Ana SERRANO MAZO is a nomad transdisciplinary architect and a trained musician, architect, performance designer and creative arts scholar. They work collaboratively with animate and inanimate bodies to explore the potential in humans to become tools and mediums for registration of architecture performativity. Specifically, through choreographic intra-actions with architecture matter, as explored in their spatial critical practice Choreoarchitecture. In 2006 they co-founded Serrano Evans Partnership, a London-based office with an interest in motion as a design tool. Previously, Serrano worked as a theatre consultant, was a partner at London Make architects, and worked with Estudio Lamela and Richard Rogers on the Stirling price-winning Madrid-Barajas T4 Airport, amongst others. They have taught Art, Design and Architecture at University level for over 20 years. Serrano lectures and chairs workshops internationally to transcend the conventional and speculative boundaries of architectural practice. They were awarded the 2016 Tasmania Graduate Research Scholarship (A.P.A) to study site- specificity through choreography. Their performative work has been featured on sites such as Tate Britain and London Open House (UK), AIA New York (USA), Beirut Design Week (Lebanon). They are currently Madrid-based developing Cientejuelos, a performing catalogue of 100 of their creative works, funded by the Government of Spain.
