This addictive website is a master class in feminist design history
The digital archive of Feminist Spatial Practices is designed like a tapestry.
When you first load the page to Feminist Spatial Practices (FSP), a new online archive, the site appears to be a collage of multicolor organic shapes and hundreds of vibrant squares. But zoom in and pixelated icons start to appear. Click on any one of them and you’ll discover an encyclopedia-like entry for a feminist collective, project, protest, publication (and more): The Combahee River Collective’s 1977 manifesto for Black feminism; a biography of Margarette Schütte-Lihotzky, one of Austria’s first women architects and a socialist activist; and a link to a booklet by the Tender Yet Furious Oracle, a collective of disabled, sick, and caregiving cultural workers.