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Alejandro G. Alonso, born in Havana, 1935. Graduated from Havana University. art historian, art critic, journalist and curator. Published extensively on Cuban art and architecture. Deputy director and Cuban art specialist in the National Museum of Fine Arts in Havana for ten years. Director of the National Museum of Contemporary Cuban Ceramics in Havana since 1990. President of the Comission for the Ceramics Biennale in Havana since 1991. JOVIS published: HAVANA – The Sleeping Beauty/Photographs by Bodo Tuengler/With an essay by Alejandro Alonso. |
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Dr. Marvin Altner, study of art history, German, philosophy and psychology in Göttingen, Berlin and New York. 2002, doctorate at the FU Berlin. Until 2004, academic assistant at Hamburg Kunsthalle. Until 2005, deputy head of the fine art department in the Cultural Offices of Hamburg. Since 1991, art mediation at the State Museums of Berlin. Foundation of an office in conjunction with Ellen Kobe: FLORA 16—Office for Art and Communication. Since 2008, research post at the German Historical Museum Berlin. JOVIS published: Neue Kunst in den neuen Kammern and GLEISDREIECK BERLIN 2012 – Kunst im öffentlichen Raum. |
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Paul Andreas, art historian, architecture and design journalist, since 2007 press officer at the DAM, Frankfurt. Author of numerous articles, radio and TV features on architecture and design, in particular on the Japanese scene. Lives in Dusseldorf. JOVIS published:
Takaharu + Yui Tezuka. Erinnerte Zukunft. |
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Arakawa, architect and poet; has worked with Madeline Gins since 1963. The two founded the “Architectural Body Research Foundation”. JOVIS published: Niemals sterben!! |
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Prof. Dr. Jürgen Aring, geographer and city planner. Owner of the “Büro für Angewandte Geographie” (Studio for Applied Geography) since 2002. Professor at Kassel University since 2004. Studied geography at the universities of Münster and Oslo, doctorate from the University of Oldenburg. JOVIS published: Regiopolen. |
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Together with Alfred Kerr and Alfred Polgar, the journalist and writer Victor Auburtin was, until the early 1920s, one of the “gods” of the Berlin cultural and literary news media. His elegant causeries appeared in the “Berliner Tageblatt” and “Simplicissimus” and also in a number of books. Kurt Tucholsky recommended Auburtin’s genre pictures; Walther Kiaulehn wrote thus of him: “He was not a pessimist, but he was a sceptic, and derided people – but did so with absolute tenderness.” JOVIS published: Victor Auburtin – Vom Menschen zum Seestern. |
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Arnold Bartetzky, Dr. phil., studied History of Art, German Philology, and Philosophy in Freiburg i. Br., Tübingen, and Cracow. Researcher at the Centre for the History and Culture of East Central Europe (Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum Geschichte und Kultur Ostmitteleuropas) in Leipzig since 1995. Teaching experience at the Universities of Leipzig and Jena. Currently involved in a research project on "Imaginations of Urbanity in the 20th Century." Numerous publications on various aspects of architecture and urban planning from the Renaissance to the present day. JOVIS published: Urban Planning and the Pursuit of Happiness. |
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Kirsten Baumann, since 1997 research associate at the Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau, since 2005 science coordinator and deputy director. JOVIS published: Bauhaus Dessau |
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Günter Behnisch, architect, member of the Akademie der Künste in Berlin, founder member of the “Sächsische Akademie der Künste”. Worked at the “Gutbrod” offices in Stuttgart until 1952, then founded his own architectural studio; founded the architectural group “Behnisch & Partners” in 1966. Gained international fame with the construction of the Munich Olympic Stadium. JOVIS published: Der Pariser Platz – Die Akademie der Künste and Berlin – Pariser Platz. |
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Toufic Beyhum, photographer and art director at BBDO Campaign. JOVIS published: Emotions in Motion. |
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Jolanta Bielanska, born in Wroclaw, Poland, studied art, architecture and painting at the Art Academy in Wroclaw, curator for young contemporary polish art (exhibitions in France, Finland and Romania, radio features, articles), curator of the polish contribution of urban potentials. JOVIS published: Urban Potentials. |
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Torsten Birne art historian, critic and curator, numerous articles on modern architecture and city development in East-Germany (e.g. Baumeister, Der Architekt BDA, Deutsche Bauzeitung), curator of public art projects (e.g. DRESDENPostplatz 2003/ Modern Islands 2003/Wildes Kapital/Wild Capital 2006/On Call. Temporarily used spaces in Dresden and Budapest 2007). JOVIS published: Urban Potentials. |
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Stefan Boness is a photojournalist based in Berlin and Manchester. His photos have received several awards including a World Press Photo Award. His work is being published in quality magazines and newspapers throughout the world. In his long-term documentary projects in the tradition of conceptual “Landscape-Photography” he captures the reality of a designated place in the present in the context of its underlying historical dimensions. Examples are: “Asmara – The Frozen City”, “Flanders Fields”, “Manchester – City in Transition”, “Tel Aviv – The White City”, “Hoyerswerda – The Shrinking City”. JOVIS published: Asmara – The Frozen City, Southern Street and Tel Aviv – The White City
www.iponphoto.com
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Friedrich von Borries, was born 1974 and live in Berlin, Professor for design theory and curatorial practice at the HfBK Hamburg. Friedrich von Borries and Matthias Böttger set up raumtaktik, their office for spatial investigation and intervention, in 2003. JOVIS published: TV Towers. |
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Matthias Böttger, was born 1974 and live in Berlin, teaches at the ETH in Zürich. Friedrich von Borries and Matthias Böttger set up raumtaktik, their office for spatial investigation and intervention, in 2003. JOVIS published: TV Towers . |
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Dr. phil. Sigrid Brandt, study of musical sciences and art history at the Humboldt University Berlin. Freelance work for various state offices for the protection of monuments, member of the graduate college Art Studies—Building Research—Preservation of Monuments at the TU Berlin, doctorate on: “The History of the Preservation of Monuments in the GDR,” lecturing work at the TU Berlin and the University of Applied Sciences Anhalt Dessau, professorial research project on the writing of urban developmental history at the TU Dresden, editor at www.kunsttext.de. Since autumn 2008, research associate at the University of Salzburg, Department of Art History, member of the German monitoring group of ICOMOS and the working group Theory and Teaching of the Preservation of Monuments (Theorie und Lehre der Denkmalpflege e.V.). JOVIS published: Stadtentwicklung und Denkmalpflege 11—Stadtbild und Denkmalpflege. |
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Guido Brendgens, writer, studied political science, sociology and the history of art, 1999–2000 research associate at the Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau. JOVIS published: Berlin Architektur. |
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Born in Bad Ems in 1960. 1982–1989, study of English literature and art history in England; M.A. degree at the Royal College of Art (RCA), London. 1989–1990, research assistant at the Royal College of Art, London. 1990–1992, Zaha Hadid Architects, London. 1993–2004, Ove Arup & Partners Consulting Engineers, London and Berlin. 2004–2005, CBP Consulting Engineers, Munich. Since 2006, independent freelance advisor, author, and curator. Lives in Berlin. JOVIS published: Bernhard Schäpertöns – Zwei Brücken. |
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Prof. Dr. Gerda Breuer (*1948), who holds a dorctorate in art history, has served as professor of art and design history at the Bergische Universität Wuppertal since 1995. Prior to that she held senior positions at the Rheinische Industriemuseen Oberhausen and the Institut Mathildenhöhe in Darmstadt. Her international teaching experience in the USA, the Netherlands, Bielefeld, Aachen and Cologne is complemented by numerous publications on art, architecture, design and photography in the 19th and 20th centuries. In 2008, she was distinguished with the Gender Prize of the Bergische Universität Wuppertal for publications on Walde Huth, Marianne Brandt and photographic self portraits by women designers from the 1920s, among other topics. JOVIS published: Hans Schwippert 1899–1973, Max Burchartz 1887–1961, Werner Graeff 1901–1978 and Women in Graphic Design 1890-2012. |
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Margitta Buchert, professor of Architecture and Art of the 20th and 21st Centuries on the faculty of architecture and landscape at the Leibniz University Hanover. Focuses: phenomena and developments in modernism in an international association. JOVIS published: Performativ? and Inklusiv. and In Bewegung.... |
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Dagmar Buchwald, studied sociology, political science, literature, English/American studies in Munich, Bielefeld, Boston, and Konstanz. 1990 doctorate on Gertrude Stein’s modular prose. Main research: transfer between natural and cultural sciences; the parasitic as a strategy of post-modern aesthetics and politics; trans- and post-humanism; virtual worlds. JOVIS published: Niemals sterben!! . |
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Mark Burry, English architect and writer, professor of innovation (spatial information architecture) at the RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia and architect at the Sagrada Família. He is deeply committed to the life and works of the Barcelona architect Antoni Gaudí. JOVIS published: Gaudí Unseen. |
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Independent architecture critic and curator. Diploma in architecture at the TU Munich, Döllgast Prize. Editor of the specialist magazine AIT. Co-founder and chief editor of the online publication a-matter, architecture, and related (2000–2005). Since 2007, freelance academic work for the German Museum of Architecture. Coordinator and exhibition curator of the International High-Rise Award 2008 and 2010. JOVIS published: Internationaler Hochhauspreis 2008, Best High-Rises 2010/11. |
