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J. Yolande Daniels

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
J. Yolande Daniels
Born1962 (age 61–62)[1]
NationalityAmerican
Alma materCity College of New York and Columbia University
OccupationArchitect
AwardsRome Prize
BuildingsMuseum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts

J. Yolande Daniels (born 1962) is an American architect, designer and educator. She is a founding principal of studioSUMO, an architecture firm that speaks to socio-cultural landscapes through design.[2]

Education

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Daniels received her B. Arch from City College of New York and her M. Arch from the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation at Columbia University.[3] After completing her graduate studies, Daniels received two fellowships from the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Independent Study Program in 1996.[4]

Career

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Daniels came to find her voice as a black woman, the figure she often found “objectified or negated in the approach to architecture.”[5] The highlights of her earlier works and personal research focus on the critiques on the techniques of power – gender, sexuality and race – and how these social structures shape the built environment in the form of architecture.[citation needed]

While at the Whitney Independent Study Program, Daniels developed her practice that responds to issues of gender, race and other forms of subjugation in the built environment through research and design. Daniels co-founded studioSUMO with Sunil Bald in 1997.[6] With Bald as studioSUMO, Daniels has designed projects such as the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Art in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, New York in 2007 and the Mizuta Museum at Josai University in Sakado, Japan in 2012.[7][8] As of 2021, studioSUMO has established offices in both New York and Los Angeles. She has taught at the University of Michigan, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Columbia University, where she remained for a decade. Currently, she is an assistant professor at the University of Southern California where she teaches architectural design.[9][10][11]

In 1996, Daniels devised a standing urinal for women first installed in a guestroom of New York City’s Gramercy Park Hotel, to challenge architecture, at the scale of space and object, to confront gender and sexuality as a biased technology in building and clothing codes. The straddle-style installation, FEMMEpissoire, consists of pipes for flush, a pair of rubber pants, a dryer addressing the commodification of female hygiene, and a mounted mirror for self-reflection of users’ bodies and identities.[12] The charge of “politics of standing” queries “whether the act of controlling the flow of urine constitutes an essential personal freedom for men." The work is also viewed as an echo to gay men’s reclamation of pissoire and public restroom in the 1990s from the historical felony against homosexual acts.[12][13] This design was the first that could "allow its user to observe her body evacuating itself of urine."[14]

With Intimate Landscape of the Shotgun House in Dallas, Texas, Daniels continued the dialogue on the materialization of power through the lenses of slavery history. In search for terms of domesticity in the Shotgun House, a vernacular typology in the US South to house enslaved people from West-Africa, she reprised the history of surrounding landscape through quotes from WPA slave narratives.[13][15] The texts were projected on the interior walls, utilizing the power of lights and shadows, and gave agency to “the desire of the (plantation) landscape” to keep people together and apart at the same time.[15] Some earlier projects Daniels worked at studioSUMO brought racial issues to the forefront in similar fashion.[citation needed]

In her endeavors, Daniel confronted architecture to the heaviness of black history in scales ranging from territorial mapping to small-scale installations to publication and writings. De Facto/de Jure: by Custom/by Law, for example, researched and analyzed the legal cartography of exclusion and inclusion during the 20th century’s Great Migration along the Southern Crescent Railway Line.[13] For the reception area at The Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts (MoCADA) in Brooklyn, Daniels devised a three-dimensionalized map tracing the migration of African diaspora.[13][15] Her published essays on “advocacy architecture”, which dealt with the spatial politics of gender, race and class, included Crime and Ornament (YYZ Press, 2002), White Papers, Black Marks (Athlone Press, 2000), Black bodies, black space: A-waiting spectacle (2000) and Grey Areas (Chalkham Hill Press, 1999).[16]

Before joining the University of Southern California as Assistant Professor in 2019, she has lectured at MIT and Yale University as Visiting Professor, focusing on studies of thresholds across cultural differences, and taught architecture at Columbia University, City College of New York, the University of Michigan. She also held the Silcott Chair at Howard University and was the Interim Director of the M.Arch program at Parsons School of Constructed Environments.[17][5]

Daniels, as a member of the Black Reconstruction Collective, had her work black city: The Los Angeles Edition, commissioned for the Reconstructions: Architecture and Blackness in America by the Museum of Modern Art.[1]

