24
Feb

Middleground | Siting Dispossession

Stephen Shore, Main Street, Blackfoot, Métis, and Ogala Sioux Territory (Treaty 4 Territory, Gull Lake, Saskatchewan), 1974 (printed 2002). Chromogenic colour print, 43.2 x 55.2 cm. Courtesy of 303 Gallery, New York City © Stephen Shore

Canadian Centre for Architecture

1920, rue Baile
H3H 2S6 Montréal
QC
Kanada

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Architects today must grapple with the emotionally charged and politically contested spaces—middlegrounds—that have come into being through settler colonial displacement: zoning processes based on non-Indigenous legal systems have established property, and settlement and design interventions have made land ”common.” Middleground takes the position that settler spatial practitioners must now work to return land that has been colonized through design.


The term “middleground” names the spaces in and practices through which architecture continues to be complicit in the dispossession of Indigenous lands. As an intentional curatorial form of settler accountability, we acknowledge pre-existing Indigenous rights to the sovereignty and use of land in what is now known as North America. This critical reading of exemplary projects from the CCA Collection reveals everyday spatial and power dynamics that have created middlegrounds but that have not often been acknowledged. Beyond restitution, how can architects participate in imagining more just futures for sites of dispossession?

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