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Karamia Müller's latest contributions
Habits of mind
People
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Karamia Müller looks at the relational nature of Te Tiriti and the importance of collectivism over individualism.
Freedom for the hollow lands
People
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Karamia Müller considers the ‘architecture’ of land occupation and the ideological differences that reveal the politics of sovereignty.
Is the system working?
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Karamia Müller looks beyond the “electoral moment” to the built realm and asks whether or not the system is working.
What water?
People
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Karamia Müller considers the politics of the built realm and uses a clever analogy asking “How’s the water?” to address the impact of social conditioning on how we view the housing crisis.
Fifteen cigarettes a day
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Karamia Müller ponders New Zealand’s housing crisis and its connection with a decreased lifespan, and after discussion with former tutor Graeme Burgess, arrives at a possible solution.
The line between good and bad
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Karamia Müller believes that if beauty in architecture is attainable then so, too, should be equity.
The bots are here
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Karamia Müller considers artificial intelligence, its relationship to creativity, and the ethics surrounding its application in the course of architectural study and/or practice.
Exhibition: Oceanic Architectural Routes: The photographic archive of Mike Austin
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Karamia Müller discusses the Mike Austin photography exhibition, designed by Hannah Manning-Scott for Objectspace, curated by Leali’ifano Albert L. Refiti.
Before there was dank, there was Frank
People
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Karamia Müller calls for more irony, cynicism and criticality over beauty, earnestness and elitism upon revisiting the architectural satire account: @dank.lloyd.wright.
A touch of the architecture
People
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Karamia Müller considers the role of her profession in imagining a better future for Aotearoa.
Karamia Müller's latest photo contributions
Fifteen cigarettes a day
People
|
Karamia Müller ponders New Zealand’s housing crisis and its connection with a decreased lifespan, and after discussion with former tutor Graeme Burgess, arrives at a possible solution.
Before there was dank, there was Frank
People
|
Karamia Müller calls for more irony, cynicism and criticality over beauty, earnestness and elitism upon revisiting the architectural satire account: @dank.lloyd.wright.