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Adrian von Buttlar, dean on the faculty of humanities at the TU Berlin, president of the Council for the Preservation of Historic Buildings and Monuments Berlin, president of the scientific committee of the Trust for Prussian Palaces and Gardens Berlin-Brandenburg, member of the board of trustees of the Central Institute of Art History, Munich and member of the commission “Berliner Klassik" of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of the Sciences. JOVIS published: denkmal!moderne |
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Eva Castringius, photographer, lives and works in Berlin and Los Angeles. JOVIS published: The Big Sky |
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Prof. Michael Cesarz is CEO of METRO Group Asset Management, the property branch of the METRO Group, one of the largest commercial enterprises in the world. JOVIS published: Meydan Shopping Square |
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Prof. Dr. Engelbert Lütke Daldrup, born 1956, certified engineer, state secretary at the Federal Ministry's Department of Transportation, Building and Urban Development since 2006. Studied spatial planning at the University of Dortmund. Internship in urban development. Building commissioner for Frankfurt am Main. Research assistant at the Technical University in Berlin, before joining the Berlin Senate Department of Construction and becoming director of the Council for the Design of the Capital from 1992. Leipzig urban planning director (1995-2005). Honorary professor at the Technical University in Berlin and at the University of Leipzig. Member of the Saxon Academy of the Arts. Chairman of the board of trustees of the Federal Foundation for Baukultur. JOVIS published: Large-Scale Projects in German Cities. |
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Wolfgang Dickhaut studied civil engineering at the Technical University of Darmstadt, specialising in hydraulic engineering, urban planning, biology, water supply and sewage engineering, environment and regional planning, in a developed and developing country context. From 1989 to 1990 he worked in NaturProfil, an ecological planning and consulting company. From 1991 to 1995 he was scientific employee for environmental and regional planning at the Institute for Water, Wastewater and Solid Waste Engineering (WAR) at the Technical University of Darmstadt and graduated in 1996 with a doctoral thesis on “Environmental Quality Concepts in Cooperative Planning Processes”. From 1996 to 1998 he worked as a free-lance planner and environmental advisor and in 1998 took up a professorship for Technology Evaluation, Environmental Planning, Water Management and River Basin Development at the University of Applied Sciences (HAW) in Hamburg. JOVIS published: Water Sensitive Urban Design – Principles and Inspiration for Sustainable Stormwater Management in the City of the Future |
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Dawud Diniawarie, Dipl.-Ing. Architect, was born in Teheran. He completed studies of spatial planning/interior design/civil engineering and architecture in 1971 and worked as an architect at HPP Hentrich, Petschnigg & Partner KG, Dusseldorf from 1971–1991. Managing partner of build.ing. Ingenieurgesellschaft für Projektentwicklung und Immobilienmanagement mbH in Berlin/Frankfurt as from 1991. Proprietor of IMD DINIAWARIE Architects Leipzig/Königstein as from 1993. Proprietor and managing director of EFG (Engineering and Financial Group) Teheran as from 2005. Founder and president of the Immobilienforum Frankfurt. JOVIS published: Urban Living. |
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Peter Dittmar, owner of the Galerie Dittmar, Berlin, featuring artists like Georg Baselitz, Per Kirkeby, and Arnulf Rainer. JOVIS published: Gerhard Trieb – Drawings. |
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Marina Dmitrieva, PhD, Art Historian. Her fields of interest: urban visual culture in Central and Eastern Europe and the historical avant-garde with an emphasis on processes of cultural transfers and art theory. Since 1996, she has worked as research associate at the Centre of History and Culture of East Central Europe (GWZO) in Leipzig, Germany. Before joining the Centre, she was researcher at the Institute of Art History in Moscow and was teaching at the universities of Freiburg i. Br., Basel, Hamburg and Bremen in Germany. She is currently involved in research project on the Americanism in the twentieth century’s urban visual culture in Central and Eastern Europe. Selected recent publications: Happiness through Discipline. Soviet cities in the Travelogues of Foreign Vistitors, in: Urban Planning and the Pursuit of happiness, ed. by Arnold Bartetzky and Marc Schalenberg (2009); Dream of a Skyscraper. Urban Imaginations in the Socialists Capital Cities, in: Urban Imaginations. Conception, Reflection and Fiction of the City in Central and Eastern Europe, ed. by Arnold Bartetzky, Marina Dmitrieva and Alfrun Kliems (2009); Italy in Sarmatia. Cultural transfers in Eastern Europe at the time of the Renaissance (2008). JOVIS published: The Post-Socialist City. |
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Prof. Dr. Gabi Dolff-Bonekämper; 1971–1984, study of art history, French and Christian archaeology in Marburg and Poitiers. 1984–1985, editor at the radio broadcasting college of art at the German Institute of Distance Study at the University of Tübingen. 1987–1988, teaching and computing project at the University of Stuttgart; 1988–2002, inventory controller, State Office for the Preservation of Monuments, Berlin. Since 2005, professor at the Institute of Urban and Regional Planning at the TU Berlin. Co editor of the series: Stadtentwicklung und Denkmalpflege – Volume 10, 11, 12 and 14. |
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Burghard Duhm, cultural scientist and art director of the Bauhaus Dessau. JOVIS published: Edition Bauhaus Vol 21. |
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Prof. Werner Durth, architect and sociologist, professor for the history and theory of architecture, Technical University Darmstadt. Dr.-Ing., member of the board of the Konvent Baukultur. member of the DASL Deutsche Akademie für Städtebau und Landesplanung, of the Academy, of Arts, Berlin, Department for Architecture. 2004 Fritz Schumacher Award. JOVIS published: Monsters and other truths, Architektur und Städtebau der DDR, Berlin-Pariser Platz, Stadt Bauen,
Stadt Bauen II and Baukultur. |
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Japanese architect. Principal architect and general manager of the Osaka Office of MJS (Mitsubishi Jisho Sekkei), one of the top three architectural & engineering design offices in Japan. Member of the Japan Institute of Architects (JIA), Architectural Institute of Japan, and the City Planning Institute of Japan. JOVIS published: Japanese Identities. |
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Franziska Eidner, cultural scientist and cultural manager, located in Berlin. Project Development and communications for exhibitions, publications and events in the area of architecture, for the German Center for Architecture (DAZ), the Association of German Architects (BDA), sally below cultural affairs and others. Together with Nadin Heinich and Nadine Jerchau, she published "Hyperfunction. On the construction of realities in architecture" (2007). JOVIS published: Sensing Space. |
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Kennosuke Ezawa, first chair of the Ost-West-Gesellschaft für Sprach- und Kulturforschung e.V. Institut für deutsche Sprache und Linguistik, the association for language and cultural research, Institute of German Language and Linguistics. JOVIS published: Das Kurokawa-Manifest. |
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Christiane Fath, architect, culture manager and founder of the “framework” architectural gallery. JOVIS published: Color Spaces. |
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Ferreira-Erlenbach, Manina  |
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Hubertus Fischer, taught old German literature at Free University Berlin and Leibniz University Hanover. Guest professor at Cairo University and Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan. Chairman of the Theodor Fontane Gesellschaft since 2002. Cofounder of the Center of Garden Art and Landscape Architecture at Leibniz University, and member of the scientific advisory board since 2004. Co-editor of the book Return of Landscape. |
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Fischer-Leonhardt, Dorothea  |
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Prof. Dr.-Ing., Dorothea Fischer-Leonhardt, professor of landscape design and garden architecture. JOVIS published: Die Gärten des Bauhauses. |
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Ole W. Fischer, architect. 1998 planning of the refurbishment of a listed villa in Potsdam Babelsberg with Müller Reimann Architekten. Teaches Theory of Architecture at ETH Zurich. JOVIS published: Precisions. |
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Norman Foster, renowned British architect, designer and winner of the Pritzker prize. Founder of the architecture offices of "Team 4", from which arose in 1967 the offices of Foster Associates (now Foster and Partners). Leading projects: London-Stansted airport, Commerzbank tower in Frankfurt am Main, conversion of the Reichstag in Berlin (glass dome), main offices of “Swiss Re” in London, City Hall of London on the Thames, the roof of Dresden’s main railway station. JOVIS published: The Reichstag Graffiti. |
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Josephine Gabler, writer. JOVIS published: Georg Kolbe. |
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Meinhard von Gerkan is a architect. He founded his office partnership with Volkwin Marg, which is still in existence today under the name of “von Gerkan, Marg und Partner” (gmp) and is based in Hamburg. Completed designs: Berlin Tegel airport, expansions of the airports at Hamburg Fuhlsbüttel and Stuttgart, the new main railway station in Berlin (Lehrter Bahnhof), and the conversion of the Berlin Olympic Stadium. The gmp offices are currently deeply involved with a number of projects in China. JOVIS published: gmp VOL 5 Furniture. |
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Madeline Gins, architect and poet. Has worked with Arakawa since 1963. The two founded the “Architectural Body Research Foundation”. JOVIS published: Niemals sterben!! |
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Christina Gräwe, Freelance curator, DAM Frankfurt/Main. JOVIS published: High Society. |
