Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Pompidou’s Huts

Architectural haiku by Tadashi Kawamata, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris

Architectural haikus by Tadashi Kawamata, 2010
Centre Georges Pompidou
Place Georges-Pompidou
Quartier Saint-Merri, 4th arrondissement
Paris, July 2010

“Tadashi Kawamata, a Japanese sculptor and installer, is known for creating urban spaces that utilize simple materials. Often times, Kawamata selects an single item, whether it is a material or an object, that becomes the basic module of a huge construction. His latest spaces are occupying the external façade of the Centre Pompidou in Paris. These timbers huts, which are lined with cardboard, attach on to the existing structural framework, like a parasite, and morph into something entirely new. These precariously hanging wooden huts strongly contrast the highly technical aesthetic of Piano’s and Rogers’ facade. ‘From his reflections on the architecture of the Pompidou Center, its location in the urban fabric, its intimate memory, the Japanese artist invests more locations within the Centre: the Children’s gallery, Forum and exterior facades’, explained the museum.” (Pompidou’s Huts, ArchDaily)

5 comments:

Dina said...

Sort of like a little sukkah. :)

tapirgal said...

I'd never have expected that. Very nice. Great lines.

cieldequimper said...

Yuck.

joo said...

Interesting!

Francisca said...

Hmmm... I'm not getting this...