top of page
Sue Anne Ware
Head of School - School of Design and the Built Environment - Curtin University
Screenshot 2024-10-04 at 6.34.27 PM.png

Prof SueAnne Ware has over 25 years of design research practice through a set of critical lenses and discursive questions centring on themes of: contesting the public realm, conflating intersectionality, provoking social engagement, and embracing radical hope. Her most recent work explores regimes of care and notions of feral; resulting in wild, unrestrained or uncultivated states as they pertain to contemporary and historic practices in ecology, landscape architecture, remediating toxic sites, and gardening (see https://delpratgarden.com.au/ and  https://powerplantsphytoremediation.com/) . 

 

Much of Ware’s design research practice explores physical catalysts for social and political change or more simply, design activism. She aims to incite action by using counter-narratives to an unsustainable status quo.  Ware is a co- founder of out(fit) see http://www.outfit.org.au/, an all-female collective of design practitioners and student volunteers who work in marginalized and disadvantaged communities. Out(fit) provides design and build services for women’s domestic violence refuges, underfunded schools for students with special needs, and Indigenous Community Centres. She believes that landscape architects share a responsibility for exploring political, social and environmental agendas in public spaces.  

 

SueAnne’s projects reflect her commitment to society's marginalised communities and an exploration of issues such as drug addiction, 'illegal' refugee policies and domestic violence. She creates spaces that generate friction, where protests are permitted and possible, where attention is drawn to some of society's most pervasive issues, and passers-by may discover insight into what Ware hopes is a more humanitarian and compassionate approach.  Her design projects have won national and international awards; including Delprat Garden, Humus (film), Power Plants, Germinate, Honeysuckle Placemaking, St Andrews Bushfire Memorial, The SIEV X memorial, the Road as Shrine, and the Anti-Memorial to Heroin Overdose Victims.    



Title- Radical Hope, Design Activism and PracAdemic meanderings

© 2024 Architalk.org

bottom of page