Andrés Jaque, Office for Political Innovation - Teddy House - Vigo, Spain - 2005

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Andrés Jaque, Office for Political Innovation - Teddy House - Vigo, Spain - 2005
2
ANDRES JAQUE - CLIMATE DISSENT HOUSE
30/09 - 10:03 - ONDERZOEK VERDERZETTEN
partner: Bastien
resultaat: aanzet bij het reconstrueren van het beeld
? bevindingen:
Hoe groot is dit beeld?
volledig op photoshop
Zijn de micro organismen met waterverf?
Hoe maak je deze texturen? Opzoeken of zelf proberen maken?
Mensen en dieren zijn moeilijk te vinden
Volgens mij is de tekst IMPACT of HELVETICA
PHANTOM. Mies as Rendered Society, Andres Jaque, 2012, Art Institute of Chicago: Architecture and Design
This installation aims to unravel the myth of Mies van der Rohe as a solitary genius. Fundació Mies commissioned Andrés Jaque in 2012 to create a site-specific intervention in Mies’s most famous building, the Barcelona Pavilion. The original Pavilion of 1929 was reconstructed in 1986 with the fundamental addition of a basement. Jaque’s installation focused on this lower level, which was an overlooked yet significant part of the building, introducing new questions for contemporary scholarship about Mies. The intervention exposes—like the phantom of the Pavilion’s past—the building’s hidden context: the networks of people, technologies, and institutions that made it possible. PHANTOM. Mies as Rendered Society consists of all the objects and materials found in the basement that have contributed to rebuilding and maintaining Mies’s iconic building and reputation. This installation includes architectural fragments such as the velvet curtains, travertine plates, a spare Barcelona chair now broken, as well as contemporary cleaning products and devices that support the Pavilion’s maintenance. Together these objects reveal the Barcelona Pavilion as a social construction resulting from specific technological moments and civic initiatives. Gift of Fundació Mies van der Rohe, Barcelona Size: Variable Medium: Mixed media installation
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/250751/
PHANTOM. Mies as Rendered Society, Andres Jaque, 2012, Art Institute of Chicago: Architecture and Design
This installation aims to unravel the myth of Mies van der Rohe as a solitary genius. Fundació Mies commissioned Andrés Jaque in 2012 to create a site-specific intervention in Mies’s most famous building, the Barcelona Pavilion. The original Pavilion of 1929 was reconstructed in 1986 with the fundamental addition of a basement. Jaque’s installation focused on this lower level, which was an overlooked yet significant part of the building, introducing new questions for contemporary scholarship about Mies. The intervention exposes—like the phantom of the Pavilion’s past—the building’s hidden context: the networks of people, technologies, and institutions that made it possible. PHANTOM. Mies as Rendered Society consists of all the objects and materials found in the basement that have contributed to rebuilding and maintaining Mies’s iconic building and reputation. This installation includes architectural fragments such as the velvet curtains, travertine plates, a spare Barcelona chair now broken, as well as contemporary cleaning products and devices that support the Pavilion’s maintenance. Together these objects reveal the Barcelona Pavilion as a social construction resulting from specific technological moments and civic initiatives. Gift of Fundació Mies van der Rohe, Barcelona Size: Variable Medium: Mixed media installation
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/250751/
PHANTOM. Mies as Rendered Society, Andres Jaque, 2012, Art Institute of Chicago: Architecture and Design
This installation aims to unravel the myth of Mies van der Rohe as a solitary genius. Fundació Mies commissioned Andrés Jaque in 2012 to create a site-specific intervention in Mies’s most famous building, the Barcelona Pavilion. The original Pavilion of 1929 was reconstructed in 1986 with the fundamental addition of a basement. Jaque’s installation focused on this lower level, which was an overlooked yet significant part of the building, introducing new questions for contemporary scholarship about Mies. The intervention exposes—like the phantom of the Pavilion’s past—the building’s hidden context: the networks of people, technologies, and institutions that made it possible. PHANTOM. Mies as Rendered Society consists of all the objects and materials found in the basement that have contributed to rebuilding and maintaining Mies’s iconic building and reputation. This installation includes architectural fragments such as the velvet curtains, travertine plates, a spare Barcelona chair now broken, as well as contemporary cleaning products and devices that support the Pavilion’s maintenance. Together these objects reveal the Barcelona Pavilion as a social construction resulting from specific technological moments and civic initiatives. Gift of Fundació Mies van der Rohe, Barcelona Size: Variable Medium: Mixed media installation
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/250751/
#politicastransmateriales #oficinadeinnovacionpolitica #andresjaque #art #arte #artivismo #artivism #tabacaleramadrid #exposchulasygratis (en Tabacalera Promocion del arte)
#politicastransmateriales #oficinadeinnovacionpolitica #andresjaque #art #arte #tabacaleramadrid #exposchulasygratis (en Tabacalera Promocion del arte)
Andres Jaque, Phantom. Mies as Rendered Society
Infraestructural collage