Andreas Angelidakis in Domus again !

read the article, here

L’installation NOMAD au Musee du Quai Branly

L’installation NOMAD occupe le jardin du Musée du Quai Branly pendant
les mois d’été, du 4 juin au 4 septembre 2011, avant de poursuivre son chemin.
Des roulottes, des toiles, des tapis: confrontée à un environnement
architecturé à l’extrême, présent autant au sol que dans les airs, l’installation NOMAD opte pour une occupation programmatique du site et vient squatter le jardin du Musée du Quai Branly le temps d’un été. Architecture informelle, assemblage d’éléments familiers recyclés et détournés, l’installation facilite la domestication et l’appropriation active de ce jardin conçu avant tout pour la contemplation. Cinq campements mobiles et éphémères définissent des points de concentration, offrent événements, rafraîchissements et subsistance. Disposés le long des chemins parcourant le jardin, dans les clairières, sous le vaisseau muséal, ils favorisent les interactions, établissent un nouveau champ de relations. Au cœur de la ville, l’épaisse végétation devient le théâtre d’une occupation primitive et temporaire. Sans clôtures et sans mesures, ce territoire est redéfini, tenu, habité pour un temps.











L’Architecture Emotionnelle dans Campus

Un dossier sur l’Architecture Emotionnelle dans Campus, le journal de l’Université de Genève, à lire ici.

Architecture émotionnelle – matière à penser, réédition !

Nous avons le grand plaisir de vous informer que l’ouvrage Architecture émotionnelle – matière à penser, sous la direction de Paul Ardenne et Barbara Polla, vient d’être republié grâce au généreux soutien du Conseil d’Etat de la République et Canton de Genève.

L’ouvrage, sorti à l’occasion de la préparation du Premier Colloque International d’Architecture Emotionnelle qui s’est tenu à Genève en janvier dernier, avait été rapidement épuisé. Nous nous réjouissons que ce livre soit à nouveau accessible, dans l’attente de la publication des Actes du colloque l’hiver prochain, Actes qui apporteront un nouvel éclairage sur le thème.

Merci à tout ceux qui ont contribué au succès de ce livre et un remerciement tout particulier au Président du Conseil d’Etat Monsieur Mark Muller.

Architecture émotionnelle dans Archistorm

Peut-on accoler le mot architecture à celui d’émotion ?
Un Dossier d’Archistorm.
Lire l’article en pdf, ici.

Concrete Islands in Domus


In this short movie by Andreas Angelidakis, Chara—the largest housing block in downtown Athens, built in 1960—reacts to the decline of the city by turning into a “living” building. Now more interested in becoming a mountain, it walks away from the urban context. Its new name, Troll, refers to the mountain beings in Norse mythology: half-human half-earth monsters. Ultimately, a mountain seems to fulfill the modernist promise more effectively than architecture: the separation of interior and exterior finally dissolved, you live close to nature and clean air, part of a healthy ecosystem. The well-meaning modernist building can no longer achieve its goal as an affordable domestic utopia, because the city has made this impossible.

The video will be featured in the exhibition Concrete Islands, curated by Elias Redstone for Analix Forever in Paris, opening on 9 April.

—–
Nel cortometraggio di Andreas Angelidakis, Chara, il più grande complesso residenziale del centro di Atene edificato negli anni Sessanta e oggi semi abbandonato, reagisce al declino della città, diventa un edificio “vivente” che fugge dal contesto urbano, e preferisce diventare una montagna. Il suo nuovo nome, Troll, è un riferimento agli abitanti della montagna della mitologia norvegese, mezzi uomini e mezzi mostri. Una montagna pare in effetti una risposta più concreta alla promessa modernista: ci si vive vicino alla natura, all’aria pulita e si fa parte di un ecosistema salubre. È la reazione dell’edificio modernista onesto che non può più svolgere il suo compito di utopia abitativa a basso prezzo, perché la città glielo ha reso impossibile.

