Archive for July, 2007



02
Jul

Zaha Optimus MAXXImus

Zaha Hadid Portrait

In the third century BC, the ancient Romans invented concrete - a material that revolutionized ancient architecture. The appearance of this new medium provoked innovation, for it allowed the ancient Romans to overcome the limitations of post-and-lintel architecture that dictated the forms of Greek and Egyptian buildings. With this new capability, vast interior spaces could be created. Concrete buildings could be designed to create unusually spatial interiors that were open, rather than spaces punctuated by columns or piers. Architects used the medium to maximum effect - think of the Pantheon - making Roman architecture about the enclosure of volumes rather than the shaping of masses.

Zaha Hadid's MAXXI in Rome

Some two thousand years later, Rome is the site of the next concrete revolution - though lack of public funding has made it a bit slow in coming. In this case, the protagonist is the British-Iraqi architect, Zaha Hadid, who in 1998 won a competition for the design of a new contemporary art museum in Rome. The Eternal City showed it’s long-standing affection for revolutionary architecture when it chose Hadid’s design for a sinuous serpentine cast concrete building, leaving behind the designs of Jean Nouvel, Steven Holl, and Rem Koolhaas.

Zaha Hadid's MAXXI museum in  Rome

Designated MAXXI (Museum of XXIst Century Art), the new contemporary art museum, is taking form on 30,000 square meters of land in Rome’s northern Flaminio district. Replacing a 19thC barracks, Hadid has designed almost 6000 square meters of sweeping galleries enclosed by curving windowless cast concrete walls. The roofs of the galleries, however, are not concrete but are fully glazed to allow natural lighting, so that the galleries are not boxes but are essentially troughs with glass lids. Alan Jones of SKM Anthony Hunts, which contributed structural design to Hadid’s competition scheme, commented on the difficulty of building such a structure, saying: “Only the floors and walls, but not the roof, provide structural stability.”

Zaha Hadid's MAXXI Museum in Rome

Radical as the building appears, from the street it will blend into the surrounding urban fabric. Its three stories of curving concrete walls will be hidden by a 19th century facade and its long sleek hallways (which will serve as galleries) will wind their way around extant buildings and culminate in a huge and light-filled three story atrium.

The building is slated to open in 2009.

01
Jul

Cracking Up at the Cloister of Bramante

Cracking Animals at the Cloister of Bramante

About 1500, Rome superseded Florence as the center of the Italian Renaissance. Artists and architects looking for work flocked to Rome, hoping to be hired by the Pope, by Cardinals, or by noble Roman families. Among those architects that made it big in the Eternal City was Donato Bramante, who found favor with Pope Julius II as well as with other Roman movers and shakers. In the course of his Roman career, Bramante would build the Tempietto, design a new St. Peter’s Basilica, begin a massive courtyard complex in the Vatican, and reorganize city streets.

Bramante is also responsible for one of the most elegant enclaves in Rome today - the cloister of the monastery of Santa Maria della Pace, near Piazza Navona. Built between 1500-1504 and commissioned by Cardinal Oliviero Carafa (whose name is memorialized in the inscription on the architrave), the cloister reflects Bramante’s quintessentially Renaissance interest in all things antique, for he uses classical forms - arches and engaged columns - to frame an open courtyard. There’s little doubt he’d spent some time studying extant Roman buildings like the Theater of Marcellus and the Colosseum.

Today the Cloister of Bramante houses an art gallery and a chic cafe that offers free wifi. The exhibits on display in the gallery are often in striking contrast with the classical simplicity of Bramante’s architecture, and that’s certainly the case with the current show, called Cracking Art, which runs until 29 July.

Cracking Art at the Cloister of Bramante, Rome

Cracking Art, it seems, is the name of a cooperative of ironic and environmentally-aware artists in northern Italy who create plastic representations of wildlife. As the physical medium that provides the basis for their works of art, the members use a type of plastic produced via a thermo-chemical reaction in crude oil. This reaction, is known as “cracking” and therefore is the origin of the group’s name.

We’ll admit we didn’t crack open our wallets to see the whole show. But we were utterly smitten (and a bit bewildered) by the giant red-hot poodle and the eight shocking pink crocodiles populating Bramante’s Renaissance courtyard. Cardinal Carafa may be rolling over in his grave, but surely Bramante is cracking up.




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