Dirty Work

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

Michael Hirschbichler (TU Delft - Theory, Territories & Transitions)

Research Group
Theory, Territories & Transitions
Copyright
© 2023 M.P. Hirschbichler
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.7480/writingplace.7.6372
More Info
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Copyright
© 2023 M.P. Hirschbichler
Research Group
Theory, Territories & Transitions
Issue number
7
Pages (from-to)
129-140
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

There is a tradition in architecture and art – proclaimed by Leon Battista Alberti, Adolf Loos and others – to refrain from dirt. According to such an understanding, architectural and creative thinking and making are conceived as an intellectual and pure endeavor. Dirt, impurity, contamination are, however, inevitable when firmly grounding architecture and other ways of worldmaking in our complex reality. I therefore advocate “dirty work” as a modus operandi that is more suitable for the enormous challenges that we are facing. Dirty work demands active material and bodily engagements with places and environments instead of idealizations and abstractions from a distance. It relies on fieldwork as a practice of working in, with and through the field, its materiality and the immaterial relations that it is made up of.