Collaborator: Davy Dai
Paprika! Magazine is the often-monthly broadsheet published by the students of the Yale School of Architecture and Yale School of Art.
In this issue of Paprika! Charity Edwards and Virginia Mannerings insist we listen to the polyphony of the concrete communities - for the multitudes they contain. While Sam Sheffer and Emily Wissenmann question the implied predictability of forecasts. In Stitching Punk’s Patchwork, Leah Altman finds creative renewals from the patchwork of urban decay of the punk rock clubs in New York City. In DE-ARCHITECTURE, Heather Mitcheltree delves into the themes of creation, transformation, and renewal, exploring the intricate process of shaping architectural ideas. Alex Ianchenko reminds us “our job is not to draw new buildings - it’s to reimagine a liveable future.”
Esma Selen Aksoy contemplates on buildings as dynamic elements that adapt to changing environmental conditions and human needs, while Steven Stulco explores the prevailing nature of an established structure and how circumstantial changes can prompt individuals to take on unexpected roles. Yifei Zhang presents us with the many geneses of architecture. Mesut Sallah writes on the Soviet building blocks in his childhood home Kabul, and the bittersweet memories they hold. Additionally, Ahmad Al Ajmi poses questions of “commoning” via the lens of humanitarian development. Finally, Sara Al Ajmi wrote us a poem.
This issue highlights the moment before action — what does a patchwork of advocacy look like in its totality?