The ‘Future of Archives’ Conversations Series explores the most fundamental aspects related to architectural archives and libraries around the world. This series of ten virtual dialogues are hosted by Estrella de Diego, Professor at the Universidad Complutense of Madrid and Academician at the Royal Academy of Arts of San Fernando; and Hans Ulrich Obrist, art curator, critic and historian of art, and present and future of archives alongside the following leading experts: Andrew Perchuk Deputy Director, Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, CA, United States Beatriz Colomina Director, Program in Media and Modernity, School of Architecture, University of Princeton, Princeton, NJ, United States Deborah Berke Dean, School of Architecture, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States Dennis Crompton Founder, Archigram; Director, Archigram Archives, London, United Kingdom Edmund de Waal Artist and writer Frédéric Migayrou Deputy Director of the Musée National d’Art Moderne, Centre de Création Industrielle (MNAM-CCI), Centre Pompidou, Paris, France Julia Gonnella Director, Museum of Islamic Art, Doha, Doha, Qatar Justin W. Gunther Director, Fallingwater; Vice President, Western Pennsylvania Conservancy Kenneth Frampton Ware Professor Emeritus, Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (GSAPP), Columbia University, New York, NY, United States Phyllis Lambert Founder, Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA), Montreal, QC, Canada The ‘Future of Archives’ Conversations Series follows the ‘Future of Cities’ Conversations Series, which considers the past, present and future of cities, and will be followed by the ‘Climate Crisis’ Masterclass and Conversation Series, in which the imminent challenges of climate change will be addressed by key visionaries within the field of sustainability. The ‘Future of Archives’ Conversations Series is part of the Norman Foster Foundation’s Education + Research Programme and is currently available for viewing here. This digital initiative supports the NFF’s extensive educational programme by promoting an exchange of knowledge across a range of geographic and disciplinary perspectives.