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Nicolas Grospierre, Photographer. Born in 1975 in Geneva, Switzerland. Resides permanently in Warsaw. Nicolas Grospierre holds a Master's degree in Political Science from the Institut d'Études Politiques in Paris and in Russian and Post-Soviet Studies from the London School of Economics. He has settled in Warsaw, but travels all over the world with his socially-aware, critical works of art and photography. Grospierre has become best-known for his photographs of architectural sites, principally modernist structures, treated as relics of a recent past. In 2008 Grospierre was invited to show a series of photographs at the Polish Pavilion at the Venice Biennale of Architecture, curated by Grzegorz Piątek and Jarosław Trybuś. This series was entitled "Polonia Hotel - The Afterlife of Buildings", which was awarded the prestigious Golden Lion award. JOVIS published: OPEN-ENDED |
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Dr. Lucia Grosse-Bächle is a freelance landscape architect, publicist and lecturer. JOVIS published: Creating Knowledge. |
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Hans Achim Grube graduated in architecture. Studied in Berlin, Darmstadt and Florence. Project leader at the architectural offices of Max Dudler, speaker at the Federal Department of Transport, Building and Housing, and various tasks at Vattenfall. JOVIS published: Re Use, Power and Energy, New Power and Renaissance der E-Werke. |
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Peter Gruss, born 1949 in Alsfeld. On June 14, 2002, he assumed the office of President of the Max Planck Society. Studied biology at the TU in Darmstadt. After graduating, he went to the Institute for Virus Research at the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg where he wrote his doctoral thesis. In 1977, he earned his Ph.D. in biology from the University of Heidelberg. In 1982, he was appointed to Prof. in the Institute for Microbiology at the University of Heidelberg. One year later, he was designated to the Board of Directors of the Center for Molecular Biology in Heidelberg. In 1986, he was named to Director of the Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry in Göttingen and to Scientific Member of the Max Planck Society. Since 1990, he has held the status of honorary professor at the University of Göttingen. JOVIS published: Fehling+Gogel. |
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Kerstin Gust studied architecture in Berlin and New York City. Since 1991, she has been active in project coordination, production, and exhibition curatorship in the thematic fields of architecture, art, and cultural history. She was guest curator at the German Architecture Center (DAZ), Berlin from 1997 until 2000; from 2001 to 2005, she was responsible for programme coordination and curating at the Architecture Museum, Vienna; from 2006, she was curator at the M:AI, Museum for Architecture and Engineering Art NRW, Gelsenkirchen. In 2007, she founded her own exhibition bureau, Gust & Grünhagen, located in Berlin. JOVIS published: A Utopia of Modernity : Zlín. |
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Niels Gutschow, building historian with two focuses: the history of architecture in Asia, and architecture and urban planning during World War II and in post-war Europe. His publications include approx. 100 articles, mostly in scientific magazines, and 24 books, some co-authored with other writers. JOVIS published: Architektur und Städtebau der DDR. |
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Anke Haarmann born 1968, studied philosophy, literature and ethnology at the University of Hamburg and the FU-Berlin from 1989–1994. Participated in the post graduate programme of the Jan van Eyck Academy of Fine Art, Design and Theory in Maastricht, the Netherlands from 1994–1996. Study of free art in Lerchenfeld Hamburg from 1994–1998. Doctorate in philosophy at the University of Potsdam, 2004. Since 1998, numerous exhibitions at home and abroad. Emphases of her work as an artist and a curator are participatory and interventionist project art (New Genre Public Art), art in public space, urban development, and contemporary media. JOVIS published: Culture|Nature
and Shanghai (Urban Public) Space. |
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Joachim Haase, study of architecture at the RWTH Aachen. After his studies, work in various planning offices. Since 1993, co-founder and partner of the Aachen planning office rha Reicher Haase Architekten + Stadtplaner and the Luxemburg planning office rha Reicher Haase atelier d’architecture et d’urbanisme. JOVIS published: Der öffentliche Raum. |
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Axel Haeusler, born 1972, is a qualified engineer, urban planner, and architect. Study at the University of Stuttgart and the RWTH Aachen. 2006–2009, deputy professor and head of the Chair of Urban Development at the Bergische University Wuppertal. Doctoral candidate at the Geographical Institute of the University of Bonn and lecturer in urban and regional development for the master’s degree course Real Estate Management Rem+Cpm. Since 2003, he has had his own office in Cologne specialising in urban research, location development, and architecture. JOVIS published: Das war nicht Monaco hier. |
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Matthias Hank Haeusler, Ph.D., Graduate Engineer. (UAS) Architecture, studied architecture at Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan, the Technical University, Delft/The Netherlands and at The University of Applied Sciences, Stuttgart. Haeusler has worked in architects’ offices in Germany, the United States, and Australia, and finished his Ph.D. at SIAL (Spatial Information Architecture Laboratory)/RMIT University, Melbourne. His research focused on the design of a Spatial Dynamic Media System. Since March 2008 he has been a lecturer at the University of Applied Sciences in Stuttgart, Germany and Ph.D. secondary supervisor at Royal Collage of Arts, London in the department of Industrial Engineering Design (IED). JOVIS published: Chromatophoric Architecture—Designing for 3D Media Façades. |
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Oliver G. Hamm, born 1963, Dipl.-Ing. (FH) architecture (studied at the FH Darmstadt). Editor of db – deutsche bauzeitung, Stuttgart from 1989–1992; editor of Bauwelt, Berlin from 1992–1998; chief editor of the Deutsches Architektenblatt, Berlin from 2000–2007; chief editor of greenbuilding, Berlin since 2008. Freelance author, editor and curator (incl. "NEU BAU LAND. Architecture and Urban Restructuring in former East Germany", Deutsches Architekturmuseum, Frankfurt/Main 2007). Lives in Berlin. Co-editor of the title Metropolis 1: Reflection. |
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Nadin Heinich, curating and mediting of architecture, based in Berlin. Founding of plan a during her studies. Exhibtion and publication project "Hyperfunction" at gallery Aedes (Berlin) in 2007. The publication "Hyperfunction-On the construction of realities in architecture" (togehther with Franziska Eidner and Nadine Jerchau), was awarded with the prize Schönste Bücher 2008 (Most beautiful books) by the Stiftung Buchkunst. JOVIS published: Sensing Space. |
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Uli Hellweg, born 1948, studied architecture and urban development at the RWTH Aachen. 1980, freelance urban planner in Berlin; 1982, coordinator of the IBA Berlin GmbH 1984/87 for pilot projects. 1986, planning coordinator of S.T.E.R.N. GmbH for the area of urban renewal Moabit in Berlin; 1992, head of the Department of Planning and Building in the City of Kassel; 1996, managing director of Wasserstadt GmbH , Berlin; 2002, managing director of agora s.a.r.l., Luxembourg. He has been managing director of the IBA Hamburg GmbH since 2006. JOVIS published: Metropolis: Reflection, Metropolis: Resources, Metropolis: Education and Metropolis: Metrozones. |
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Christian Helmle, Swiss photographer. Vevey School of Photography, 1999 City of Thun prize for photography, 2006 Canton of Bern prize for photography. JOVIS published: White Elephants and Waterpower. |
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Ingrid Hermannsdörfer, graduate in engineering. JOVIS published: Solar Design. |
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Christoph Heuter, art historian, regional consultant with the LWL-Amt for the preservation of monuments and historic buildings in Westphalia for the Höxter district and the town of Dortmund. JOVIS published: denkmal!moderne. |
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Bärbel Högner is a photographer and social anthropologist. She lives in Frankfurt am Main and Berlin, works for print media as well as social institutions and does research in urban planning. Her portraits and essays have been published widely and she has exhibited in Germany, Mexico and India. A specialist in visual anthropology, she has taught at various universities. JOVIS published: "Typ Berlin" – Corbusier´s Building in Charlottenburg and Chandigarh. |
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Caroline Spliid Høgsbro is a journalist. She studied architecture at the Technical University Berlin and film, media, and cultural studies at the University of Copenhagen; commissions for Danish newspapers, magazines on the subjects of architecture, culture, and Berlin history, screenwriter for Danish television TV2 and editor of the German magazine for design and architecture H.O.M.E. She designed the innovative exhibition concept Die Planrolle (a winner in the competition of the UIA World Congress of Architecture 2002) and curated and hosted the symposium "Das Nordische Modell und die Moderne" at the Nordic Embassies in Berlin in 2007. JOVIS published: Nortopia Nordic Modern Architecture and Post War Germany. |
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Matthias Hollwich, founder of XPEKT, has worked with numerous internationally renowned architectural offices. Projects: Campus Center at the Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago, the Dutch Embassy Berlin, the International School of China in Beijing. JOVIS published: Edition Bauhaus Vol. 16. |
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Stefan Horn, born in 1968, has worked internationally as a freelance theatre designer, installation artist, and project manager since 1996. He studied philosophy, sociology, political science, and theatre studies, and his works and projects investigate urban and social spaces. Stefan Horn is artistic director of the Berlin urban art project “urban dialogues.” JOVIS published: Signs of the City. |
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Prof. Falk Jaeger, architecture critic and architecture historian. JOVIS published (among others): Hans Otto Theater Potsdam, The Head of the Architect, ASP Schweger Assoziierte Architekten, GAP Architekten, WGV Stuttgart and 3 Stadia 2010 – Architecture for an African Dream. Editor of the series [portfolio]. Author of the titles: Wulf & Partner, Anderhalten Architekten, LRO, Behnisch Architekten, UNStudio, Wingårdhs, Auer+Weber+Assoziierte, ASTOC – Architects and Planners, Next 3 Stadia – Warsaw – Bucharest – Kiev and SPEECH Tchoban & Kuznetsov - Architekturtransfers. |
