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Miami

Cooper Jacoby

Stragglers

Dec 01, 2019

Jan 09, 2020

Today’s space-race stories are recapitulations of colonial projects, masked as solutionism and utopic migration. The first world dreams of new extractive frontiers and their futures of terraformed, air-locked enclaves are unevenly distributed. They split the atmospheres
of the privatized and selectively fertilized from the extracted and exhausted. As much as they are aggregates of particles and mol- ecules, these atmospheres are imaginaries—moods at social scale, narrative bubbles enveloping populations.

Modeling these enclosures, Stragglers stages its architecture as a closed circuit of respiration and emission. Predictive scents are piped into and diffused in one space; sucked out and exhausted in another. The building is an organ constantly exhaling and inhaling, producing and dumping.

Silos

Initiated as a collaborative research laboratory, the International Space Station (ISS) now acts as an outpost for the commercializa- tion of outer space. Sustaining the longest, continuous human pres- ence off earth since its launch in 1998, the station is a life support system for its inhabitants. Generating its own oxygen, the ISS tests how biotic processes grow, regenerate or fail in other habitats.

The entry and exit into the closed world of the ISS is a pressurized airlock which separates the hospitable from the inhospitable. Like the Global Seed Vault in Svalbard, Norway, the station is a bunker where the reproduction of life is sealed and suspended. Though ostensibly sealed, both spaces are subject to leakage, contaminants, and unseen exchanges. After the “Old World” brought it’s diseases with its crops to the “New World” in the Columbian Exchange, the skin and hair particles of astronauts clogged NASA’s early space simulators. Using air-flow software that renders how oxygen fills volumes, Silos presents the airlock as a similarly unstable architec- ture, a body that is not sterilized and static but instead subject to deflation and unmanaged life.

Stressors

Limp hammers struggle to strike deformed alarm bells, which have been overfed with electricity and minerals. The gears slowly turn but the warped physics of the mechanism fail to generate a sound. Framed in the high-visibility colors of ambulances, the emergency of the alarm is muted, incessant and normalized.

Ideopaths and Extremeophiles

While it usually burrows deep into the human body, an endoscopic camera travels in Ideopaths and Extremeophiles through a series of architectural arteries and clogged infrastructures—air conditioner filters, shower drains, electrical conduits, car engines. Excerpts skimmed from online medical forums of self-diagnosed conditions with unknown causes trail through the passages. They speak of insides projected onto space and speculate on environmental factors at the microbial level. Reshuffling causalities and scales, perceptions and prognoses, access or denial of care orients one’s semiotic world.

Pollinators

Air-borne particles both fertilize and choke atmospheres: pollen travels from flowers’ stamens to other flowers; brake pads and tires grind into a micro-dust that diffuses past the roads they travel. Volatile compounds bind to the senses. Smell is the perception of this traffic.

Synthesized from petroleum, formed into tires, worn out and then recycled into a colored gravel for landscaping— rubber, is one of these traveling particulates. Like many polymers, it moves from the planet’s bowels to its top layer, circulating and accumulating. In its recycled form, it’s meant to resemble mulch and fertilizer. Some call this green. Playgrounds and landfills are typically surfaced with these squishy, compacted bits.