Come and Forget, a series of speculative historical erasures, continues with Los Angeles–based architect Craig Hodgetts, principal of Hodgetts + Fung, founded with Hsinming Fung in 1984. 

Building on questions about history and its uses, raised by exhibitions like Educating Architects: Four Courses by Kenneth Frampton and Besides, History: Go Hasegawa, Kersten Geers, David Van Severen, we invite special guests to propose acts of mass amnesia—precise and universal erasures of a place, person, or idea from our collective memory. READ MORE

Come and Forget, a series of speculative historical erasures, continues with Los Angeles–based architect Craig Hodgetts, principal of Hodgetts + Fung, founded with Hsinming Fung in 1984. 

Building on questions about history and its uses, raised by exhibitions like Educating Architects: Four Courses by Kenneth Frampton and Besides, History: Go Hasegawa, Kersten Geers, David Van Severen, we invite special guests to propose acts of mass amnesia—precise and universal erasures of a place, person, or idea from our collective memory. READ MORE

Come and Forget, a series of speculative historical erasures, continues with Los Angeles–based architect Craig Hodgetts, principal of Hodgetts + Fung, founded with Hsinming Fung in 1984. 

Building on questions about history and its uses, raised by exhibitions like Educating Architects: Four Courses by Kenneth Frampton and Besides, History: Go Hasegawa, Kersten Geers, David Van Severen, we invite special guests to propose acts of mass amnesia—precise and universal erasures of a place, person, or idea from our collective memory. READ MORE

Come and Forget, a series of speculative historical erasures, continues with Los Angeles–based architect Craig Hodgetts, principal of Hodgetts + Fung, founded with Hsinming Fung in 1984. 

Building on questions about history and its uses, raised by exhibitions like Educating Architects: Four Courses by Kenneth Frampton and Besides, History: Go Hasegawa, Kersten Geers, David Van Severen, we invite special guests to propose acts of mass amnesia—precise and universal erasures of a place, person, or idea from our collective memory. READ MORE