Projects

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  • FEMMEpissoire (installation), Gramercy Park Hotel, New York City (1996)
  • Intimate Landscape of the Shotgun House, Dallas, Texas (2000)
  • Museum of African Art (interior space), Long Island City (2001)
  • Museum of African Diaspora Art, Brooklyn (2006)
  • Josai University School of Business Management, Sakado, Japan (2006)
  • Mitan Housing, Miami (2007)
  • Leaney Harlem Duplex, Harlem (2009)
  • Mizuta Museum of Art, Sakado, Japan (2012)
  • iHouse Dormitory, JIU University, Togane, Japan (2016)
  • black city: The Los Angeles Edition, MoMA, (2021)

Publications

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O: the apparatus in Crime and Ornament (YYZ Press, 2002)[18]

Essay in White Papers, Black Marks (Athlone Press, 2000) [16]

Essay in Grey Areas (Chalkham Hill Press, 1999) [16]

Awards and honors

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  • The American Academy of Arts and Letters Architecture Award, 2015[19]
  • Emerging Voices Award, 2010[20]
  • Design Vanguard Award, 2006-2007 [16]
  • MacDowell Colony Fellowship, 2005-2006.[21][22]
  • Rome Prize in Architecture, 2003-2004[23][22]
  • Helena Rubinstein Critical Studies Fellow at the Whitney American Museum of Art, 1996-1998 [21]

References

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  1. ^ a b "The Black Reconstruction Collective" (PDF). press.moma.org.
  2. ^ "Studio SUMO". The Architect's Newspaper.
  3. ^ "Yolande Daniels". Beyond the Built Environment.
  4. ^ "Reconstructions Portrait: J. Yolande Daniels on the Enduring Problem of Segregation". Pin-Up Magazine.
  5. ^ a b "Faculty Spotlight: J. Yolande Daniels". USC School of Architecture. Retrieved 2020-07-30.
  6. ^ "Emerging Voices winner profile: StudioSUMO". The Architectural League of New York.
  7. ^ "Mizuta Museum Of Art / Studio SUMO". ArchDaily.
  8. ^ "Studio SUMO-15 Iconic Projects". Re-thinking the Future.
  9. ^ "New Transitions: studio SUMO's Yolande Daniels on Design Research, the Context for Form, and Expanding Boundaries". Madam Architect.
  10. ^ "J. Yolande Daniels". USC School of Architecture.
  11. ^ "USC Architecture Appoints Four New Tenure Track Faculty". USC School of Architecture.
  12. ^ a b Bonnemaison, Sarah; Elsenbach, Ronit (2009). Installations by Architects: Experiments in Building and Design. Princeton Architectural Press.
  13. ^ a b c d "Yolande Daniels". School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Archived from the original on 2021-07-09. Retrieved 2020-07-30.
  14. ^ Schweder, Alex (2016). "A Piss Poor Performance" (PDF). Dirty Furniture. Vol. 3: Toilet. pp. 104–107. ISBN 9780993351129. OCLC 962802913.
  15. ^ a b c Rappaport, Nina (Spring 2019). "Yolande Daniels". Constructs. Yale School of Architecture: 5.
  16. ^ a b c d "Yolande Daniels and Sunil Bald Charles and Ray Eames Lecture | Taubman College of Architecture & Urban Planning". taubmancollege.umich.edu. Archived from the original on 2020-09-20. Retrieved 2020-07-30.
  17. ^ "J. Yolande Daniels". USC School of Architecture. Retrieved 2020-07-26.
  18. ^ "Crime and Ornament: The Arts and Popular Culture in the Shadow of Adolf Loos, Edited by Melony Ward and Bernie Miller". YYZBOOKS. 2012-03-03. Retrieved 2020-08-07.
  19. ^ "2015 Architecture Award Winners – American Academy of Arts and Letters". Retrieved 2020-08-07.
  20. ^ "Past Emerging Voices". The Architectural League of New York. Retrieved 2020-08-07.
  21. ^ a b "Women in Architecture". Women in Architecture. Retrieved 2020-08-07.
  22. ^ a b "Announcing the 2018 Studio Prize Jury". Architect Magazine.
  23. ^ "AIArchitect, May 26, 2003 - American Academy in Rome Announces 2003-2004 Rome Prize Winners". info.aia.org. Retrieved 2020-08-07.
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