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Frank Peter Jäger, architecture journalist, owner of the Archikontext agency. Consultant to architects and real estate agents in project presentation, own marketing, book production and PR. Also a freelance journalist and book writer. JOVIS published: Offensive Architektur, the PR manual for architects. Also: Dorotheenhöfe and Neues Quartier Vulkan.Köln |
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Annemarie Jaeggi, director of the Bauhaus-Archiv/Museum für Gestaltung, Berlin. JOVIS published: Fagus. |
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Leon Janucek, businessman and art collector. Born in Berlin 1953, lives and works in Berlin. Related to the Noack foundry familiy on his mother`s. Collects art and supports artists. His collection includes works by James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Gabriele Münter, Carl Hofer, Max Pechstein, Muntean/Rosenblum, Julian Opie and Dieter Finke, and bronzes by sculptors such as Käthe Kollwitz, Ernst Barlach, Georg Kolbe, August Gaul, Renée Sintenis and Anna Bogouchevskaia. Has been running the family firm since 1997. JOVIS published: Dieter Finke – Works. |
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Jessen-Klingenberg, Detlef  |
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Dr. Karen Jung, born in Münster in 1974. Study of architecture at the University of Karlsruhe and the ETH Zurich. Work in various architectural offices. 1999–2002, work at the Institute of Architectural Principles at the University of Karlsruhe. 2005, doctorate at the ETH Zurich supervised by V. M. Lampugnani and À. Moravànsky on the subject of the “Porous Construction Block.” 2006–2008, intern and since 2008, freelance curator at the German Museum of Architecture in Frankfurt am Main. Since 2009, freelance curator at the M:AI Museum of Architecture and Engineering Art NRW in Gelsenkirchen. Co editor of the book: Dynamik und Wandel – Die Entwicklung der Städte am Rhein. |
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Martin Kaltwasser, studied art at the Academy of Fine Art Nuremberg and architecture at the Technical University of Berlin. JOVIS published: City as a Resource and hold it! |
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Kay von Keitz studied cultural sciences and aesthetic practice at the University of Hildesheim; he is a freelance author in the fields of contemporary art and architecture, conceives and realises art projects, and edits various publications. In 1999 he founded the international festival of architecture “plan—forum for contemporary architecture in Cologne” (Forum aktueller Architektur in Köln) together with Sabine Voggenreiter. JOVIS published: En passant. |
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Martin Kieren, lecturer at the TFH in Berlin, studied architecture and critical confrontation with 20th century architecture. JOVIS published: New Architecture-Berlin 1990–2000. |
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Sung Hong Kim, professor of architecture and urbanism at the University of Seoul. JOVIS published: Megacity Network. |
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Albert H. Kirchengast; 2000–2008, study of medicine, art history, philosophy, and architecture at Karl Franzens University and the Technical University, Graz. 2002–2008, work at the “Institute of Architectural Theory and Building Art” at the TU Graz. 2003–2008, independent editor of the weekly newspaper Falter in the department of culture and, as from 2007, at the architecture Internet site gat, editorial member of the bookzine GAM—Graz Architektur Magazin. Since 2007, work in the private foundation for Austrian building culture, “Gemeinnützige Österreichische Baukultur Privatstiftung.” Since August 2008, assistant to the chair of architectural theory, Prof. Dr. Ákos Moravánszky, Institute gta, DARCH, ETH Zurich. JOVIS published: Experiments – Architecture between Sciences and the Arts. |
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Gunnar Klack, born 1979, studied architecture at Berlin University of the Arts. He is working on a doctoral thesis about the architects Fehling+Gogel in the Department of the Preservation of Monuments at the Institute of Urban and Regional Planning at the TU Berlin. Since 2005, freelance work as an architect and journalist, writing among other things for the magazine Spex since 2007. Curator and academic editor for the exhibition “Fehling+Gogel”. JOVIS published: Fehling+Gogel. |
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Dr. Ursula Kleefisch-Jobst, born in 1956, study of art history, archaeology and German in Bonn, Munich and Rome: doctorate, 1985–1988, research project at the Biblioteca Hertziana in Rome; 1989–1990, work at the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Berlin; since 1990, independent architecture critic; 2001–2007, curator at the German Museum of Architecture in Frankfurt am Main; since 2008, executive curator at the M:AI Museum of Architecture and Engineering Art of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia. Numerous publications on modern and contemporary architecture. Co editor of the book: Dynamik und Wandel – Die Entwicklung der Städte am Rhein. |
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Alfrun Kliems, literary theorist, 2000 PhD at the Humboldt-University of Berlin, 2001-2003 assistant at the Institute of Slavonic Studies, since 2004 coordinator of literary science at the Center for the History and Culture of East Central Europe in Leipzig (GWZO), 2006-2010 leader of the project „Imagining the Urban“. Main interests: literatures in exile and the poetics of migration, underground literature, urban imagery. JOVIS published: The Post-Socialist City – Continuity and Change in Urban Space and Imagery. |
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Katrin Klingan was born in Lienz, Austria. She studied comparative literature and Spanish at the universities of Vienna and Madrid. She has been responsible for the conception and organization of diverse cultural events in Vienna and was an assistant to the city councillor of cultural affairs of the City of Vienna. From 1998 to 2001, she was a dramaturge at the Wiener Festwochen (Vienna Festival). In 2001 and 2002, she was an advisor for cultural affairs to the Erste Bank Group in Austria, the Czech Republic, Croatia, and Slovakia. In the years 2003-2006, she served as artistic director of relations, a project initiated by the German Federal Cultural Foundation. She is a member of the relations e.V. board and since 2007 has been the director of Zipp – German-Czech Cultural Projects. JOVIS published: A Utopia of Modernity : Zlín. |
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Ellen Kobe, 1987–1990, study of fashion, painting, and graphic art at the College of Art in Berlin-Weissensee. 1990, period of study at Villa Arson in Nice, grant from the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD); 1992, diploma from the Ecole D’Art Marseille (France). Actions in public space including TIEFENGARTEN, RASTSTÄTTE (Dresden), exhibitions/performances/videos: MOMA GOES ON, GOYA TO GO. 2006, foundation of FLORA 16—Office for Art and Communication together with Dr. Marvin Altner. Curator of the exhibition „NEUE KUNST IN DEN NEUEN KAMMERN!“ in Potsdam Sanssouci. JOVIS published: Neue Kunst in den neuen Kammern. |
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Eduard Kögel, graduate engineer in urban planning and development, research associate at the faculty of planning and construction in non-European regions at the TU Darmstadt, publications in specialist magazines: arch+, bauwelt, db, trialog, time+architecture, world architecture, archis; editor-in-chief of the Internet magazine for architecture and urban development in China and Germany – IDAS. JOVIS published: The Chinese City and Tangshan Xiandeli-Neue Stadt in China. |
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Prof. Dr. rer. pol. Dipl.-Ing. Ingrid Krau, architect BDA, planner: 1994–2007, professor of the Chair of Urban Development in the Faculty of Architecture at the Technical University Munich; 1995–2010, director of the Institute for Urban Development and Housing, Munich, attached to the German Academy of Urban Development and Regional Planning; research on living conditions during shift work, integrated urban development planning, on density, solar potentials and the compact city, mobility and urban regions, ideal cities and urban imagination in literature; publications on these research subjects, also on questions of building, urban development, and urban developmental planning and on inter- and trans-disciplinary work in urban developmental planning. JOVIS published: Städtebau als Prozess. |
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Elisabeth Kremer, urban sociologist, research associate and project leader at the Stiftung Bauhaus specialising in urban and regional sociology and development in East Germany. Co editor of the book: Edition Bauhaus Vol. 18. |
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Sylvie Krüger (born in 1973) was a founding partner of Korridor (1999–2002), a multi-disciplinary design office with a focus on textile spatial partitions as well as textile product design, exhibition design, the conception and implementation of photo production, and trend consultation within the realm of textiles. From 2004–2006 she managed the home textiles studio of Wever automobile and furniture fabric weaving mill and was responsible for the public image of the company. From 2002–2004 and since 2007 she operates independently with a focus on textile, material, colour and interior design. She lives and works in Munich. JOVIS published: Textile Architecture. |
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Anupama Kundoo was born in Pune/India in 1967 and graduated from Sir J. J. College of Architecture, University of Bombay in 1989. She practiced as an independent architect in Auroville from 1990 and produced a number of projects in which sustainable building technologies and infrastructural systems were developed as an integral part of the architecture. She received the Vastu Shilpa Foundation Fellowship in 1996 when she pursued her dissertation on “Urban Eco-Community: Design and Analysis for Sustainability.” She completed her doctoral studies at the University of Technology in Berlin in 2008, where she also taught Architecture and Urban Management. JOVIS published: Roger Anger—Research on Beauty Architecture 1953–2008. |
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Sebastian Kusenberg, studied communication design at the College of Design, Hamburg (graduated in photo design), studied free art at the College of Art Berlin. JOVIS published: playing life. |
