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Brown Bag Seminar Matthew Ashton

Footnotes from Stockholm's Landscapes of Extraction.

Welcome to the third Brown Bag Seminar of 2026, with Matthew Ashton, who will share his work that has resulted in the thesis “Groundbreaking: Fieldnotes from Forty Walks Across Stockholm’s Landscapes of Extraction". He will share his work and experiences of exploring and seeing the extractive landscapes of Stockholm in new ways by using "walking" as an artistic research practice.

Tid: To 2026-04-16 kl 12.00 - 13.00

Plats: Kitchen, Division of History, Teknikringen 74D

Språk: English

Medverkande: Matthew Ashton

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In this talk Matt Ashton will give a short presentation of his recent PhD dissertation, “Groundbreaking: Fieldnotes from Forty Walks Across Stockholm’s Landscapes of Extraction”  (RMIT University, 2025).  

In the PhD “breaking ground” becomes a lens from which to explore the dialectical relationship between acts of building, and their broader territorial entanglements. Every act of building is intertwined with multiple forms of destruction, unfurling at varying scales and intensities throughout time and space—from the tangible transformations brought about by excavation, demolition, and new construction, to the more removed ruination caused by mining and resource extraction, the accrued concentrations of carbon released into the atmosphere, and the gradual seepage of toxins into seas, lakes, and groundwater. Following the flows of broken earth—the mundane materials of sand, gravel, crushed rock, and excavation waste—I embarked upon an intrepid exploration of the myriad landscapes of extraction scattered throughout the hinterlands of the city of Stockholm. Observing what is actually happening in the mud and fine-grain of the ground, “paying attention” to material flows, and reading the neglected stories embedded in the landscape.

The act of “following” is a thread which weaves through the entire PhD, tracing material flows on the ground in the form of a creative walking practice. Walking becomes a means of entering these “landscapes of extraction,” perceiving their enduring processes of transformation, and becoming attuned to their social, material, and ecological entanglements. To walk is to be grounded, partial, and subjective, open to the unexpected and the unintended. It’s a method of artistic research practice which cultivates a form of spatial intimacy—a way of being-in-the-world—engaging the body as a sensory recording device to read and transcribe one’s surroundings. Over the course of forty individual walks across the peripheral spaces of Stockholm I developed a distinctive practice of walking, and this PhD offers a reflection on those experiences, building a walking methodology that has the potential to generate new knowledge, different ways of seeing, and different ways of being in the world.

Register for the seminar here

NB: If you register for the seminar after the 12th of April, there are still seats to join the seminar, but we cannot guarantee a sandwich.

Matthew Ashton

Matthew Ashton is an architect, walker, writer, and researcher, born in Australia, but currently living in Stockholm. He holds a PhD from RMIT University, Melbourne, defending his dissertation “Groundbreaking: Fieldnotes from Forty Walks Across Stockholm's Landscapes of Extraction” in 2025. The project explored the reciprocal relationship between architecture, and the wider landscape, following the material flows of building aggregates—sand, gravel, and crushed stone—as they are displaced from the earth and circulated within an ecology of utility. Matthew is also interested in exploring walking as a creative and pedagogical practice, and has taught at previously at KTH school of Architecture.

Contact

Email: mail@matthewashton.se

Web: www.matthewashton.se