""When you first load the page to Feminist Spatial Practices (FSP), a new online archive, the site appears to be a collage of multicolor organic shapes and hundreds of vibrant squares. But zoom in and pixelated icons start to appear. Click on any one of them and you’ll discover an encyclopedia-like entry for a feminist collective, project, protest, publication (and more): The Combahee River Collective’s 1977 manifesto for Black feminism; a biography of Margarette Schütte-Lihotzky, one of Austria’s first women architects and a socialist activist; and a link to a booklet by the Tender Yet Furious Oracle, a collective of disabled, sick, and caregiving cultural workers.
“'We wanted to shake up the way people think about feminism in the built environment,' says Bryony Roberts, an architect and one of the project’s cofounders. 'I think a lot of the discussion about the topic focuses on issues of representation, and this idea that if you just put enough people who identify as women in certain positions, then that will address any kind of gender inequities. We were interested in an approach to feminism that is about ways of making and ways of knowing.'” - Diana Budds
Article: This Addictive Website is a Master Class in Feminist Design History
Web Design