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Gregor Langenbrinck, urban researcher, urbanist and research associate for the Bauhaus Dessau. JOVIS published: Edition Bauhaus Vol. 14. |
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Professor Pavlos Lefas, born 1955, study at the National Technical University of Athens and the Technical University in Graz; prize-winner in Greek and European architectural competitions. Currently professor at the University of Patras, where he is deputy director of the Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering. JOVIS published: Dwelling and Architecture. |
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Tim Lehmann, born in 1972, he studied Architecture and Urban Planning in Stuttgart and has worked in various positions for the DB Station&Service company since 1999. He is now acting head of the DB Station&Service AG, which has been offering support and advice to cities and towns throughout Germany on the development of railway stations for the last years. Co editor of the book: Stations in Germany. |
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Harald Lemke, born 1965, studied philosophy and history in Constance, Hamburg and at the UC Berkeley/California, USA from 1986–1993. Graduate of the Jan van Eyck Academy of Fine Art, Design and Theory in Maastricht, with a doctorate and post doctoral thesis in philosophy. Currently a lecturer at the Institute of Cultural Theory and Research at Leuphana University in Lüneburg. Guest professor at East China Normal University Shanghai. Co-curator of the artistic, contextual platform Culture|Nature in the context of the Elbinsel Summer '08 as part of the International Building Exhibition (IBA) Hamburg. JOVIS published: Culture|Nature. |
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Scott Lloyd is the Principal of Deliver, a Zurich based design research studio exploring identity through the politics of space and aesthetics. He has worked in architecture and art direction in Switzerland and China, and on various collaborations with Room 11 in Australia. He co-edited EPI, the journal of the Beijing Architectural Biennial and curated Spaces of Flow at the National Museum of China, an exhibition that investigated China’s emerging urban condition. He is currently completing a Master of Science in Architecture at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. JOVIS published: Infrastructure as Architecture. |
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Kamel Louafi, born in Batna, Algeria, study of topography in Algeria and France. Employee at the Ministry of Forest Inventory and Landscape Development in Algeria, draughtsman at his older brother’s architecture office. 1980 – 1986 study of landscape planning at the TU Berlin. Freelance work on projects in Luxemburg and Berlin. 1996 founding of Kamel Louafi landscape architecture and land art in Berlin. 2000 – 2009 one of several curators at the architecture gallery AEDES Berlin. Jury member for national and international design competitions, teaching at the German Foundation for International Development in Bonn as well as at universities in Berlin, Barcelona, Batna, Paris, Oslo, and Lüneburg. Numerous lectures and publications on the subject of landscape architecture and landscape art. JOVIS published: Landscape Interventions – City Paradises |
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Claudia Lüling, born 1961, Professorin für Darstellen und Entwerfen an der Fachhochschule Frankfurt am Main, freie Architektin. Realisierungs-, Forschungs- und Entwicklungsprojekte zu Gestaltungspotenzialen nachhaltiger Materialien (MehrWerkstoffe*), insbesondere gebäudeintegrierte Photovoltaik sowie Symposien, Veröffentlichungen, Preisgerichts- und Vortragstätigkeiten. JOVIS published: Energizing Architecture. |
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Alex S. MacLean, pilot and photographer Alex S. MacLean has flown his plane over much of the United States documenting the landscape. His powerful images provide clues to understanding the relationship between the natural and constructed environments. The photographs have been exhibited widely in the US, Canada, Europe, and Asia and are found in many collections. Numerous awards: e.g. the 2009 CORINE International Book Award for OVER: The American Landscape at the Tipping Point, the American Academy of Rome's Prix de Rome in Landscape Architecture for 2003/2004 and from foundations. MacLean maintains a studio and lives in Lincoln, Massachusetts. JOVIS published: Return of Landscape. |
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Christoph Mäckler heads the architectural office Prof. Christoph Mäckler Architekten in Frankfurt am Main and has been full professor of urban development at the TU Dortmund since 1998. He has been guest professor in Naples, at the TU Brunswick and the University of Hanover. In 2008 he founded the German Institute of Urban Architecture (Institut für Stadtbaukunst), which he directs in conjunction with Wolfgang Sonne, and since then he has acted as an advisor to many cities. Current building projects include the high-rises OpernTurm and Tower 185 in Frankfurt am Main and the Zoofenster in Berlin, as well as the Augustinian Museum in Freiburg. JOVIS published: OpernTurm Frankfurt am Main and Tower 185 – Frankfurt am Main. |
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Monika Markgraf, architect, since 1997 research assistant in renovation and building research at the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation. JOVIS published: Edition Bauhaus Vol. 23. |
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Julia Meer (*1982), has worked at the institute for art and design at the Bergische Universtität Wuppertal since 2008. She has designed exhibitions and catalogues on topics such as Max Burchartz, shown in the Kandinsky/Klee Master House at the Bauhaus Foundation in Dessau, and Mies van der Rohe´s Barcelona Chair. In addition to pursuing the completion of her dissertation on typography in the 1920s, she works as a freelance designer and organizes lecture series, most recently on the architecture of the 1950s. She has served as editor of the magazine ff. since 2006. JOVIS published: Women in Graphic Design 1890-2012. |
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Prof. Dr. phil. Hans-Rudolf Meier, study of art history, history, mediaeval archaeology, and prehistoric and early history. Research assistant for the Art History Seminar at the University of Basel, where he completed a doctorate in 1992 and a professorial thesis in 2000; between the two he was head research associate at the Institute for the Preservation of Monuments at the ETH Zurich; member of the Swiss Institute in Rome, teaching at the universities of Basel, Bern, Fribourg, and Zurich. 2003–2007, professor of the study of monuments and applied building research at the TU Dresden and coordinator of the master’s degree course in the preservation of monuments and urban development. Since 2008, professor of the preservation of monuments and building history at the Bauhaus University Weimar. Member of associations incl. ICOMOS, the Dehio Union, the State Council for Monuments in Saxony-Anhalt, also a committee member of the working group Theory and Teaching of the Preservation of Monuments (Theorie und Lehre der Denkmalpflege e.V.). JOVIS published: Stadtentwicklung und Denkmalpflege Vol. 11 – Stadtbild und Denkmalpflege. |
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Nils Meyer, Dr. Ing., architect, study of architecture at the TU Berlin, academic assistant at the Chair of the Preservation of Monuments and Planning in the Faculty of Architecture at the TU Dresden from 1999–2005; 2007, doctorate at the same university. Member of the working group Theory and Teaching of the Preservation of Monuments (Theorie und Lehre der Denkmalpflege e.V.). Specialist subject in theory and practice is the appropriate handling of existing historical buildings. Since 2007, partner in the office av-a Veauthier Meyer Architects, Berlin. JOVIS published: Stadtentwicklung und Denkmalpflege Vol. 14 – Leerräume. |
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Ulf Meyer, architecture journalist. Studied architecture in Berlin and Chicago. Architecture journalist in Berlin, regular contributor to BauNetz. JOVIS published: The Chinese City and CBA Christian Bauer. |
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Dirk Meyhöfer, born 1950, is a qualified architectural engineer and urban planer (study at the TU Hanover). Editor/editor in chief of the magazines Zuhause Wohnen and Architektur und Wohnen in Hamburg from 1977–1987. Since then he has been a freelance author, architectural critic, exhibition organiser and university lecturer. Publisher and editor of the Hamburg Architectural Yearbook (since 1989). Lives in Hamburg. Co editor of the book: Metropolis 3: Education. |
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Pia Mingels, study of French cultural history in Paris and of German and art education in Munich, followed by a study of communications design in Wuppertal. Since 2006, research assistant at the Chair of Art and Design History at the Bergische University Wuppertal. Currently working on a doctorate about Mia Seeger and the German Werkbund, supervised by Prof. Dr. Gerda Breuer. JOVIS published: Hans Schwippert 1899–1973. |
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Elke Mittmann, studied art history, archaeology, literature and music sciences in Paris, dissertation 2004 at the University of Leipzig. 1996–2004 freelance scientific associate and curator. Since 2005 PR IBA Urban Redevelopment Saxony-Anhalt 2010. JOVIS published Edition Bauhaus Vol. 27 and Architektur und Elektrizität |
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Werner Möller, project coordinator at the Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau. JOVIS published: Bauhaus Objekte. |
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Prof. Dr. Ákos Moravánszky, architect, Professor for the Theory of Architecture at ETH Zurich. JOVIS published: Precisions and Experiments. |
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Sabine Müller, Architect Dipl.-Ing. MSc Sabine Müller, a founding partner of SMAQ – architecture urbanism research, received a Diploma in Architecture from Kassel University and a Master in Advanced Architectural Design from Columbia University, Graduate School for Architecture Planning and Preservation in New York. She worked for West 8 (Rotterdam) and Asymptote (New York) before establishing SMAQ with Andreas Quednau in 2001 first in Rotterdam (2001-2005), then in 2005 in Berlin and in 2009 in Stuttgart. Sabine Müller has received several international awards including the Architectural Review Award for Emerging Architects and the Holcim Award for Sustainable Construction both in 2008. She taught 2002 at the Karlsruhe State School for Design, from 2004-2005 at the Delft University of Technology and was from 2006-2011 Assistant Professor at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Chair of Urban Design. Currently she is Visiting Critic at Cornell University. JOVIS published: Charter of Dubai – A Manifesto of Critical Urban Transformation |
