Migrations affiliates
Min Kyung Lee
Min Kyung Lee is associate professor and chair of the department of the Growth and Structure of Cities at Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania. She is the founder of the ‘Architecture and Migration’ group of the EAHN (European Architectural History Network) which focuses on the ways in which migration diaspora and movement has always been central to the built environment and its histories. She has previously worked on histories and theories of architectural and urban representations. Her current research focuses on Korean migrations during the Cold War, situating affective feminist practices in building diasporic communities.
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Osman Yousefzada
Osman Yousefzada is a British artist and writer, born in Birmingham UK, whose work engages with the representation, rupture and reimagining of the immigrant experience. His work incorporates textiles, print-making, installations, sculpture and performance. Yousefzada’s practice has been described as “defiant”, where the participating bodies throughout his work are presented as part objects that refuse to identify or conform. Recent solo shows include; ‘Queer Feet’ (2024) at Charleston, ‘Embodiments of Memory’ (2024) at the the Ceramics Biennale, Potteries Museum in Stoke on Trent and ‘More Immigrants Please’ a nationwide series of billboards with Artichoke. His large-scale series of solo interventions ‘What Is Seen and What Is Not’ at London’s V&A in 2022, was commissioned by the British Council in partnership with the V&A. In April 2024 he presented a major solo show in conjunction with the 60th Venice Biennale at the Palazzo Franchetti. In May 2024 he opened the prelude to Bradford City of Culture 2025 with a solo show at Cartwright Hall. He is a visiting Professor of Interdisciplinary Practice at the Birmingham School of Art, BCU, a visiting Fellow at the Jesus College, Cambridge University and a Research Practitioner at the Royal College of Art. Yousefzada is also the author of The Go-Between: A Memoir of Growing Up Between Different Worlds (2022), a coming-of-age story described by Stephen Fry as ‘one of the greatest childhood memoirs of our time’.
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