lunes, 16 de septiembre de 2013

ANDALE MONO: 2nd phase finalist!


2nd PHASE FINALIST

in association with NOMOS Groupement d'Architectes, for La Cigüe student housing in Geneva, Switzerland. 
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Immeuble de logement pour personnes en formation dans l'écoquartier des Vergers pour la Coopérative La Ciguë.

PROJECT TEAM: 

PYO arquitectos: Paul Galindo Pastre, Ophélie Herranz Lespagnol, Natalia Vera Vigaray

NOMOS Groupement d'Architectes SA: Lucas Camponovo, Massimo Bianco, Jean-Michel Chartiel, Katrien Vertenten

ORNELLA exhibited at MoMA

The images from our project ORNELLA (in association with NOMOS) are included in Cut'n'Paste exhibition at MoMA. They are part of a digital animation projected on a fabric screen at the entrance to the gallery. The screen itself is interactive, visitors can walk through it. The animation is composed of a variety of images from contemporary architectural practices, all published in the last months of 2012. 

Cut ’n’ Paste: From Architectural Assemblage to Collage City
July 10, 2013–December 01, 2013
The Robert Menschel Architecture and Design Gallery, third floor

Contemporary culture is often described as a relentless rearrangement of multiple historical references, images, and signs. Collage has been referred to as a process that illustrates this specific condition of modernity. Cut ’n’ Paste explores the evolution of collage as both a fundamental yet overlooked technique of architectural representation, and as an extended cultural notion of layering, juxtaposition, and remix that has shaped perceptions of the urban realm over the past century. 

This installation pulls from MoMA’s vast collection to revisit the medium’s manifold expressions and to uncover how the visual language of collage has come to dominate contemporary architectural representation. Architectural collages from Mies van der Rohe’s early photomontages to the reprise of the technique in digital rendering are juxtaposed with the cut-and-pasted experiments of artists, photographers, and graphic designers. A concept first theorized by architectural critics Colin Rowe and Fred Koetter in the 1970s, these artistic experiments suggest an immersive “collage city”—a city that comes alive through the superimposition of its many elements. 

Considered in this diversity, collage offers more than a continuation of drawing practices. Whether through direct evocations of lifestyle or inventive connections to surrounding cultural conditions, it is an aspirational tool by which architects have drawn reality onto their projects from their earliest conception. 

Organized by Pedro Gadanho, Curator, and Phoebe Springstubb, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Architecture and Design.