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Natalija Subotincic

Natalija Subotincic taught architecture for 32 years in Canada, United States, Turkey and Denmark. She most recently left MEF University in Istanbul to co-found a small house museum in Montréal called Ceci n’est pas un musée. Since 2006 she has assisted the Museum of Jurassic Technology in Los Angeles, in the design of new exhibition spaces. Her creative research includes: The Interpretation of Rooms, an ongoing spatial analysis of Sigmund Freud’s consulting room and study at Berggasse 19 in Vienna. Key publication’s include: ‘Incarnate tendencies – An architecture of culinary refuse’, a social and architectural re-evaluation of food preparation and consumption, in Eating Architecture (MIT, 2004); ‘Anaesthetic induction: An excursion into the world of visual indifference’, an enquiry into Duchamp’s Le Grand Verre and Étant Donné, in Chora: Intervals in the Philosophy of Architecture (McGill/Queen’s, 1994); and a photographic exploration of technology, architecture and the body, in Polyphilo or the Dark Forest Revisited – An Erotic Epiphany of Architecture, by Dr A. Perez-Gomez (MIT, 1992).

Contact: Ceci n’est pas un musée, 4450 Rue de Bullion, Montréal, QC H2W 2G1, Canada.


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