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Michelle Fornabai

Adjunct Assistant Professor
mf2225@columbia.edu
+1 212 854 3414
11.19.09
6:30PM - 8:00PM
Studio-X | 180 Varick Street, STE 1610 | 1 train to Houston Street
Heather Rowe and Michelle Fornabai in Conversation
01.26.10
6:30PM - 8:30PM
Miller Theatre, Columbia University

No Fixed Points in Space: Transferring Form, Time, and Narrative between Architecture and Performance. Performances by Merce Cunningham Dance Company's Repertory Understudy Group and Conversations with Trevor Carlson, Merce Cunningham Dance Foundation; Michelle Fornabai, Ambo Infra Design; Paul Kaiser, Open Ended Group; Paul Miller (aka DJ Spooky), artist; composer; writer; Tere O'Connor, Tere O'Connor Dance; and Bernard Tschumi, Bernard Tschumi Architects. Curated and moderated by Annie K. Kwon, Architect, Kwon Studio

01.28.10
8:00PM - 10:00PM
Studio-X New York | 180 Varick Street, STE 1610 | 1 train to Houston Street

Live, simulcast panel between New York and Beijing, on the various uses and potentials of ink, to launch the exhibition "ink" by Michelle Fornabai. Exhibition will be on display through 2/25/2010.

01.28.10
8:00PM - 10:00PM
Studio-X New York | 180 Varick Street, STE 1610 | 1 train to Houston Street

Live, simulcast panel between New York and Beijing, on the various uses and potentials of ink, to launch the exhibition "ink" by Michelle Fornabai. Exhibition will be on display through 2/25/2010.

01.28.10
12:00AM - 11:59PM
Studio-X New York | 180 Varick Street, STE 1610 | 1 train to Houston Street
A series of ink on mylar drawings by MICHELLE FORNABAI, produced and exhibited for "conceptual acts in concrete." Having premiered at Studio-X Beijing in July 2008, "ink" now travels to Studio-X New York as part of the GSAPP's growing Studio-X Global Network Initiative, the "first truly global network for real-time exchange of projects, people and ideas between regional leadership cities."
Advanced Studio IV: Emergent Technologies and Sensory Architectures

The studio will explore flaws in architecture through the design of an Institute for Standards Research.

Have you been mistaken? Lax, careless, negligent, erratic, inattentive? Maladjusted? Misunderstood? Prone to mishaps, misreading, misinterpretation, or mistiming? Curious about being bad? Wild, illogical, imaginary, implausible, unrealistic, improbable, illusory and absurd? Ever wonder if two wrongs can make a right? Or how something so bad becomes good?