‘drawing ambience’ opens tomorrow at the Cooper Union

Posted on October 12th, 2015 by Nader Tehrani

Posted under: Academic, Installations + Exhibitions, The Cooper Union

Opening tomorrow evening in the Arthur A. Houghton Jr. Gallery. Details here.

‘Ambient Speculation’

As I landed in London in late 1986, I felt I had just missed the party. With the aura of some of the greatest hands of this exhibition still lingering in “the bar,” a good many of them had already packed their bags and moved on to greener pastures. Not only had the economy picked up in Rotterdam and Paris – among other places – but the political support that the voice of architecture was gaining in the European sphere was having a significant impact on the shape of things to come, providing the opportunity for the ambient speculation of this generation to be translated into physical reality. The rest is history, and we are still living out an extension of that narrative some three decades later, but the preamble to the political and economic turnaround is probably the telltale part of this story.

In the early 1970’s, Alvin Boyarsky’s Architectural Association was marked by a sudden internationalization of the institution, at a time when the British Government could no longer subsidize the school. This coincided with a broader cultural shift toward the alignment of economies across borders and time zones – which, in turn, proved a fecund opportunity to make the AA a platform for the architect as global citizen. If economic pressures seemed to be the reason for the urgencies of the moment, they were not cast as limitations. This was perhaps the most productive historic moment of the AA, when a new intellectual opportunism was found in the generative moment of architectural inception: the drawing.

OMA

Drawing by OMA, circa 1984

Significantly, the drawings presented here have a great range: from the hand sketch to the meticulously constructed, from the poetic to the realistic, and from the utopic to the polemical. The heterogeneity of media deployed suggests the richness of the environment within which these architects were operating. If some drawings were entrenched in the theater of real competitions, they were nonetheless deeply invested in architectural ideas that could produce new forms of knowledge. If those ideas seemed distant, theoretically hermetic, or relegated to the realm of “paper architecture” at the time, then the turn of events in subsequent years has proven to make those very projections both the beneficiaries and victims of reality. For this reason, we not only see these images as prophetic in their ability to be translated beyond the terms of their medium, but, in fact, as instruments in their own right. The drawings speak, they cast shadows, and they emanate vastly different ideological predispositions. Between representation and generation, the drawings oscillate from conditions known to conditions unprecedented. Within this space of speculation, they also suggest how the drawing, as instrument, positions itself within discourse – and Boyarsky understood the power of that agency.

Boyarsky’s curatorial ingenuity did not come so much from the tailoring of a new curriculum, but rather the assembly and overlay of critical architectural voices, most often in a symphony of dissonance. In the context of this exhibition those voices take shape with the alignment of the mind and hand through a series of architectural projections that see the instrumentality of drawing as perhaps the most potent political act of architecture. The drawings are neither subservient to building, nor marginal to them; they underline that the practice of architecture is rooted in a cultural process that begins long before the project at hand, and ends long after we are all gone. Boyarsky’s pedagogical strategy may also serve us well today with the recognition that a powerful school of thought is not necessarily rooted in the control of the singular voice, but rather the building up of a discursive platform with the certainty of uncertain results.

Nader Tehrani, 2015

Dean, The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture

 

 

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FAREWELL FOR NOW BSA SPACE

Posted on October 6th, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Installations + Exhibitions

We took down our Catenary Compression installation yesterday at the BSA Space, but we’ll be back again in a few months, curating a new Global Citizen exhibit for Moshe Safdie Architects.

taking it down bsa

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Breadbox: An evening with the curators and designers

Posted on August 20th, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Events, Installations + Exhibitions

Join NADAAA, Matter Design, and IK Studio for an open discussion on the Bigger than a Breadbox installations at the BSA Space tonight at 6:00pm. The event is free, but please register here.

BSA exhibit

NADAAA - Catenary Compression 2015 (12)

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‘MEASURE’ OPENING AT STOREFRONT FOR ART AND ARCHITECTURE

Posted on August 11th, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Events, Installations + Exhibitions

Join NADAAA this Thursday August 13th at 7:00pm at the Measure’ exhibition opening at the Storefront for Art and Architecture at 97 Kenmare St, New York, NY.
measure-576

‘Measure’ is an exhibition of 30 drawings by 30 international architects presenting 30 edifices of thought.

The pleasure and pressure to measure and be measured has become increasingly present. Access to growing data sets and new sensing technologies is widespread, and the role of public and private domains in terms of information and space are being redefined. These contemporary conditions invite us to reflect on our ideologies and values, and the drawing is a manifestation of that which we are able to (and desire to) count, measure, and draw.

Storefront’s third iteration of the drawing show seeks to find measures, resist measurement, and measure the immeasurable by presenting from the real to the fictional and from the functional to the symbolic. Measure positions the medium and the act of drawing as a process by which we seek coherence in data and representation, and shows that it is the making of facts that is the basis for the production of futurity beyond existing norms.

other exhibitors include:

The Architecture Lobby
Barozzi / Veiga
Víctor Enrich
Fake Industries Architectural Agonism ((Urtzi Grau, Cristina Goberna) and Georgia Jamieson
FIG Projects
FleaFollyArchitects
Formlessfinder
Michelle Fornabai
Steven Holl
Bernard Khoury
Kohn Pedersen Fox Assoc.
KUTONOTUK (Matthew Jull + Leena Cho)
Erika Loana
Jon Lott / PARA Project
MAIO
m-a-u-s-e-r (Mona Mahall + Asli Serbest)
MILLIØNS
Nicholas de Monchaux
Anna Neimark
pneumastudio (Cathryn Dwyre + Chris Perry)
+ POOL
James Ramsey / RAAD Studio
Reiser + Umemoto
Mark Robbins
Selldorf Architects
Malkit Shoshan
Urban-Think Tank
Ross Wimer
James Wines

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CALL TO ORDER OPENING

Posted on April 9th, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Installations + Exhibitions

miami school of architecture

The New Hampshire Retreat and Villa Varoise (Dortoir Familial) are on display as part of the University of Miami’s Tecnoglass Lecture Series 2014-15, CALL TO ORDER: Exhibition from April 8 – August 15 in Glasgow Hall. Learn more about the exhibition here.

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