
EVENTS
Ethnographies of Landscape, Labour and Care
A roundtable discussion
Saturday, August 30, 2025, starting at 14:00

This roundtable brings together scholars and artists with diverse interests and approaches—from postsocialist and postcolonial studies, to landscape studies, anthropology, architecture and art—to examine how forms and acts of care manifest in spatial practice and labour as modes of relating to social and environing worlds.
The roundtable foregrounds ethnographic and documentary approaches as critical methods for tracing the affective, material, and political dimensions of the lived experience of what we term ‘landscapes of care’.
Uniunea Arhitecților din România – Str. Jean Louis Calderon 48, București
Introduction
Iulia Statica
Guest speakers
Gareth Doherty, The Graduate School of Design, Harvard University
Adrian Câtu, visual anthropologist, Documentaria
Ketevan Gurchiani, Department of Anthropology, Ilia State university
Tao DuFour, Department of Architecture, University of Cambridge
Iulia Stătică, School of Architecture and Landscape, University of Sheffield
Respondent and moderator
Olivia Nițiș, ‘G. Oprescu’ Institute of Art History, Romanian Academy
Landscape Fieldwork: How Engaging the World can Change Design
A lecture by Gareth Doherty
Saturday, August 30, 2025, from 16:00 to 17:00.
Uniunea Arhitecților din România – Str. Jean Louis Calderon 48, București

Refocusing on human inhabitants in landscape architecture Landscape architecture is at a crossroads. The ability to draw upon interdisciplinary perspectives and generate insights from the combined vantage points of design, environmental studies, and the social sciences puts it in a prime position to address the most pressing issues of our time, such as climate change and social inequality. Its current reliance on digital and technological solutions, however, has increasingly caused landscape architects to lose sight of the ways in which humans actually use spaces. And while landscapes are designed all over the world, the discipline remains inordinately centered on the Global North. Landscape Fieldwork alters that long-standing paradigm through real-life examples that provide tools for practitioners to engage more deeply with multidimensional, diverse landscapes and the communities that create, live in, and use them.
Gareth Doherty is Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design and Affiliate Faculty in the Department of African and African American Studies. He is the author of Paradoxes of Green: Landscapes of a City-State.