"Looking for blackspace" was something we wrote in China. We first used the term Blackspace as part of a group project whist students at Edinburgh University. In the project, it was our intention to reveal spatial potentials inherent in the fabric of the city. We made a series of recordings or maps which were then playfully manipulated to see what happended. Both processes used the creases and cracks within the recorded surfaces of the city as the instructions to try and unfold (and reveal) the city.
But Cities do not necessarily unfold! In order to physically achieve a flattening of the complex and continuous matrix of a city’s surface, an additional conceptual ingredient was necessary. Blackspace represented the non-mechanical, or smooth, matter required to realise this relatively crude and abstract unfolding operation. In the project, Blackspace was interesting for being the surplus physical product of the sequence of mappings performed on representations of the site. Blackspace was the generated difference, holding the potential for architecture and built form.
In subsequent projects, our understanding of Blackspace has developed to no longer rely simply on mechanical techniques and operational processes to reveal itself as physical matter. Blackspace has matured to encompass an aura of illumination, spilling light onto a previously concealed set of possibilities. Blackspace now holds a conceptual value as the space of creative generation. It is understood as the territory of the imagination, available through both observational and operational generative processes; mappings, readings, writings and interpretations. These interpretations remain free, exploratory, intuitive, nonlinear, and ultimately, playful. Blackspace is the unspecific realm of experimentation drawn from the observed conditions of architectural contexts, problems and projects.
Looking for Blackspace is conceptually tied to the pleasure of roaming within the strangeness of the real: the differences, seams, edges, scars, intensities, and tensions present in the quagmire of banality that is so often the fabric of the contemporary city. Blackspace is thus re-understood as the potential drawn from cloaking the everyday in a new guise. We revel in the beauty and potential of reading the peculiar and accidental events, forms, and spaces of the everyday. The collection of work held within these pages studies the beauty that exists within the accidents of the city.
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