistema Urbano, Madrid/Miami, FL
Moderated by Janice Shimizu, Associate Curator, Exhibit Columbus / Ball State University
Tuesday, October 13, 2:00-3:00 pm EST
Thematic Conversation: Arts and Community New Middles: Arts and Community is a roundtable conversation between artist and design strategist De Nichols, architect and urban designer Paola Aguirre, and artist-writer-researcher Matthew Fluharty. These three will draw on their expertise to look at how arts spaces and cultural organizations are shaping the future of the middle—rural, urban, and points in-between. As communities across the middle reckon with legacies and presents marked by white supremacy and structural racism, including Jim Crow–era monuments, how can speculation through art and design help people envision equitable civic spaces? How have in the past and how will in the future diverse groups of neighborhoods, communities, and individuals come together through art, design, and creativity?
Paola Aguirre, Borderless Studio, Chicago, IL
Matthew Fluharty, Art of the Rural and M12 Studio, Winona, MN
De Nichols, Civic Creatives, St. Louis, MO
Moderated by Anne Surak, Director, Exhibit Columbus
Thursday, October 15, 12:00-1:00 pm EST
Columbus Conversation: Arts and Community How might community-led cultural initiatives bring people together today and meaningfully improve tomorrow’s civic life? Featuring Miller Prize recipients Ann Lui and Craig Reshke of Future Firm and Sam Jacob of Sam Jacob Studio in discussion with community members Jessica Schnepp and others in this conversation that highlights the ways that grassroots creative networks, Friends of the Crump Theater and NOMAD, are at the front lines of preserving cultural arts spaces, and creating platforms that amplify voices and foster creativity as community asset.
Sam Jacob, Sam Jacob Studio, London, England
Ann Lui and Craig Reschke, Future Firm, Chicago, IL
Jessica Schnepp, Friends of Crump Theatre, Columbus, IN
NOMAD representative, Columbus, IN
Moderated by Bryony Roberts, Bryony Roberts Studio, New York, NY
Tuesday, October 27, 2:00-3:00 pm EST
Thematic Conversation: Indigenous Futures and Radical Thinking New Middles: Indigenous Futures and Radical Thinking is a roundtable between designer Chris Cornelius, The Land Institute Founder Wes Jackson, artist/architect Joar Nango, and speculative artist and designer Ash Eliza Smith. A long timeline is central to this conversation, which asks what are lessons, past and future, of this land and indigenous design? How might alternative voices and perspectives in relations to land, agriculture, and ways of making reimagine North American narratives?
Chris Cornelius (Oneida), studio: indigenous, Milwaukee, WI
Wes Jackson, The Land Institute, Topeka KS
Joar Nango (Sámi), FFB, Alta, Finland
Ash Eliza Smith, Carson Center of Emerging Media Arts, Lincoln NE
Moderated by Mimi Zeiger, 2020-21 Curator, Exhibit Columbus
Thursday, October 29, 12:00-1:00 pm EST
Columbus Conversation: Indigenous Futures and Radical Thinking Whose voices shape an equitable future for Columbus? Miller Prize recipient Olalekan Jeyifous joins community leaders in a discussion that addresses how collaboration, alternative histories, and multiple narratives might play a role in the design of an inclusive future.
Olalekan Jeyifous, Brooklyn, NY
Columbus community members
Moderated by Scott Shoemaker (Miami Tribe of Oklahoma), Eiteljorg Museum, Indianapolis, IN