CRIR

CRIR

crir

Research centre
Art and Design Research Centre

Date
2004

Tags
Fine Art

A critical inquiry into developing new methodologies and contexts for urban research, aiming to prototype a dialogue, which is both local and global

The CRIR Project was set up as a critical inquiry into developing new methodologies and contexts for urban research, aiming to prototype a dialogue, which is both local and global. Using the alternative living experiment, The Free Town Christiania in Copenhagen as a research base, the project has established an independent research platform, where the parameters are deliberately set to subvert existing institutional approaches and make more traditional linear forms of engagement with urban research impossible. Using localism as a critical tool in evaluating complex and messy narratives, the project has since 2004 pioneered new ways of understanding chaos and complexity in the context of urban awareness, as well as in the greater global context of urban planning and politics.

The project has resulted in a long list of international publications by artists and researchers across academic and disciplinary fields, such as: ‘Community Experiments in collaborative homes and lifestyles’ Dr. Helen Jarvis, Newcastle University, ‘Alternative Capitalism and Creative Economy’: The Case of Christiania’, Dr Alberto Vanolo, Turin University, ‘Normalization as an Urban Political Strategy’ and ‘Fourty Years of System Change - Lessons from the Free City of Christiania’ by Dr Anders Lund Hansen, Social and Economic Geography, Lund University.

For more information see: www.crir.net

CRIR is funded by the community of Christiania
Additional project specific funding from The Danish Arts Council and The Nordic Council (DIVA)

Keynote presentations by Lise Autogena

Future Thinking - Creative Utopias, Christiania Research and Residency Project’, at Tate Britain, organised by Visiting Arts, 2010
'Space for Urban Alternatives? Christiania 1971-2011' at Gallopperiet, Christiania, October 2011, Goteborg University
‘Planetary Breakdown: Autonomous Infrastructures for a Sustainable Future: ’ Alternative Communities: Christiania, The Baltic, UK, organised by Intersections, Newcastle University and The Arts Catalyst, 2010,
'Punto de Fuga' (Vanishing Point) at Vitoria-Gasteiz: Centro Cultural Montehermoso, 2008

Researchers involved

Lise Autogena - Professor of Cross-Disciplinary Art

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