Troll sarà presentato a Parigi il 9 aprile, in occasione della mostra Concrete Islands, curata da Elias Redstone per Analix Forever.

To read the article, click here.

Exposition d’Architecture à Paris, toutes les infos

Dans la foulée de la Première Conférence internationale d’Architecture émotionnelle, Analix Forever présente à Paris Concrete Islands, une exposition autour de l’architecture telle que représentée par les artistes d’aujourd’hui, photographes et vidéastes notamment, et de leur explorations des liens entre forme architecturale, nature et société.

Venez nombreux ! L’exposition est ouverte du 9 au 17 avril 2011, y compris le week end, et nous nous réjouissons de vous accueillir.


Concrete Islands / 9–17 April 2011
Curated by Elias Redstone for Analix Forever

Andreas Angelidakis (Greece)
Iwan Baan (The Netherlands)
Frédéric Chaubin (France)
mounir fatmi (Morocco)
Niklas Goldbach (Germany)

Vernissage: Saturday 9 April 2–8pm / drinks from 5pm

Analix Forever’s first show in Paris
6 rue Elzévir, 75003 Paris
Open daily 11am–7pm

www.archiemo.wordpress.com
www.analix-forever.com

Concrete Islands is a group exhibition of photography and video exploring contemporary experiences of utopian architectural projects. For many architects modernism was a physical manifestation of human progress and, as architectural historian Colin Rowe wrote in The Architecture of Good Intentions, “The architect could stipulate an intrinsic connection between the form of his buildings and the condition of society.” The works in Concrete Islands, by a selection of international contemporary artists, document, celebrate and critique architectural projects designed with inherent social and political values that now exist in various stages of inhabitation, dereliction and destruction.

The influence of architects to control space and determine its social structures alters over time. The artists each provoke an emotional response from the architecture as they find it now, adding their own narrative and interpretation, and exposing new relationships between the architecture, society and nature. As the title Concrete Islands suggests, what we find is architecture that exists in some form of isolation – whether that is geographical, social or ideological.

Andreas Angelidakis often introduces fiction and fantasy into his work to reveal truths about architecture. The film ‘Troll’ tells the story of a modernist, low-income apartment building in Athens that wants to be a mountain. The building, called Chara (‘Joy’) was built by Spanos and Papailiopoulos architects in 1960, taking up an entire city block with a network of interior gardens. Over time it has felt the effects of Athens’ extensive urbanization and deteriorating economy. Angelidakis takes a leap of imagination, suggesting that the accumulation of plants and soil in this garden-housing overtakes the architecture and Chara wants to become a mountain and leave the city altogether. Angelidakis suggests that ruins are just buildings on their way to becoming nature.

Iwan Baan’s work is characterized by his portrayal of people in architecture, revealing the context, society and environment around architecture. He has photographed two of the most ambitious urban projects of the 20th century, Chandigarh and Brasília, both conceived out of political agendas and presenting the future as conceived by its creators. Baan’s images show real life taking place in these two invented cities that have adapted to everyday social rituals and basic needs. Oscar Niemeyer’s Museu Nacional provides little protection from the elements within Brasília’s urban plan laid out by Lúcio Costa. A young man remains enthusiastic as he is drenched in the rain, while small crowds find shelter under the building’s entrance ramps. In Le Corbusier’s Palace of the Assembly in Chandigarh two men are viewed bathing and dressing themselves through the perforated concrete façade. Whether they live or work in the building is ambiguous, but here they have found a space suitable to conduct their morning routine.

Over the course of many journeys to Eastern Europe and Asia between 2003 and 2010, Frédéric Chaubin has been searching for and photographing atypical examples of architecture dating from the late Soviet era. Largely located in regions on the periphery of the former USSR, such buildings are defined by a utopian formal language uncharacteristic of the standard paradigms of Soviet state architecture. The buildings express the dreams of architects that were educated within a strict Soviet system yet, perhaps as a paradox, managed to achieve immense creative freedom in their work. According to Chaubin, this diversity of architectural style during the late 1970s is an expression of the demise in Soviet totalitarian homogeneity. His deliberate enhancement of the dramatic dimension to these buildings pays homage to the imagination of those non-conformist architects and underscores the fictional dimension of history.

