SO-IL chosen for art museum at University of California

News: New York studio SO-IL has won a competition to design an art museum at the University of California’s Davis campus with plans that will unite indoor and outdoor spaces beneath a large steel roof.

Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art by SO-IL with Bohlin Cywinski Jackson

Designed in collaboration with architecture firm Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, the Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art is conceived by SO-IL as a landscape of galleries and workshops that reference the flat plains of of California’s Central Valley.

Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art by SO-IL with Bohlin Cywinski Jackson

The 4000-square-metre canopy will stretch out across the entire site, creating varying degrees of shelter in different sections. “Its form and its shape are an abstract patchwork of geometric forms that in a way refers to the agricultural landscape and the vast horizon,” says SO-IL’s Florian Idenburg.

Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art by SO-IL with Bohlin Cywinski Jackson

Beneath the roof, the building will contain galleries for the University of California‘s collection of artworks, as well as temporary exhibition spaces, lectures rooms, studios and artists’ residences.

Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art by SO-IL with Bohlin Cywinski Jackson

“I think the museum of the future will be one that needs to be able to accommodate a lot of change,” says Idenburg. “A museum on campus, like here, should be a testing ground for new ideas. We see the building itself offering a stage on which all these different things can happen.”

Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art by SO-IL with Bohlin Cywinski Jackson

Construction of the museum is set to begin next year.

SO–IL, led by Idenburg and his wife Jing Liu, is based in Brooklyn. Past projects by the studio include the snaking white tent that hosts New York’s Frieze Art Fair and an art gallery draped in chain mail in South Korea. See more architecture by SO-IL.

Here’s a project description from the design team:


Grand Canopy

Davis is an ideal setting for a museum that will sow new ways of thinking about the experience of art. The Central Valley breathes a spirit of optimism. Whether one is influenced by the sweeping views over the flat plains beyond to the horizon, or the sense of empowerment one feels when being able to cultivate and grow freely – the spirit of this place is of invention and imagination. It is precisely this spirit we capture in our architectural proposal for the Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art.

As an overarching move, the design proposes a 50,000 square-foot permeable cover – a “Grand Canopy” – over both site and building. The distinct shape of this open roof presents a new symbol for the campus. The Canopy extends over the site, blurring its edges, and creating a sensory landscape of activities and scales. The Canopy works in two important ways: first, to generate a field of experimentation, an infrastructure, and stage for events; and second, as an urban device that creates a new locus of activity and center of gravity on campus. The Canopy transforms the site into a field of diverse spaces. At night, the illuminated canopy becomes a beacon within the campus and to the city beyond.

Inspired by the quilted agrarian landscape that stretches beyond the site, the design inherits the idea of diverse landscapes, textures and colors stitched together. Like the Central Valley, the landscape under the Canopy becomes shaped and activated by changing light and seasons. Its unique form engenders curiosity from a distance, like a lone hill on a skyline. Catalyzing exploration and curiosity, the Canopy produces constantly changing silhouettes and profiles as visitors move through the site.

Under the Canopy, the site forms a continuous landscape, tying it in with its context. Lines from the site and its surroundings trace through to shape the design. Interwoven curved and straight sections seamlessly define inside and outside. The result is a portfolio of interconnected interior and exterior spaces, all with distinct spatial qualities and characteristics that trigger diverse activities and create informal opportunities for learning and interaction. Textures and landscape break the program down into smaller volumes to achieve a human, approachable scale. The future art museum is neither isolated nor exclusive, but open and permeable; not a static shrine, but a constantly evolving public event.

