Two online exhibitions from the Architectural Design department at Gerrit Rietveld Academie 

 

staging-architecture.xyz 

political-bodies.xyz 

 

The Architectural Design department at Gerrit Rietveld Academie is proud to present two online exhibitions of student works.

 

 

Staging Architecture focuses on how theatrical forms of representation, performances and fictional scripts can be used as tools for the architectural design process.

Tommaso Campanella’s “The City of the Sun” (1602) was an early utopian work whose literary future was narrated through the description of a city. Written while in prison for conspiring against Spanish rule, Campanella envisioned a society based on the community of goods, with, of course, many contradictions. The society imagined and their stories are intrinsically connected to the fictional city envisioned by Campanella.

Seven groups of second-year students from the Gerrit Rietveld Academie’s Architectural Design department worked during the spring of 2020 to develop fictional stories and a scenographic space within which their speculative narratives can be read. The classic design process dedicated to space or objects was replaced by possible stories around these artefacts. The script and scenography became both the tool and the space in which a possible performed action can take place.

The design of each scenography departed from a common format: a simple two-by-two-meter wooden panel structure, which students were free to modify. The scenographic element was conceived as a sort of background accompanying the narratives.

The works presented here were originally prepared for Rietveld Uncut, an exhibition at the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. However, due to public safety measures put in place in response to the outbreak of COVID-19, the museum was closed, and the exhibition did not take place.

As a virtual exhibition, this website continues to reflect on and explore the themes dealt with in the studio. If at the beginning the focus was on how to display architecture in a museum through speculative narratives, scenographies and performances, conceiving a website as a digital space brings more questions on how we can transpose it on a screen-based spatiality. Every project has been transformed and not simply adapted to the new format, thus exploring the possibility of an on-line platform. The website has been conceived as a proper space, a stage where different acts can take place. The public, exploring the platform, is free and able to add another layer, deciding the order and the sequence of the narration.

Students: Arnar Freyr Sigurðsson, Britt van Dam, Floriane Libilbéhéty, Gabija Nedzinskaite, Herman Berge, Julia Hager Jutterström, Lene Antonopoulos, Leonie Marie Wegertseder, Neža Kokol, Nikolai Kold Aarre, Robbie Doorman, Tania Phuong, Valter Torsleff, Wimke Dekker, Yuriy Krupey.

Studio Tutors: Parasite 2.0

Department Head: Nick Axel

Website: Joana Chicau

Political Bodies proposes to read architecture through two opposing scales, the individual and the community. Architecture is also, at the same time, the expression of both power and self-awareness. This can be seen most clearly in how architecture has signified and embodied ideal bodies over time. 

Ideal bodies have emerged throughout the histories of human culture to reflect a society’s values, which has in turn informed the scale, proportion, and materiality of architecture. Students from the first and second year of the Gerrit Rietveld Academie’s Architectural Design department worked throughout the spring of 2020 in collaboration with the Holland Festival to deconstruct contemporary ideal bodies and craft new ones. 

Serving as founding architectural myths for alternative worlds, students started by developing an atlas of spatial references and writing a manifesto outlining the value systems of projective, fictional, political bodies. As the architectural element that most directly embodies the values of ideal bodies, students then designed a portal, which was realized both as a collage and a 1:1-scale model. They then zoomed out to envision a collective space, a stage for communal expression.

Students: Nikolai Aarre, Lene Antonopoulos, Fanny Bezie, Miriam Chair, Wimke Dekker, Robbie Doorman, Julia Hager Jutterström, Kevin Kim, Neža Kokol, Yasmin Lyon, Tania Phuong, Giovanni Salice, Arnar Freyr Sigurðsson, Valter Torsleff, Leonie Marie Wegertseder.

Studio Tutors: Traumnovelle

Department Head: Nick Axel

Website: 4 us & 4 others

Images:

1) Nikolai Kold Aarre and Julia Hager Jutterström, The new standard, 2020. 2) Lene Antonopoulos and Leonie Marie Wegertseder, Am I on a boat or is it just a waiting room, 2020. 3) Staging Architectureexhibition website, design by Joana Chicau. 4) Fanny Bézie, Prune Weed, Water, 2020. 5) Valter Törsleff, Three Graces, 2020. 6) Political Bodies exhibition website, design by 4 us & 4 others.