Mae-Ling Lokko Explained

Mae-ling Lokko
Birth Date:17 October 1987
Birth Place:Taif, Saudi Arabia
Citizenship:Ghana and Philippines
Education:Tufts University
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Occupation:designer, educator, architectural scientist, artist

Mae-Ling Lokko (born 17 October 1987) is a Ghanaian-Filipino designer, academic and artist. She is best known for her research, art and work on fungi, plants, agricultural waste and renewable biobased building materials in relation to ecological health and social justice.[1] In her artistic and design practice, she focuses upon investigating and prototyping participatory models of production.[2] Lokko is an Assistant Professor at Yale University’s School of Architecture.[3]

Early life and education

Mae-ling Jovenes Lokko was born in Taif, Saudi Arabia to a Ghanaian surgeon and Filipino nurse. She grew up in Oxford, Grenada, Malaysia, Philippines and in Ghana where she attended boarding school.[2] [4] [5]

Lokko studied architecture and African In the New World politics at Tufts University, during which she spent a year studying at the Bartlett School of Architecture. She completed her Master’s and Ph.D. in architectural sciences at the Center for Architecture, Science and Ecology] (CASE), when it was an academic-industrial alliance between Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Skidmore, Owings and Merrill in New York City.[6]

Work

Lokko is best known for her academic research, artistic practice and architectural teaching around agricultural waste, fungi and plants that advocate for the design and scaling of biobased global material value chains around generative justice goals.[7] [8] [9] Her research focuses on the broad development and matching of biobased resources towards high-value material applications. She is the founder of AMBIS Technologies (2015-2018) and Willow Technologies (2017-present), both focused on the upcycling agricultural waste into affordable, low-carbon building materials and for water quality treatment applications.[10] In 2023, Lokko was the co-author of a major United Nations Environment Programme, Global ABC and Yale Center for Ecosystems in Architecture global report “Building Materials and Climate: Constructing a New Future.”[11] [12] Lokko’s artistic practice focuses on the revaluing of waste through biomaterial design and biophilic aesthetics, drawing on new interpretations of architectural, landscape and industrial spaces. She has been influenced by Ghanaian sculptor and artist, El Anatsui, who invited her to do a residency in 2020-21 during. Lokko curated his Anatsui’s first show in Dubai and designed a large extension for his artistic studio in Ghana completed in 2023.[13] [14] [15] In her 2022 exhibition Grounds for Return at Z33 House for Contemporary Art, Design and Architecture in Belgium, Lokko reconstructed the “Threshold of Return” from high-strength coconut waste husks in reference to the “Doors of No Return” across Ghanaian slave forts, a symbol of Transatlantic slavery and commodity extraction.[9] [16]

Lokko’s interests extend from the technical design and aesthetics of biobased materials to social and industrial infrastructures that enable access to participating in new material value chains. In 2018, as part of the Liverpool Biennial, she worked together with over 150 multigenerational volunteers from Squash Nutrition Liverpool, Windsor Street Farmers, Windsor Primary School and Liverpool Life Sciences UTC High School to demonstrate the distributed growing fungi-based materials and onsite building of a shipping container structure from at the Royal Institute of British Architects-North.[17] [18] [19]

Teaching

Lokko serves as an Assistant Professor at the Yale School of Architecture. Previously she served as Assistant Professor and Director of the Building Sciences program at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Prior to Yale, Lokko taught at Cooper Union in New York City.

She lives and works in New York City and Accra, Ghana.

Awards & Residencies

Exhibitions

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Returning the Building to the Soil: an Interview with the Architect and Scientist Mae-Ling Lokko. June 30, 2022. ArchDaily.
  2. Web site: Mae Ling Lokko: On Coconuts and Earthships. August 30, 2023.
  3. Web site: New faculty members Anthony Acciavatti and Mae-ling Lokko - Announcements - e-flux. www.e-flux.com.
  4. Life in Architecture: Mae-Ling Jovenes Lokko. Mae-Ling Jovenes. Lokko. Frieze . June 4, 2018. 196. www.frieze.com.
  5. Web site: Agricultural Waste and Transforming the Future of Building Materials | Tufts Now. March 6, 2023. now.tufts.edu.
  6. Web site: SOM and Rensselaer Form Collaboration | Architect Magazine.
  7. News: A Panorama of Design. The New York. Times. The New York Times . August 31, 2023. NYTimes.com.
  8. Web site: Changing Perspectives on Waste. Contemporary And.
  9. Web site: Circular design as discussed with Mae-ling Lokko | Salone del Mobile. www.salonemilano.it.
  10. Web site: Willow Technologies Transforms Agricultural By-Products Into Building Materials in Ghana. July 28, 2023. ArchDaily.
  11. Web site: UN Report Offers Solutions for Decarbonization of Buildings, Construction Sector. September 14, 2023. www.globalissues.org.
  12. Web site: Building Materials and the Climate: Constructing a New Future | Globalabc. globalabc.org.
  13. Mae-Ling Lokko on the Art of El Anatsui. Mae-Ling Jovenes. Lokko. Frieze . January 25, 2019. 200. www.frieze.com.
  14. Web site: El Anatsui: Shard Song.
  15. Web site: Crafts issue 297: 50 years of Crafts. www.craftscouncil.org.uk.
  16. Web site: Mae-ling Lokko's Grounds for Return installation explores circular agriculture and architecture. October 19, 2022. Dezeen.
  17. Web site: Hack the Root. November 6, 2018. YouTube.
  18. Web site: Hack the Root: Making architectural structures from mushrooms. www.architecture.com.
  19. Web site: Grow your own building. Pamela. Buxton. August 28, 2018. www.ribaj.com.
  20. Web site: Mae-ling Lokko Wins Future by Design Grant From the British Council | News. news.rpi.edu.
  21. Web site: Mae-ling Lokko – Black Rock Senegal.
  22. Web site: 20 September 2019 . 5TH EDITION HUBLOT DESIGN PRIZE . 2024-07-04 . hublot.com.
  23. Web site: Mae-Ling Lokko.
  24. Web site: Soil Sisters: An Intersectoral Material Design Framework for Soil…. SOM Foundation.
  25. Web site: Mae-Ling Lokko. www.luma.org.
  26. Web site: We've decided! The jury has selected five innovative concepts to push forward – Housing the Human. housingthehuman.com.
  27. Web site: Rotch - Studio - 2013 Winner. rotch.org.
  28. Web site: Emerging Ecologies: Architecture and the Rise of Environmentalism . press.moma.org . 23 October 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240320025237/https://press.moma.org/exhibition/emerging-ecologies/ . 20 March 2024 . dead.
  29. Web site: Nobel Prize Museum | New exhibition will dive into the world of fungi . June 28, 2023 .
  30. ttps://www.serralves.pt/en/ciclo-serralves/the-art-of-mushrooms-1655735675645/
  31. Web site: Gonzalo Herrero Delicado | Tomorrow Today .
  32. Web site: It's Our F-ing Backyard . 2024-06-04 . www.stedelijk.nl.
  33. Web site: TRIENNALE MILANO / The State of Art of Architecture . February 17, 2020 .
  34. Web site: Mushrooms: The Art, Design and Future of Fungi . May 9, 2019 .