Skip to content
Yale Architecture YSoA
Search

Student Work

Student Work

All images
Filter by
All Programs
P.h.D.M.E.D.M.Arch. IIM.Arch I
Schematic drawing for Inflata-box.
Visual output of computer program.
Project by James Schwartz.
Model by Valeria Flores.
The Topographic Maps between Yichang and Chongqing, 1936
Detail of “Close Combat Course”; Sketch to Accompany Inclosure 2 in 353.01/61–GnGTC (2-4-43); H.Q. A.G.F. to all Commanding Generals (February, 4 1943) “Subject: Special Battle Courses”; Training Directives; Background Files: “Military Training in WWII” 1939-1945; Record Group 319, National Archives Building, College Park, M.D.
Julian Beck, Poster for Six Public Acts with Map of Pittsburgh as Background, 1975. Living Theatre Records, Beinecke Archives and Manuscripts Library.
Concrete swatch in a Louis Kahn building.
Philosophical object by Gentley Smith.
Overview of sample neighborhood design.
Perspective drawing.
Grid of props.
Painted wall.
Drawing by Liwei Wang and Haylie Chan.
Publication on Whitehall in London.
Model of a formal garden by Jamie Edindjiklian.
Watercolor frieze by Gina Cannistra.
Diagram of pollutant mediation strategies.
Map of Connecticut.
Rendering by Daniel Glick-Unterman and Pierre Thach.
Rendering by Ian Donaldson and Radhika Singh.
Rendering of Boston City Hall Plaza with new intervention.
Physical model.
Model by Ava Amirahmadi.
Next Page
Loading in progress
Yale Architecture
Search
Yale Architecture
Search
  • Academics
    • Overview
    • M.Arch I
    • M.Arch II
    • M.E.D.
    • Ph.D.
    • Joint-degree Programs
    • Undergraduate Studies
    • The Jim Vlock First Year Building Project
    • Student Travel
    • Awards and Fellowships
    • Explore all Courses
  • Admissions
    • Overview
    • Requirements
    • Tuition and Fees
    • Financial Aid
    • International Students
  • Calendar
    • Events
    • Academic Calendar
    • Exhibitions
  • Publications
    • Overview
    • Perspecta
    • Retrospecta
    • Constructs
    • Books
  • About the School
    • Overview
    • History and Objectives
    • News
    • Tribal Lands Acknowledgement
    • Yale Urban Design Workshop
    • Yale Center for Ecosystems in Architecture
    • Fabrication Labs
    • Advanced Technology
    • Staff
    • Visiting
    • Contact
  • Faculty
    • Explore all Faculty
    • Endowed Professorships
  • Students
    • Student Affairs
    • Recent Graduates
    • Student Work
    • Student Groups
    • Career Development
  • Alumni
    • Overview
  • All Images
  • Forms and Resources
  • Make a Gift
  • School Policies
  • Jobs at YSoA
  • Accreditation Information
Yale logo
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Accessibility
  • Land Acknowledgement
  • Public Safety
  • Colophon
  • Yale University
Loading in progress

Student Work

Final document’s front cover
Final document’s front cover
Fig02 table of contents
Fig03 introduction
Printed card file of project’s media collection
Printed card file of project’s media collection
1∕4

Title

Overseeing Amazonia: Environmental Media of Brazilian Grounds

Authors
Juliana Biancardine

Course
Independent M.E.D. Research

Project Description

In 1988 a new Brazilian constitution reset public representations of Amazonia. For centuries colonial expansionist discourses portrayed the forest as a “demographic void.” This new democratic regime acknowledged cultural and ontological differences within national territory for the first time. Simultaneously, the rise of climatic concerns, leading to recurrent images of forest fires in news coverage, increased widespread concern for protecting the rainforest. Although these changes allowed the amplification of evidence of social and environmental violence in the region and opened space for broad public mobilization to protect it, deforestation records have reached unprecedented levels over the last few years. To tackle this apparent contradiction, this project takes Amazonia’s representations as a central matter of concern. Due to its vastness, cartography has been a dominant point of view for guiding planning and conservation in the region. These distanced maps unify the rainforest as a single observable, useful and closed object. Looking at environmental media helps us to better understand how ‘from above’ representations assist in the imposition of violent developmental plans for the region, but also helps us to see how there is no one unmediated view from below to counter it. Instead, the media collection traces a sectional cartography that suggests possible ways to cut through the binary division via an erratic scalar comprehension of Amazonia. The collection of representations is gathered in a web archive that favors repetition and partiality rather than completeness. Among statues that celebrate gold mining, maps that demarcate territories to protect and extract, and atmospheric representations in general circulation models, the project thinks about how the forest shapes and is shaped by its media. And, if images can work to simplify the crisis in Amazonia as a polarized clash between protectors and invaders, this project asks how they can be retooled to imagine other futures for Brazilian hinterlands.

Tags
MED Program MED Thesis Juliana Biancardine

Related items

Courses

Independent M.E.D. Research

Student Work

Overseeing Amazonia: Environmental Media of Brazilian Grounds

Final document’s front cover
Students

Juliana Biancardine