The AR is looking for an architecture graduate to join its editorial team
The Criticism issue
At a moment when independent publications are under existential threat, it has perhaps never been more urgent to reflect on criticism in architecture. In a fast-evolving and ever-changing media landscape, architecture criticism is not confined to written words. This issue considers criticism as a conversation around a table, as collecting, assembling, cutting, editing, layering, drawing, redrawing, writing, making, and talking. We turn our gaze to what is included and excluded from this table, examining the colonial and capitalist forces at work
JULY/AUGUST 2024
斑马加速器vqn-outline
Support the AR: join the conversation and stay safe at home with a subscription
AR reading lists, podcasts and awards
Architects and their sketchbooks
The Inside issue
We have witnessed the world turn inward. As streets emptied, schools, bars, restaurants closed and entire countries shut off, we have been sucked inside. With staying in no longer a choice, we are forced to embark on reconsidering the space of the home under new conditions. This issue interrogates that which constitutes the interior, its furniture, linings, portals to outside, and how our bodies sink into and mediate these landscapes
JUNE 2024
ssr最新版本Android
AR Reading Lists: weekly compilations of pieces old and new on a chosen topic
The Tourism issue
As the climate crisis has progressively deepened, the question has been raised of what it would possibly take to place brakes on the colossal, surging machine of global travel. While this issue was originally planned to coincide with the opening of the Venice Biennale, it was instead put to press from home. We consider travel from a sudden distance, both as deeply personal, as a means of escape, and in its role as a footing in local economies worldwide
MAY 2024
More from the Tourism issue
AR Bookshelf, a podcast by The Architectural Review: listen now
The Darkness issue
As the dark of the night is progressively hedged out by 24/7 cities and light technology, political futures for many around the world nevertheless seem increasingly overcast, the dark cloud of the climate crisis looming menacing over all. But life in the shadows can be subversive if marginal, and in a culture of ever-increasing surveillance, these unseen pockets might become the last bastion of resistance
APRIL 2024
More from the Darkness issue
Keep in touch with the AR: change your delivery address and activate your online account