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Stubbornly searching for collaborators, since July 2006 the architect and curator Isolde Nagel has been designing a programme for all those who value artistic-architectural visions and are mindful of social issues. Innovative strategies, interventions into and the perception of urban space are presented in an interdisciplinary way under an annual motto. JOVIS published: Disembodiment. |
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Winfried Nerdinger, born 1944 in Augsburg, 1965-1970 studied architecture at the TH Munich. 1979 obtained a PhD in the history of art. Since 1986 Professor of Architectural History and Director of the Architectural Museum of the TU Munich (since 2002 at the Pinakothek der Moderne). Since 1995 Director of the Architectural Museum Schwaben. Since 2004 Director of the Department of Fine Arts at the Bavarian Academy of the Fine Arts. Visiting professor at universities in Harvard, Helsinki, Canton; Cummings lecturer McGill University Montreal. Scientific publications in the history of art and architecture, direction and organisation of numerous exhibitions. JOVIS published:
Multiple City, Die Kunst der Holzkonstruktion
and
Zlín – Model Town of Modern. |
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Rudolf Netzelmann is a sociologist and works as project manager, evaluator and advisor to educational and art projects at the metropolitan arts organisation urban dialogues. Educated in Berlin and Barcelona, he specialises in art and media in urban and human resources development. Recently he coordinated the project „signs of the city“, a cross-city youth art project (London, Berlin, Barcelona, Sofia) in the frame of the EU Culture Programme. JOVIS published: Signs of the City. |
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Clemens Niedenthal, born in 1974, lives and works as a cultural scientist, publicist and journalist in Berlin. He has published on the subjects of architecture, everyday culture and contemporary life. He writes for the Frankfurter
Rundschau, die tageszeitung, Financial Times
Deutschland newspapers among others. He is a judge of the Adolf Grimme Prize. He publishes regularly, most recently he published Unfall – Portraiteines automobilen Moments (Marburg 2007). JOVIS published: Stations in Germany. |
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Christopher Oestereich, study of history and economics in Trier and Cologne. Since 1998, work as an academic associate, exhibition curator, and museum education specialist in museums in the Rhineland, Berlin, and Nuremberg. Since 2007, work at the House of Regional History in Kastellaun. Publications on the history of culture, economics, and technology. JOVIS published: Hans Schwippert 1899–1973. |
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Elizabeth Otto, junior professor at the State University of New York in Buffalo. JOVIS published: Tempo, Tempo! |
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Markus Otto, study of architecture at the Technical University in Darmstadt and the Technical University in Delft. Since 1998, professor at the University of Lusatia. Since 2002, work at the Institute for New Industrial Culture. JOVIS published: Industriebau als Ressource. |
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Burkhard Pahl was born in Darmstadt in 1955. He studied architecture at the TH Darmstadt and the ETH Zurich (DAAD fellowship). Diploma in 1983, followed by project direction at Lambart & Partner in Ratingen/Düsseldorf, including successful revisions of diverse competition entries. Academic assistant to Prof. Günter Behnisch from 1986-1990; various teaching contracts including Constructive Planning/Civil Engineering at the TH Darmstadt. Work as an independent architect together with Monika Weber-Pahl from 1987. Since 1997, Professor of Designing and Constructive Planning at the University of Leipzig. Dean of Studies, speaker of the working group "Competitions" in the BDA; work as an assessor and jury member. Since 2005, director of the Institute for the Principles of Building and Planning Management at the University of Leipzig. JOVIS published: Structure in Mind. |
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Born in Naples, Italy; studied literature in Rome and Paris. Following completion of her doctorate in Rome as a specialist in video art and contemporary theater, she accompanied and curated numerous exhibitions in Italy. Has lived in Hamburg since 1990 where she has worked as deputy curator and conceptualist for various shows, such as Der Traum von der Stadt am Meer (The Dream of the City on the Sea) at the Museum of the History of Hamburg, Hamburg 2003; Giuseppe Terragni (German Museum of Architecture, Frankfurt 2004). Lives and works as an independent author and literary scientist in Hamburg and Rome. JOVIS published: Jörg Friedrich pfp architekten: Theaters and Works – Jörg Friedrich—pfp-architekten (May 2012). |
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Thomas Pavel, associate at the Georg-Kolbe Museum, Berlin. JOVIS published: Barcelona Pavilion. |
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Knud Peter Petersen, trained as a carpenter, studied engineering science and architecture. Since 1979 a freelance architect specialising in the preservation of monuments in Berlin, he has made photography a skilfully controlled tool in his activities. JOVIS Published: Hundert Jahre Architektur in Berlin. |
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Anne Pfeil, Görlitz Centre of Revitalising Urban Development at the TU Dresden. Study of biology in Bonn followed by study of architecture at the Technical University Berlin. Subsequently, she worked in planning offices in the fields of building, urban development, architecture, and landscape architecture. 2003, research assistant at the Chair of Landscape Architecture and Design at the University of Hanover. Since 2004, research assistant at the Foundation Chair of Urban Redevelopment and Research of the TU Dresden and at the Görlitz Centre of Revitalising Urban Development. JOVIS published: Stadtentwicklung und Denkmalpflege Vol. 10 – Stadt Raum Zeit. |
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Karl Plastrotmann, study of architecture at the University of Applied Sciences Münster and the University of Stuttgart. Since 1996, professor at the University of Lusatia. Since 2002, work at the Institute for New Industrial Culture. JOVIS published: Industriebau als Ressource. |
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Beat Presser, from 1976–78 published the photo magazines Palm Beach News and The Village Cry; started working with Werner Herzog in 1981. Presser works on a number of films as camera assistant and stills photographer. Later camera man, cutter and director for various film productions. JOVIS published: Werner Herzog. |
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Prof. Andreas Quednau, Architect Dipl.-Ing. MSc (hons) Andreas Quednau, a founding partner of SMAQ – architecture urbanism research, received a Diploma in Architecture from Berlin University of Technology and a Master in Advanced Architectural Design (hons) from Columbia University, Graduate School for Architecture Planning and Preservation in New York. He worked for Diller Scofidio + Renfro (New York), KCAP (Rotterdam) and Arata Isozaki (Berlin) before establishing SMAQ with Sabine Müller in 2001 first in Rotterdam (2001-2005), then in 2005 in Berlin and in 2009 in Stuttgart. Andreas Quednau has received several international awards including the Architectural Review Award for Emerging Architects and the Holcim Award for Sustainable Construction both in 2008. He taught at the Berlin University of Technology from 2005-2009 and was in 2009 appointed Professor of Architecture and Urban Design at the Stuttgart State Academy for Art and Design, School of Architecture. JOVIS published: Charter of Dubai – A Manifesto of Critical Urban Transformation |
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Raumlaborberlin began working on the issues of contemporary architecture and urbanism in 1999. In various interdisciplinary working teams we investigate strategies for urban renewal. Raumlabor does urban design, architectural design, build, interactive environments, research. JOVIS published: acting in public.. |
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Friedrich von Borries and Matthias Böttger set up raumtaktik, their office for spatial investigation and intervention, in 2003. raumtaktik is concerned with the means of production of space and the cultural, economic and political parameters that determine the shape of architecture and urban development. JOVIS published: TV Towers. |
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Prof. Christa Reicher studied architecture at the RWTH Aachen. Since 2002, head of the Department of Urban Development, Urban Design, and Construction Planning in the Faculty of City and Regional Planning at the Technical University Dortmund. Previously, from 1998 to 2002, she was professor of urban development and design in the Department of Architecture at the FH Bochum. She is co-founder and partner of the Aachen planning office rha Reicher Haase Architekten + Stadtplaner; in addition, she works as a prize judge and in several design councils. JOVIS published: Der öffentliche Raum and Schichten einer Region – Kartenstücke zur räumlichden Struktur des Ruhrgebiets. |
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Ivan Reimann, born in Prague in 1957: 1976–1980, study at the TU Prague and 1981–1985, study at the TU Berlin, graduating with a diploma. 1988–1989, Architectural Association, London. 1989–1994, work at the chair of Prof. Dr. Schmidt-Thomsen, TU Berlin. Since 1999, professor of design and building theory, TU Dresden. JOVIS published: Fakultäten und Bibliothek für Recht und Wirtschaft. |
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Iris Reuther, since 1993 director of the office of urban projects in Leipzig. Studied architecture at the College of Architecture and Construction in Weimar. Thesis on changes in city housing forms in the first half of the 20th century. From 1987 until 1990 she was a research associate at the Institute of Urban Development and Architecture of the GDR Academy of Building in Berlin. The social change and the new urbanistic questions that arose in East Germany led to her becoming a freelance architect for urban planning in Leipzig and opening her own planning office. JOVIS published: Regiopolen. |
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Eckhart Ribbeck is a professor at the Städtebau-Institut of Stuttgart University. Eckhart Ribbeck is the director of the faculty SIAAL – urban development in Asia, Africa and Latin America, which was set up with the aim of addressing in greater depth the subjects of urbanisation, city planning and residential construction in non-European regions. JOVIS published: Die Welt wird Stadt – Stadtbilder aus Asien, Afrika, Lateinamerika. |
