TA: Neha MaturiSingle Person Dwelling – well-being through productive loneliness
Demographic Research Journal’s issue, Living Alone: One-person household in Asia (2015), addresses one-person household as the fastest growing living situation in the world, especially in Asia. The current social welfare system and institutions not only fall short of supporting one-person household, but the distribution and utilization of resources are known to be limited to and facilitated for ideal family household.
Within the course of this studio, we re-think housing and dwelling outside of ideal family household and question spatiality and materiality association with state of well-being, especially single person dwelling as primary situation.
During COVID -19 global pandemic and subsequent lock-down, we experienced being alone at own home/room while connected with friends and families in virtually through Zoom or any other. This experience as a starting point, participants will document her/his space and objects to analyse and articulate relationship with her/himself.
Further, we address how does single person dwelling confirm its normality and well-being? Sitting at the threshold of communal and private, or simultaneously confining and liberating, the single person dwelling is purposed as both: for isolation and production, shift between these two states of being.