How do we build, and how can we build better, before it’s too late? Join us for the opening of CAFx Micro-Festival Vol.2, an exploration of the grandeur and folly of humanity and its precarious relationship with nature through Kossakovsky’s inquisitive lens.
Filmvisning: “Livet mellem husene” og samtale med Jan Gehl
Kom med, når vi viser “Livet mellem husene”, og efter filmen inviterer til en samtale mellem Jan Gehl og Kristoffer Lindhardt Weiss om Gehls inspirerende arbejde
Film Screening: Miralles - An Architect in Dialogue With Time
Enric Miralles is an essential figure in contemporary architecture. Join us for a documentary exploring the man and his sculptural architectural works, which beautifully reads sites and landscapes.
The climate movement and two lawyers are challenging the Danish state in a high-profile court case to stop a new artificial peninsula in Copenhagen Harbor. After the film you can experience a Q&A with the director Naja Andersen.
CAFx at CPH:DOX: Archiving Legacy -Bauhaus Forever
How do we tell today’s stories through the icons of the past? At Designmuseum Denmark, we will screen Bauhaus Forever and host the conversation Archiving Legacy exploring the curatorial choices and responsibilities that come with presenting living cultural heritage through archives, movements, and historical figures.
Christiania is one of the world's most iconic social experiments. After 50 years of big dreams, strong tobacco and anarchy, this colourful neighbourhood finally got the film its colourful history deserves.
CAFx at CPH:DOX: Form Follows Community - The Silo and Us
Join us for a warm and subtle documentary on an abandoned grain silo in Stubbekøbing + a conversation with Danh Vo and Oliver Stilling about how art, architecture, and culture can be more than aesthetics - and perhaps become the spark for something new.
CAFx at CPH:DOX: The Mother Age - History Written Through the Organic, Fragile, and Ephemeral
What if history were not told through weapons, wars, and heroes. Join us for the screening of “The Mother Age” and a panel discussion exploring what happens when using Ursula K. Le Guins ‘carrier bag theory’ to
turn our gaze toward art as a form of historiography.