- JEFFREY LANDMAN DESIGNS - OBJECT - ROOM - BUILDING - TEXT -
R.06
DESKTOP
Type:
Exhibition
Role:
Design, Fabrication, Curation
Location:
Keller gallery, M.I.T.
Date:
Fall 2021
With:
Joel Austin Cunningham, James Vincent Brice
With thanks to:
The Generous support of the MIT Department of Architecture, Nicholas De Monchaux, Aidan Flyn, Chris Dewart, Eytan Levi, Ben Hoyle
DESKTOP aims to materialize the diverse experiences of MIT Architecture during the remote 2020-2021 academic year. The collective work surface of the exhibition makes a space to explore the artifacts of our isolation, the stories behind the products and processes of making at a distance. The finished and the unfinished, the prototype and the cast-off, the footnote and the shopping list, the things we made and the things we used to make them -- Desktop offers a reflection on the material histories of the department’s year apart while celebrating its re-opening: our coming together.
The exhibit was conceptualised as a rolling archive, a collective work surface. We released an open call to the student body, with the aim of recieving one piece of material from each student. The exhibition furnishings were fabricated in a few short days after the submissions had been recieved, in order to meet the quantity of submissions. In the tradition of the ‘MIT hack’, I designed a folded metal desk lamp which was to be cut out of the shelf material of an inexpensive rolling cart. Two pieces of plexiglass stabilised the shelf after this operation, creating a silhoutted figure on the desktop. At the end of the exhibit, the carts were knocked down, disperesd into the studios, and quickly re-metabolised into the work-flow of the department.

01. installation

02. installation



05. lamp detail


07. postcards

01. cut plan

02. plan


R.06
DESKTOP
Type:
Exhibition
Role:
Design, Fabrication, Curation
Location:
Keller gallery, M.I.T.
Date:
Fall 2021
With:
Joel Austin Cunningham, James Vincent Brice
With thanks to:
The Generous support of the MIT Department of Architecture, Nicholas De Monchaux, Aidan Flyn, Chris Dewart, Eytan Levi, Ben Hoyle
DESKTOP aims to materialize the diverse experiences of MIT Architecture during the remote 2020-2021 academic year. The collective work surface of the exhibition makes a space to explore the artifacts of our isolation, the stories behind the products and processes of making at a distance. The finished and the unfinished, the prototype and the cast-off, the footnote and the shopping list, the things we made and the things we used to make them -- Desktop offers a reflection on the material histories of the department’s year apart while celebrating its re-opening: our coming together.
The exhibit was conceptualised as a rolling archive, a collective work surface. We released an open call to the student body, with the aim of recieving one piece of material from each student. The exhibition furnishings were fabricated in a few short days after the submissions had been recieved, in order to meet the quantity of submissions. In the tradition of the ‘MIT hack’, I designed a folded metal desk lamp which was to be cut out of the shelf material of an inexpensive rolling cart. Two pieces of plexiglass stabilised the shelf after this operation, creating a silhoutted figure on the desktop. At the end of the exhibit, the carts were knocked down, disperesd into the studios, and quickly re-metabolised into the work-flow of the department.

01. installation
02. installation

02. installation

03. installation
![]()

04. installation
![]()
05. lamp detail
06. installation detail
![]()
07. postcards

05. lamp detail


07. postcards

01. cut plan![]()
02. plan
03. elevation
04. isometric

02. plan