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Kristien Ring is American, living in Berlin since 1991 and is a registered, German Architect (Dipl.Ing. Architektin, B.E.D.Arch U.S.A.). Kristien Ring works as a curator, editor and architectural critic in communicating architectural topics as well as in teaching. 2001 – 2005 co-founder of the gallery SUITCASEARCHITECTURE. 2005 – 2011 Director of the German Center for Architecture DAZ. AA Projects was founded by Kristien Ring in 2011. JOVIS published: auf.einander.bauen, Emerging Identities-EAST and CITÁMBULOS – MEXICO CITY. |
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Dr. Steffen de Rudder, studied architecture at the Technical University Berlin. Since 1999 research associate at the Bauhaus University Weimar, faculty professor for design and housing development. In 1995 he opened his own offices for the preservation of monuments and historic buildings and refurbishment. JOVIS published: The Architekt Hugh Stubbins. |
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Manfred Sack, renowned architecture critic. JOVIS published: Stadt im Kopf. |
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Born in Maputo, Mozambique and grew up in Portugal, where he studied Theology and Fine Art. At a crucial moment, he had to make a decision between one or the other, since they are by and large mutually exclusive. His inclination became clear at this stage—to pursue art, which he has done in a quasi-religious manner. He moved to Amsterdam for the DeAppel’s Curatorial Training Programme and then to Dundee to do a PhD on the subject of Shadow Curating, a practice advancing platforms for the agonistic dialogue between curators. Nuno’s professional life has been spent between the UK, the Netherlands, and Lisbon where he taught at the Faculdade de Belas Artes de Lisboa, doing post-doctoral research and teaching the Mestrado de Museulogia e Museugrafia. Nuno Sacramento is currently the Director of Scottish Sculpture Workshop, an international residency programme in Lumsden, Scotland. JOVIS published: ARTocracy—Art, Informal Space, and Social Consequence: A Curatorial Handbook in Collaborative Practice. |
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José Salinas, AAMArch, he received his Master of Architecture from The Architectural Association. He is the founder of KNOBSDesign in New York + Madrid. KNOBS (Knowledge Based System) focuses on architectural design at all scales - furniture, interior, building and urban design - and extends to digital interactive environments and installations. KNOBS understands architecture design as augmented interactive environments and is exploring inner living spaces, shaped by external machinist systems of information that transform and generate new topological configurations. In addition to his practice, José Salinas is teaching at Universidad Europea, Escuela Superior de Arte y Arquitectura [ESAYA] in Madrid and has taught at Cornell University in New York. JOVIS published: Disembodiment. |
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Julia Schäfer graduated in research into anti-Semitism at the TU Berlin and is a research associate at the institute of the history of medicine at the Heinrich-Heine University Düsseldorf. JOVIS published: Dora Garcia. |
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Marc Schalenberg Dr. phil., studied History, Art History, and Philosophy in Bonn, Oxford, Paris, and Berlin. Wissenschaftlicher Assistent at the History Departments of Humboldt University Berlin and the University of Zurich from 1999 to 2008. Research Fellow at Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies from 2008 to 2010. Co-editor of Selling Berlin. Imagebildung und Stadtmarketing von der preußischen Residenz bis zur
Bundeshauptstadt (2008); various other publications in the field of modern European urban history. Currently preparing a comparative study on "urban icons" in German capital cities between 1648 and 1848. JOVIS published: Urban Planning and the Pursuit of Happiness. |
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Susanne Schaubeck, born 1975, Urban designer. Degree in architecture from the TU Munich 2004. 1994–1997 studied classical philology and theology at the University of Regensburg and LMU Munich. 2004 freelance work at Wallner Architects, Munich. 2005–2007 freelance editor of the architectural magazine Detail. 2005–2008 she is assistant professor at the Department of Urban and Regional Planning at TU Munich, engaged on a research project on the urban development of Munich (Prof. em. Stacke). Since 2006 research and curatorial activities on the current transformation of cities with reference to urban concepts of the 20th century. JOVIS published: Multiple City. |
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Anne Schmedding, research associate at the faculty of “History + theory of architecture and town” at the TU Brunswick and freelance editor, countless art and architecture catalogues, also edits the catalogue ”urbane Realitäten: Fokus Istanbul”. JOVIS published: Gesetz und Freiheit. |
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Bastienne Schmidt is a German born and New York based fine art photographer and multi media artist. She has lived and worked for many years in Greece and Italy. Her art work is included in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the International Center of Photography, The Brooklyn Museum, The Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris among many others. JOVIS published: ShadowHome and Home Stills. |
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Hemma Schmutz, art historian, specialist in German studies and since March 2007 director of the Salzburg Kunstverein. JOVIS published: Otto Zitko. |
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Lutz Schöbe, associate at the Bauhaus Dessau and member of the Deutsches Werkbund (German Work Federation) and Verband Deutscher Kunsthistoriker (German Art Historians Association). Studied the history of art and classic archaeology at the Humboldt University in Berlin. JOVIS published: Bauhaus Objekte. |
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Jörg Schröder, architect and urban planner in Munich, diploma 1998. Assistant at the Chair of Planning and Construction in Rural Areas under Prof. Reichenbach-Klinke, TU Munich. Member of the Bavarian Academy for Rural Areas; 2007, nominated for the promotional art award of the City of Munich. Work in the research association “Urbanlandscape” of the Institute of Urban and Landscape Design (Entwerfen Stadt und Landschaft). Work on perceptual and design tools for rural-urban phenomena, architecture and spatial configurations. JOVIS published: Landraum. |
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Arabella Schwarzkopf, studied photography in Rochester, New York. Represented by the Anzenberger agency of Vienna since 1998. JOVIS published: City Lives. |
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Matthias Seidel, born 1966, study of architecture at the TU Berlin. 1995–2001, freelance work as an architect. Since 1999, contract to teach the social foundations of building at Berlin University of the Arts; since 2007, lecturing in architecture/urbanities. From 2001–2007, assistant to Prof. Dr. Jonas Geist in the Department of the History, Theory, and Criticism of Architecture at Berlin University of the Arts. 2002, foundation of the agency Laufwerk B for architecture and communication. 2007, foundation of dr. julius | ap, exhibitions and projects in the fields of architecture and art. Since 2009, associate member of the Federation of German Architects. Curator and producer of the exhibition “Fehling+Gogel.” JOVIS published: Fehling+Gogel. |
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Maria Sewcz, photographer, lives and works in Berlin. JOVIS published: point out. |
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Anna Viader Soler, studied architecture at the School of Architecture of Barcelona (ETSAB ) and at Technical University Berlin (TUB). She taught at the TU Dresden's Institute of Landscape Architecture from 2004 to 2009. In 2004 she founded her own office for architecture and landscape architecture. She has won numerous prizes in international landscape architecture competitions and cooperates with various other offices, including Büro Kiefer. She has given a variety of lectures and has diverse publications. She was the curator of an exhibition entitled "Re-thinking Palma, Mirades Paisatgístiques des de Dresden" at COAIB , Palma de Mallorca, Co-curator of the exhibition "Return of Landscape" at the Akademie der Künste, Berlin. JOVIS published: Wiederkehr der Landschaft. |
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Tom Sólo lives and works equally in both Spain and Germany. The north German-born artist (1973) did not grow up planning to become a photographer. After a successful apprenticeship as a furniture maker, he received a scholarship from the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs to study at the Academy for Creative Craftwork in Aachen. Inspired by artists and friends, he bagan to turn his attention to the performing arts before he emigrated to Spain and established himself as a photography assistant, production manager, and independent photographer in Spain and Germany. Sólo works internationally for private clients, companies, and magazines. JOVIS published: Es Moli d'En Morei. |
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Rolf Stein, graduate economist, consultant, lecturer and researcher, developed an Internet platform for urban and regional development. JOVIS published: Edition Bauhaus Vol. 22. |
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Professor Steiner heads the projects and events of the professorial chair of trade fair and exhibition design. Started in 1972 as a stage technician at the playhouse at the Hallesche Ufer in Berlin; qualified as a stage manager and lighting designer. Founded the company “Steiner Museumstechnik” in 1982 and “Museumstechnik GmbH” in 1986. JOVIS published: Museumstechnik. |
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Ralph Stern is an architect, urban researcher, and professor of architecture and urbanism. He has been a Research Associate in architectural theory at the University of Cambridge and has taught at various institutions including Columbia University, MIT, University of Washington, the Cities Programme at the London School of Economics, the Technical University Berlin and the University of the Arts Berlin, where he co-directed the Program for Urban Processes. He has organized multiple symposia, lectures frequently on the international circuit, and is the author of numerous publications. JOVIS published: Urbanizing the Mojave Desert: Las Vegas and as a contributor to Return of Landscape.
