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Idea by

Tiago Patatas

Porto, Portugal
Tiago Patatas is a researcher and spatial practitioner based in Oporto and London. His work investigates the spatial politics of environmental violence, and everyday militarisms. His work, Transitory Assemblages, examining the modalities of unhoused domesticity in Hong Kong was shown at the 2017 Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism\Architecture. He was a lecturer at the University of Porto. Tiago holds a MA in Research Architecture from Goldsmiths, University of London.

Call for ideas 2021

Negative Commonality


Towards a spatial attitude of care

Negative Commonality


Towards a spatial attitude of care
Navigating through the spatiotemporalities of Amazonian garimpagem, towards a spatial attitude of care.
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Type of project
  • Site-specific cases

As an artisanal gold mining practice, garimpagem is violently re-shaping the Tapajós river basis, in the Brazilian Amazon: contaminated human and nonhuman bodies, moonscape-like terrains, toxic air, water and soil. But in unraveling the structures that initiated and sustained such forms of environmental violence, one encounters a persistent continuum of state neglect towards the illegalized mining practice, and a blatant failure in reducing its ecological destruction and alleviating its socio–political frameworks of injustice. In attempting to think beyond the direct material consequences of these architectures of extraction by addressing its entanglements in broader socio-environmental histories, the study interrogates contamination beyond its molecular intimacies towards a politics of toxicity, it examines the collectivities of life that trouble the boundaries of victim, perpetrator and crime, and questions what modes of endurance can sustain chemically altered lives otherwise.


Harm–by–indirection. Mercury contamination is a prevalent form of violence.

Water scars. The proliferation of garimpagem in Munduruku Indigenous territories.

An etnography of contamination. Mercury circulates through various mediums, with profound impacts.

A novel threat. Large-scale mining prospection concessions invade the Tapajós river basin.

Negative Commonality


Towards a spatial attitude of care

Negative Commonality


Towards a spatial attitude of care
Navigating through the spatiotemporalities of Amazonian garimpagem, towards a spatial attitude of care.
File under
Type of project
  • Site-specific cases

As an artisanal gold mining practice, garimpagem is violently re-shaping the Tapajós river basis, in the Brazilian Amazon: contaminated human and nonhuman bodies, moonscape-like terrains, toxic air, water and soil. But in unraveling the structures that initiated and sustained such forms of environmental violence, one encounters a persistent continuum of state neglect towards the illegalized mining practice, and a blatant failure in reducing its ecological destruction and alleviating its socio–political frameworks of injustice. In attempting to think beyond the direct material consequences of these architectures of extraction by addressing its entanglements in broader socio-environmental histories, the study interrogates contamination beyond its molecular intimacies towards a politics of toxicity, it examines the collectivities of life that trouble the boundaries of victim, perpetrator and crime, and questions what modes of endurance can sustain chemically altered lives otherwise.


Harm–by–indirection. Mercury contamination is a prevalent form of violence.

Water scars. The proliferation of garimpagem in Munduruku Indigenous territories.

An etnography of contamination. Mercury circulates through various mediums, with profound impacts.

A novel threat. Large-scale mining prospection concessions invade the Tapajós river basin.


Idea by

Tiago Patatas
Porto
Portugal
Tiago Patatas is a researcher and spatial practitioner based in Oporto and London. His work investigates the spatial politics of environmental violence, and everyday militarisms. His work, Transitory Assemblages, examining the modalities of unhoused domesticity in Hong Kong was shown at the 2017 Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism\Architecture. He was a lecturer at the University of Porto. Tiago holds a MA in Research Architecture from Goldsmiths, University of London.