Le Val Fourré was built in the 1960s in the Parisian banlieue of Mantes-la-Jolie as a large scale, optimistic project to meet the increased demand for homes in the city. Densely populated, under resourced and poorly integrated with public transport, the residential project has become a place of escalating frustrations and civil unrest since the 1990s. During a residency at Le Chaplin in Mantes-la-Jolie, mounir fatmi made several films documenting the gradual demolition of Le Val Fourré. ‘Architecture Now! Etat des lieux #1’ focuses on an individual apartment as it is torn down by a bulldozer. The men demolishing the building are as absent from view as its former residents, leaving the social implications of such an act to the imagination. As the architecture is slowly destroyed, nature is revealed.

‘Gan Eden’, a film by Niklas Goldbach, also inverts the relationship between architecture and nature. It was filmed in 2005 in the remains of the Dutch pavilion designed by MVRDV for the World Expo 2000 in Hanover, Germany. The pavilion was intended as a multi-level park but was left to decay when the Expo closed. Goldbach’s film sees two men cruising in the decaying pavilion as an act of re-appropriation. In a text in the accompanying catalogue, the architects celebrate the creation of a new ruin in this transition from utopia to distopia. Overcome by nature, the pavilion became the park it had always aspired to be.

About the artists

Andreas Angelidakis runs an experimental practice in Athens, Greece, that is involved in building, designing and speculating the contemporary ecosystem of screens and landscapes. His medium is habitation, of buildings, clouds, spaces, furniture, videos, online communities or exhibition spaces, and operates at the intersection of systems: Art and Architecture, Virtual and Real, Building and Nature, Ruin and Construction. His work has been exhibited at the Venice Architecture Biennale, Sao Paolo Biennial, ExperimentaDesign in Lisbon, and Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton and Jeu de Paume in Paris.
www.angelidakis.com

Dutch photographer Iwan Baan is known primarily for images that narrate the life and interactions that occur within architecture. Born in 1975, Iwan grew up outside Amsterdam and studied at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague. He collaborates with many architects including Rem Koolhaas, Herzog & de Meuron, SANAA, Frank Gehry, Toyo Ito and Zaha Hadid. His photography has been featured in exhibitions at MoMA in New York and the Architectural Association in London. He has also conducted documentary projects across Africa, Asia and Latin America.
www.iwan.com

Frédéric Chaubin, born in Cambodia, is an artist, writer and editor-in-chief of Citizen K magazine for the last fifteen years. His photography considers architecture as an expression of its historical, cultural and anthropological condition. In 2003 he began a seven year project photographing unusual structures within the former USSR. ‘Cosmic Communist Constructions Photographed’ was published by Taschen in 2011. Solo exhibitions include ZKM Museum of Contemporary Art, Karlsruhe, and the Storefront for Art and Architecture, New York.
www.fredericchaubin.com

mounir fatmi was born in Tangier, Morocco in 1970. His practice involves constructing visual spaces and linguistic games that aim to free the viewer from their preconceptions. His videos, installations, drawings, paintings and sculptures bring to light our doubts, fears and desires. His work was featured in Paradise Now! Essential French Avant-Garde Cinema 1890-2008 at the Tate Modern in London and Traces du Sacré at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris.
www.mounirfatmi.com

German artist Niklas Goldbach creates video, sculpture and photographic works that focus on dystopic aspects of architecture. Gan Eden is the second in a series of videos about utopia in urban culture. His films have been screened at the International Architecture Film Festival Rotterdam, Temporary Kunsthalle Berlin and the Barbican, London. He was an artist in residence at the Palais de Tokyo, Paris, in 2007/08.
www.niklasgoldbach.de