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Sarah Akigbogun

Research


image: Sarah Akigbogun
Subject

Beyond Urban Tragedy:ÌýExploring Race, Gender and the City. Using storytelling in film and performance to illuminate experiences of spaces of Oppression and Liberation in Architecture.


First and second supervisorsÌý


Abstract

In 1969 Jean Rhys wrote Wide Sargasso Sea, a backstory to ‘the madwoman in the attic’,ÌýBertha, from Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre. Renaming her Antoinette, Rhys’s post-colonialÌýcritique explores themes of power, gender, race and not belonging. It looks at CaribbeanÌýhistory, double consciousness (W.E.B Du Bois, 1903), madness and architecture. We seeÌýarchitecture used as a tool to confine a Creole woman, her mind and arguably also the traces ofÌýBlack, African influenced culture, which she grew up surrounded by. Similar themes of patriarchy verses women, and the use of space as a means of control are found in Euripides’s Antigone. What these women both share is an idea of badness and transgression.

This research explores the interaction of these characters' inner worlds with the external material of architecture, taking a transdisciplinary approach, which uses storytelling film, performance, writing and virtual representation, as tools to communicate their experience. It responds to the contemporary, post pandemic, George Floyd and #metoo era, in which race andÌýgender and their relationshipÌýto architecture have been re-examined.

The thesis argues that architecture is still unwittingly complicit in many real tragediesÌýwhich unfold in our cities. That in the contemporary urban landscape we see echoes of
classical tragedy. Cities in which people of colour have well-documented, poorer mentalÌýoutcomes, partly due to living in the urban environment, where incidences of severe mentalÌýillness are higher (Golembiewski, 2017). Cities where architecture is also has beenÌýdisproportionately used to confine women and people of colour (Appignanesi, 2010). Cities in which now and then protests erupt. Therefore, this research will ask how architectureÌýmight disrupt these built environment narratives, what it coins ‘Urban Tragedy’ throughÌýprocesses that build moments of liberation. Ìý
Ìý
Referring to both real world figures such as the 1930s Architect, Amaza Lee Meredith Virginia home ‘of her own’ and fictional characters' worlds, as moments of agency to learn from. But can architecture liberate? Foucault argues architecture has no inherent agency. (Foccualt,1982). This thesis considers whether architecture, and by extension architects, are indeed so innocent.

The research takes the form of a series of films and performances. Taking Hackney as a context, we travel through memories and imagination to explore African migrant pasts and speculate on alternative, architectural futures.
Ìý


Biography


Sarah Akigbogun is MPhil/PhD student in Architectural Design at The Bartlett School of Architecture. Her research takes an allegorical approach to exploring the experiences of the built environment with respect to race and gender.

Sarah is a transdisciplinary practitioner; an Architect, filmmaker, and actor. She holds a degree in Architectural Engineering from the University of Westminster, Ìýa Diploma in Architecture from the Architectural Association and a Masters in Acting from Drama Centre London, Central St Martins.Ìý

Prior to her PhD, Sarah spent several years in working in practices such as Alsop Architets and Foster and Partners, before founding her own studio. She has since evolved herÌýpractice, which utilises performance and filmÌýas tools for research, design and advocacy.ÌýSarah is founder of Studio Aki, a Wallpaper Emerging practice of 2021, of Appropri8 theatre, and the XXAOC (Female Architects of Colour Project) project. She is a former Vice Chair of Women in Architecture.

Sarah has taught design at The University of Canterbury, on the Bartlett’s Architecture MSci, a Professional Studies tutor at the AA and on the Media Studies programmeÌýat the Royal College of Art, where she leads MS15 ‘Homescapes’.


Publications

  • Akigbogun , S. (2021) ‘Zoe Zenghelis - Building a House of Her Own’, in H. Khosravi and T. Issaias (eds.) Fields, Fragments, Fictions. Pittsburgh: Carnegie Museum of Art.Ìý
  • Akigbogun , S. (2021) Out of the archive: Zoe Zenghelis at the AA, The Architects’ Journal. Available at: (Accessed: 22 February 2024).Ìý
  • Akigbogun , S. (2021b) ‘Uncovering Hidden Women In Architecture’’, in K. Donaldson, anning McBride, and M. Prunotto (eds.) Inflection: Journal of the Melbourne School of Design. Melbourne, Victoria: Melbourne Books.Ìý
  • Akigbogun, S. (2019) In conversation ... Sharon Egretta sutton, Parlour. Edited by J. Clarke and S. Asworth. Available at:
  • Akigbogun , S. (2019) Searching for female architects of colour, Parlour. Edited by J. Clarke and S. Asworth. Available at: (Accessed: 22 February 2024).Ìý

Links

Image:ÌýSarah Akigbogun