Andrew Higgott
Architectural writer and teacher
  • Home
  • Profile
  • BLOG
  • Teaching
  • ArchPhotography
  • BritModern

Easter Island Photographs exhibited at  AA

22/3/2014

17 Comments

 
Picture
Part of exhibition in Photo Library Corridor Gallery
An exhibition of my photographs of Easter Island is now on at the Architectural Association in London. In the Photo Library's Corridor Gallery, it displays 25 images  of the island and its statues taken last December (see post below). Many thanks to Byron Blakeley and Valerie Bennett. Pictures are for sale !

AA Photo Library Corridor Gallery 37 Bedford Square London WC1. Runs until 30 May, Monday to Friday 10-1 and 2-6: and building closed from 7 April to 20 April inclusive. See also www.aaschool.ac.uk/PUBLIC/WHATSON/exhibitions.php
17 Comments

Royal Academy: Sensing Spaces

9/3/2014

0 Comments

 
It’s gratifying that the Royal Academy’s current exhibition of architecture Sensing Spaces: Architecture Reimagined, should be something of a runaway success- for one thing, it’s a great contrast to what a typical exhibition of architecture includes, such as the RA’s own on Richard Rogers last year, with diverse representations of a series of buildings as perfected objects.

Picture
Pezo von Ellrichshausen
Picture
Li Xiaodong
Instead it presents installations by seven architectural practices, who for the most part have relished the opportunity to pursue and build a project without the usual kind of constraints of functionality and purpose. The main rooms of the Academy are transformed into sometimes dark or confusing, sometimes apparently empty spaces: each, usefully, very different from each other. They are aware of the architecture of the Royal Academy’s own grand spaces and their detail: Pezo von Ellrichshausen’s great structure enables the viewer’s intimate relationship to the plaster moulding of the ceiling coving. Kengo Kuma occupies two rooms with delicate enclosures of bamboo, evoking sensation through darkness, and smells of cypress and tatami. Li Xiadong’s maze of green timber leads to a slightly disappointing climax. The passage-work of Diebedo Francis Kere invites the enthusiastic participation of visitors in modifying his structure: while the installations by Alvaro Siza and Souto de Moura seem to be fragments of a different, more cerebral exhibition. For me the prize, if there was one, goes to Grafton Architects whose spaces are articulated in a way familiar to Western architecture- installing forms whose weight and mass frame and articulate light in mysterious and affecting way. 

Picture
Grafton Architects
Picture
Much of what the exhibition includes is not too surprising for those involved in architectural education in the recent past. That architecture can be playful and experimental, that it may be experienced in a state of distraction, that it is created always in a context that is physical, but also experiential and emotional. Architecture is not only appreciated through the eyes, but the body, and through touch and smell.  And also that architecture is about the making of space along with the making of its enclosure is a point which the RA’s visitors seem to fully appreciate. As Yvonne Farrell of Grafton Architects says of how architecture can work: ‘For a short time in your life you think ...mmm, there's something lovely here’.

Picture
Kengo Kuma
Interviews with the architects and clips of built work they’ve done provide a fascinating context to the show and can be seen at http://roy.ac/youtube

The exhibition is open until 6 April.

0 Comments

    Archives

    September 2020
    September 2019
    May 2018
    February 2018
    June 2017
    March 2017
    April 2016
    February 2016
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    June 2015
    April 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013

    Categories

    All
    20th Century History
    Birmingham
    Contemporary Art
    Current Architecture
    Photography
    Public Buildings
    Remote Places

Web Hosting by iPage