Eyal WeizmanMBEFBA (born 1970) is a British Israeli architect. He is the director of the research agency
Forensic Architecture at
Goldsmiths, University of London where he is Professor of Spatial and Visual Cultures and a founding director there of the Centre for Research Architecture[1] at the department of Visual Cultures. In 2019 he was elected Fellow of the British Academy.
In 2007 he was a founding member of the architectural collective Decolonizing Architecture (DAAR)[3] in Beit Sahour in the West Bank, Palestinian territories. Weizman has been a professor of architecture at the
Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna and has also taught at
The Bartlett (UCL) in London at the
Städelschule in Frankfurt. He lectured, curated and organised conferences in many institutions worldwide. Weizman's most known theoretical work describes the acts of the Israeli army as founded upon the post-structuralist French philosophers and a reading of them. He also conducted research on behalf of
B’tselem on the "planning aspects of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank".[4]
He has also published many articles on Israeli geography and architecture.[5][6][7]
In 2013 he designed a permanent folly in Gwangju, South Korea which was documented in the book The Roundabout Revolution (Sternberg, 2015).
In 2010 he established the agency
Forensic Architecture, which provide advanced architectural and media evidence to civil society groups, with the help of several European Research Council grants, as well as other human rights grants. Forensic Architecture undertook research for
Amnesty International,
Human Rights Watch,
Doctors without Borders (MSF), the Red Cross (
ICRC), and the
United Nations.
In 2017, he was a guest speaker at the 17th edition of the
Sonic Acts Festival: The Noise of Being (Amsterdam). Since 2019 he is a guest professor at
ETH Zurich. Between 2014 and 2017 he was a Global Scholar at
Princeton University.
In February 2020, Weizman was informed by email that his right to travel to the United States under a visa waiver program had been revoked. He was later informed by an official of the US Embassy in London that an algorithm had identified a security threat that was related to him.[8]
Political activism
Weizman is on the editorial board of Third Text, Humanity, Cabinet and Political Concepts and is a board member of the Centre for Investigative Journalism (CIJ) and of the Technology Advisory Board of the International Criminal Court in the Hague, and sat on the board of the Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem in Jerusalem.
He is currently on the advisory boards of the Human Rights Project at
Bard College in New York,[9] as a jury member for architecture in the
Akademie Schloss Solitude and of other academic and cultural institutions.
In 2014 Weizman was featured in "The Architecture of Violence", a film produced for the series Rebel Architecture broadcast by Al Jazeera English.[10]
2015 The Roundabout Revolution, Berlin: Sternberg Press
2015 (with photography by Fazal Sheikh) The Conflict Shoreline: Colonization as Climate Change in the Negev Desert, Göttingen: Steidl and
Cabinet Books.ISBN978-3-95829-035-8
2017 Hollow Land: The Architecture of Israel's Occupation, Third and updated edition (with an additional chapter) London and NYC: Verso Books
2017 Forensic Architecture: Towards an Investigative Aesthetics (in Spanish), Barcelona and Mexico City: MACBA/MUAC (NYT/Spanish top ten non-fiction books of 2017)[21]
2017 Forensic Architecture: Violence at the Threshold of Detectability, NYC: MIT/Zone Books
2021 (with
Matthew Fuller) Investigative Aesthetics: Conflicts and Commons in the Politics of Truth, London: Verso
2021 The Police Shooting of Mark Duggan: Forensic Architecture Reports, New York:
Cabinet books and London: ICA books
Translations
Hollow Land
2017 in Arabic, Cairo and Ramallah: Madarat for Research and Publishing
2017 in Turkish, Istanbul: Kitap
2017 in Hebrew, Tel Aviv: Babel Books
2012 in Spanish (chr. 7): A través de los muros, Madrid: Errate naturae editors
2011 in Greek (chr. 7), Athens: ΤΟΠOBOPOΣ
2009 in German (chr. 7): Durch Wände gehen, Leipzig: Konserve-Verlag
2009 in German: Sperrzonen: Israels architektur der besatzung, Hamburg: Edition Nautilus
2009 in Italian: Architettura dell'occupazione: spazio politico e controllo territoriale in Palestina e Israele, Milan: Bruno Mondadori
2007 in French (chr. 7): A travers les murs, Paris: La Fabrique
The Conflict's Shoreline
2016 in Hebrew, Kav Hamidbar, Sav Hasihsuh, Tel Aviv: Babel Books
The Least of all Possible Evils
2013 in Italian, Il minore dei mali possibili, Rome: Nottetempo[22]
2013 in Croatian, Najmanje od svih mogućih zala, Zagreb: Multimedijalni institute[23]
2009 in Italian, Il Male Minore, Rome: Nottetempo (a short version, Italian)[24]
Mengele's Skull
2020 in German, Megeles Schädel, Leipzig: Merve
2015 in Spanish el cráneo de Mengele, Madrid and Buenos Aires: Sans Soleil Ediciones[25]
2014 in Turkish, Mengele'nin Kafatası Adli Estetiğin Ortaya Çıkışı, Istanbul, Açılım Kitap[26]
2013 in Hebrew, Hagulgolet Shel Mengele: Lidata shel Haestetika Haforensit, Tel Aviv: Resling Books
2013 in Croatian, Mengeleova lubanja: Zaceci forenzicke estetike, Zagreb: Monoskop[27]
^Segal, Rafi; Weizman, Eyal; Tartakover, David (20 February 2003). A civilian occupation: the politics of Israeli architecture. Babel ; VERSO.
OCLC52334881.
^Ophir, Adi; Givoni, Michal; Ḥanafī, Sārī (20 February 2009). The power of inclusive exclusion: anatomy of Israeli rule in the occupied Palestinian territories. Zone Books ; Distributed by the MIT Press.
OCLC317288328.