The post SO-IL chosen for art museum
at University of California
appeared first on Dezeen.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

The first New York Frieze Art Fair took place last weekend inside a 450 metre-long snaking white tent designed by Brooklyn architects SO-IL.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Located between Manhattan, Bronx and Queens on Randall’s Island, the structure comprised six rented rectangular tents connected with wedge-shaped corner sections.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Strips of white tent fabric overhanging the two gabled ends were fanned out and fastened to the ground, creating partially sheltered entrances.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

This is the first year that the Frieze Art Fair has taken place in New York as well as London.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

See Carmody Groarke’s timber pavilions for last year’s London event here.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

See more stories about SO-IL here, including a temporary pavilion with reflective purple scales created for an arts festival in Beijing.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Photography is by Iwan Baan.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Here’s some more information from SO-IL:


Frieze Art Fair NYC

Working with a prefabricated rental structure forced us to be inventive with a limited vocabulary.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Randall’s Island, situated in between Manhattan, Bronx and Queens is one of the few pieces of open land in New York City large enough to accommodate the 225,000sf, 1500 ft long structure.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Pie-shaped tent section wedges are inserted between six tent sections to relax and open up the standardized system, and offer amenities at each section as a moment of recess.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

The wedges bend the otherwise straight tent into a meandering, supple, shape.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

The winding form animates it on the unusual waterfront site, as well as establishing the temporary structure as an icon along the water.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

The wedges divide the relentless length of the fair into manageable sections.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Rather than exposing the end gable section at each end of the tent, we extended the tent roof fabric in stripes, dissolving the tent into the ground.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

The playful entrances introduce visitors to the experience within.

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Client: Frieze Art Fair

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL
Location: New York

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL
Program: exhibition spaces, event space, cafes

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL
Area: 20.900 m² / 225,000 sf

Frieze Art Fair NYC by SO-IL

Porcelain by SO-IL

Porcelain by SO-IL

New York architects SO-IL have designed these coloured acrylic display cases in geometric shapes to showcase pieces by German porcelain brand Meissen in an exhibition at Kunsthal KAdE in Amersfoort, the Netherlands.

Porcelain by SO-IL

The 32 boxes sit on MDF plinths and enclose figurine’s from Meissen’s archive, including designs from the eighteenth century.

Porcelain by SO-IL

An exhibition of SO-IL’s work, entitled To Be Determined, is also on show at the galley.

Porcelain by SO-IL

The show continues until 28 August 2011.

Porcelain by SO-IL

Photographs are by Iwan Baan.

Porcelain by SO-IL

More about SO-IL on Dezeen »

Porcelain by SO-IL

The information below is from SO-IL:


MEISSEN X SO-IL

Porcelain by SO-IL

In the Netherlands, Meissen porcelain is often regarded as ‘high-class kitsch’.

Porcelain by SO-IL

Its sumptuous, often narrative style of decoration puts it at odds with the minimalistic and conceptual traditions of Modernism.

Porcelain by SO-IL

In this exhibition, KAdE seeks to challenge this prejudice and focus attention on the great sculptural, artistic and technical strengths of Meissen.

Porcelain by SO-IL

KAdE commissioned the Solid Objectives – Idenburg Liu (SO – IL) architectural office to design an ideal contemporary three-dimensional setting in which to present the porcelain.

Porcelain by SO-IL

In response, SO – IL has designed 32 modern, geometrically shaped showcases in bright colours and with ‘pointed tops’.

Porcelain by SO-IL

The porcelain in the exhibition will be drawn from a number of sources, including the Von Klemperer collection, the Meissen factory collection and various private collections in England and Germany.

Porcelain by SO-IL

The exhibition will be accompanied by a book discussing both the porcelain and the architectural philosophy of SO – IL.

Porcelain by SO-IL

The exhibition will also include pieces from the Meissen factory collection which were produced in the 19th or 20th century but based on 18th-century models. Among these are various Commedia dell’arte figures (Brighella, Gondoliere, Arlecchino, Beltramo and Avvocato).

Porcelain by SO-IL

‘To Be Determined’ (above and below), a presentation of recent work by SO – IL, will take place in KAdE’s second floor exhibition space. In autumn 2010, it was on show in Studio X in Beijing.

Porcelain by SO-IL


See also:

.

Flockr
by SO-IL
Shadowboxing exhibition
by Slowscape Collective
Serpentine Gallery Pavilion
by SANAA