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Katrina Stoll is an architect, urban designer, and educator. She is currently a teaching fellow at North Carolina State University College of Design. She received a Bachelor’s degree in cultural anthropology at Cornell University and a Master of Architecture from Columbia University. From 2007–2008, she taught architecture and theory at Syracuse University. Between 2008 and 2010 she taught architecture and theory, and directed the Master of Advanced Studies in Urban Design program at the ETH Zürich. Along with Scott Lloyd and Room 11, Katrina developed the IP2100 project, which is being featured at the Australian Pavilion for the 2010 Venice Biennale. She contributed to the publication Cities of Change: Addis Ababa. JOVIS published: Infrastructure as Architecture. |
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Studied photography and visual communication. Lives and works in Rome and Berlin. JOVIS published: Schatten der Macht. |
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studio urbane landschaften  |
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The STUDIO URBANE LANDSCHAFTEN is an interdisciplinary network of teaching, research, and practice at the Faculty of Architecture and Landscape at Leibniz University Hanover. The currently sixteen members from the spheres of landscape architecture, urban planning, architecture, civil engineering, biology, sociology, and water sciences work in research projects, design teaching and office practice. The STUDIO is a joint platform for questions regarding the perception, planning, and design of urban landscapes—ranging from regional strategies to local site projects. Various STUDIO-teams have published at JOVIS: Creating Knowledge, WASSERATLAS and Stadtsurfer, Quartierfans & Co. |
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Friederike Tebbe, artist, freelance consultant in colour + design for architecture and design, seminars and consultant on the subject of: colour – perception – communication. JOVIS published: Color Spaces. |
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Cornelia Tomerius, freelance journalist for newspapers and magazines, writer, editor in the "Travel" department of „Frankfurter Rundschau“. JOVIS published: Meydan Shopping Square |
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Uchimura has been photographing the streets of Tokyo for 15 years. Having grown up in London and Ottawa, he came to Berlin for the first time in 1987. It was not until he qualified as a photographer in 2005 that he returned. “For years I have been looking through my viewfinder at Tokyo; no other city in the world reminds me of it as much as Berlin does.” JOVIS published: Berlin + Tokyo. |
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Christoph Valentien, born 1939, study of landscape architecture at the TU Munich and urban development at the RWTH Aachen. Since 1971, shared office with Donata Valentien. 1980–2002, professor at the Chair of Landscape Architecture and Design at the TU Munich. Has worked on various municipal advisory committees, for specialist associations and competition juries; professor at Nanjing Forestry University. JOVIS published: New Botanic Garden Shanghai. |
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Donata Valentien, born 1944, she studied Landscape Architecture at the TU of Munich and Berlin. Assistant professor at the University of Stuttgart from 1969-1974. She co-founded Valentien+Valentien Landscape Architects and Urban Planners with Christoph Valentien in 1971. The office won numerous international landscape architecture competitions and received various prizes, including the Fritz Schumacher Prize in 1995. Jury member, official expert, and honorary professor at the University of Hohenheim in 1980 and at the TU Munich in 1988. She served on the steering committee of the Emscher Park International Building Exhibition (IBA ) from 1988 to 1999. Member of the advisory board for the Federal Ministry of Regional Planning, Building and Urban Development in Bonn from 1989 to 1995. Member of the German Academy for Urban and Regional Spatial Planning since 1988 and a member of the Academy of Arts, Berlin since 1996, serving as the director of the Architecture Section since 2006. JOVIS published: New Botanic Garden Shanghai and Return of Landscape. |
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Dipl.-Ing. Dr. Wolfgang Voigt, born in Hamburg in 1950; 1972–1978, study of architecture, lecturing contracts and work as a research assistant at various universities; 1979–1984, work in the extended editorial circle of the magazine ARCH+. Since 1997, deputy director of the German Museum of Architecture (DAM), Frankfurt/Main. Exhibition projects and catalogue productions at the DAM: Gottried Böhm, Hans Poelzig, NEU BAU Land etc. JOVIS published: Gottfried Böhm. |
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Ilija Vukorep, study of architecture at the University of Kassel. Since 2006, professor at the University of Lusatia. Since 2008, work for the Institute of New Industrial Culture. JOVIS published: Industriebau als Ressource. |
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Martin Wallroth founded the company “mawa-design” in 1978 in Michendorf near Potsdam. JOVIS published: Avantgarde in their Day. |
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Björn Weber is mainly involved in the research projects ECLISE (Enabling Climate Information Services for Europe) and PEGASOS (Pan-European Gas-AeroSols-climate interaction Studies). Through previous positions at HafenCity-University Hamburg and his work in environmental consultancy, he has experience in stakeholder engagement and knowledge transfer. As the coordinator of a “learning alliance” he worked on integrated water management to support the progress of sustainable water management regarding climate change. Björn has a degree in Geography from the University of Göttingen, during which he also spent time at UCLA in the USA. JOVIS published: Water Sensitive Urban Design – Principles and Inspiration for Sustainable Stormwater Management in the City of the Future |
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Monika Weber-Pahl was born in Bad Berleburg in 1959. She studied architecture at the TH Darmstadt, travelled to Japan with a grant from the Jürgen Ponto Foundation, and received her diploma in 1986. Practical work as a freelancer in Darmstadt. Contract to teach Wooden Building Construction at the FH Darmstadt; 1997, guest lecturer at the "Summer Academy at the University of Hanover". Work as an assessor and jury member. Since, 2003 managing director of Pahl + Weber-Pahl Planungsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG. JOVIS published: Structure in Mind. |
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Kerstin Weigert, architect and urban planner in Munich; diploma 1999. Winner of the Döllgast Prize. Research assistant at the Chair of Planning and Building in Rural Areas under Prof. Reichenbach-Klinke, TU Munich. Work in study projects on housing conditions, mobility, tourism and agriculture in the context of rural-urban landscapes. JOVIS published: Landraum. |
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Zhi Wenjun, Architect, Editor-in-Chief of Time + Architecture magazine, Professor of the College of Architecture and Urban Planning, Tongji University, Shanghai. JOVIS published: M8 in China. |
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Hans Wilderotter, ethnologist, art historian and professor of museology at the College of Technology and Industry in Berlin. JOVIS published: Das Haus am Werderschen Markt. |
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Karin Wilhelm, professor at TU Braunschweig, Institute for the History and Theory of Architecture and the City. JOVIS published: Gesetz und Freiheit . |
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Peter Winkels has run the agency Next (Intercultural Projects) since 1999. Next is active mainly in the field of international art and cultural projects and is committed to innovative concepts for the mediation of art. In this context, Peter Winkels works for institutions incl. the Haus der Kulturen der Welt, the German Foundation for Children and Young People (Deutsche Kinder- und Jugendstiftung), the International Centre for Talent Research, and many more. JOVIS published: Signs of the City. |
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Antje Wischmann is currently visiting professor in Scandinavian Studies at the University of Tübingen, lecturer at the Department for Northern European Studies at the Humboldt University Berlin, and research associate at Södertörn University in Stockholm; relevant publications: Verdichtete Stadtwahrnehmung. Untersuchungen zum literarischen und urbanistischen Diskurs in Skandinavien 1 955-95 (2003); Auf die Probe gestellt - zur Debatte um die ‚neue Frau' der 1920er und 1930er Jahre in Schweden, Dänemark und Deutschland (2006); publications in cultural and literary studies. JOVIS published: Nortopia Nordic Modern Architecture and Post War Germany. |
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Wittmann-Englert, Kerstin  |
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Dr. Kerstin Wittmann-Englert, born 1962, study of art history, modern German literature and Christian archaeology at the FU Berlin and in Bonn. 1992–1994, academic assistant in further education for the State Museums of Prussian Cultural Heritage (Staatliche Museen Preußischer Kulturbesitz); 1993–2005, lecturing and research assistant at the TU Berlin; 2002–2007, architectural editor for “Kunst und Kirche.” Since April 2005, private lecturer and academic assistant in the Department of Art History at the TU Berlin. JOVIS published: Berlin Modernism. |
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Sophie Wolfrum, since 2003 Professor at the Department of Urban Design and Regional Planning at the TU Munich. Studied regional planning at the University of Dortmund, final state examination in city planning, administrative practice in Tanzania and Germany. Since 1989 she has managed the Office of Architecture and City Planning in partnership as a free-lance planner together with Prof. Alban Janson. Member of numerous juries and advisory boards. Office projects received, among others, the German City Planning Award 1995 and 2006. JOVIS published: Multiple City. |
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Claudia Zeiske is a freelance curator and cultural activist. Originally from Germany, she studied Economics and Social Anthropology in Berlin and London. Since coming to Scotland in 1995, she has collaborated with many smaller and larger organisations across Scotland and further afield. She is co-founder and Director of Deveron Arts and set up the acclaimed Artists at Glenfiddich programme in rural Speyside. She developed a unique curatorial interest based on a balanced approach between artistic criticality and community involvement through developing projects with artists from across the globe. Today she is concentrating on the development of the international residency programme of Deveron Arts—town is the venue in the town of Huntly in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. JOVIS published: ARTocracy—Art, Informal Space, and Social Consequence: A Curatorial Handbook in Collaborative Practice. |
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Carl Zillich, studied architecture in Kassel and New York, research and teaching at Leibniz University Hanover in the field of Architecture and Art of the 20th and 21st Centuries, Works in the field of architecture in Berlin. JOVIS published: Performativ?, Inklusiv. and In Bewegung... Architektur und Kunst. |
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Prof. Peter Zlonicky, born 1935, certified urban planner and architect. Studied at the Technical University in Darmstadt. Founded the office for urban planning and research in Darmstadt in 1964, later in Essen, Dortmund and Munich. Chief spheres of action: urban development and design, cautious urban renewal, regional cooperation and development aid. Mediator in difficult negotiations. Professor at the North Rhine-Westphalia Technical University in Aachen in 1971, at the University of Dortmund in 1976 and at the Technical University in Hamburg-Harburg in 2000. Guest professor in Venice, Trento, Zurich and, since 2002, at the Technical University in Vienna. Scientific director of the IBA Emscher Park (1989–1997). Member of the board of trustees of the National Urban Development Policy since 2008. JOVIS published: Large-Scale Projects in German Cities. |
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Moira Zoitl, born 1968 in Salzburg, artist, lives and works in Berlin. Moira Zoitl deals in her practice with the topics migration, city development, gender and (auto-)biography, selected solo exhibitions: Kunstverein Wolfsburg 2001, Kunsthalle Exnergasse Wien 2007. JOVIS published: Exchange Square. |
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