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James Ewing photographs Columbia GSAPP’s Stagecraft exhibition as miniature drama of history

United States Architecture News - Feb 04, 2017 - 14:19   18086 views

James Ewing photographs Columbia GSAPP’s Stagecraft exhibition as miniature drama of history

Le Corbusier's Pavillon des Temps Nouveaux, Paris, France- 1937, Norman Foster's Renault Distribution Center, Swindon, UK-1982 and Frank Lloyd Wright's Samuel Freeman House, Los Angeles, USA- 1924 and other significant 20th-century buildings are photographed as a miniature of multisensory drama of the history by James Ewing for the upcoming Columbia GSAPP's Stagecraft: Models and Photos exhibition. 

The Arthur Ross Architecture Gallery at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (Columbia GSAPP) will open its new exhibition on February 9 until March 10, 2017 featuring exclusive models made by teams of Columbia GSAPP students between 1993 and 2004 and 14 photographs captured by photographer James Ewing. 

James Ewing photographs Columbia GSAPP’s Stagecraft exhibition as miniature drama of history

Norman Foster, Renault Distribution Center, Swindon, UK, 1982. Image © James Ewing, courtesy Columbia GSAPP

Stagecraft: Models and Photos exhibition remediates between photography and architecture models as a reinterpretive process and new drama of 'unseen'. The photography transcends itself to another dimension in this exhibition. The exhibition explores the synergy between architectural models and photography and the renewed relevance of model photography as a wellspring of architectural invention.

Columbia GSAPP's Stagecraft exhibition show includes models of significant 20th-century buildings-Le Corbusier, Pavillon des Temps Nouveaux, Paris, France, 1937, Norman Foster, Renault Distribution Center, Swindon, UK, 1982, Gerrit Rietveld, Schröder House, Utrecht, The Netherlands, 1924, Jørn Utzon, Bagsværd Church, Bagsværd, Denmark, 1976, Frank Lloyd Wright, Samuel Freeman House, Los Angeles, USA, 1924 and Peter Zumthor, Saint Benedict Chapel, Sumvitg, Switzerland, 1988. 

James Ewing photographs Columbia GSAPP’s Stagecraft exhibition as miniature drama of history

Gerrit Rietveld, Schröder House, Utrecht, The Netherlands, 1924. Image © James Ewing, courtesy Columbia GSAPP

Curated by Irene Sunwoo, Columbia GSAPP Director of Exhibitions, and Adam Bandler, Assistant Director of Exhibitions, this fantastic model show invites a reexamination of how architectural creativity and thinking unfold through the picturing of objects and the crafting of images through James Ewing's touching photographs.

''It has been a pleasure to work with James Ewing on this project,'' said Irene Sunwoo. 

''The resulting exhibition demonstrates how the Ross Gallery can foster the creative production of new projects that give architects and artists an opportunity to push their practice further, while also generating timely conversations on architectural issues that resonate with GSAPP’s research and teaching.''

James Ewing photographs Columbia GSAPP’s Stagecraft exhibition as miniature drama of history

Jørn Utzon, Bagsværd Church, Bagsværd, Denmark, 1976. Image © James Ewing, courtesy Columbia GSAPP

Using the Ross Gallery as a photographic studio for several weeks, Ewing experimented with a range of lighting, framing and staging techniques that drew upon his research on the history of model photography. Ewing specifically studied the archive of the model photographer Louis Checkman, located at the Avery Drawings & Archives Collection at Columbia University, took inspiration from the methods of Balthazar Korab and Ezra Stoller, and exchanged ideas with Jock Pottle, a prolific architectural model photographer active during the 1990s and early 2000s.

James Ewing's 14 photographs are presented with multiple interpretations of the six models. Rather than realistic constructions that simulate buildings, Ewing’s images instead offer a meditation on how the intersection of material and visual modes of representation can prompt new ways of seeing, understanding and talking about architecture.

James Ewing photographs Columbia GSAPP’s Stagecraft exhibition as miniature drama of history

Frank Lloyd Wright, Samuel Freeman House, Los Angeles, USA, 1924. Image © James Ewing, courtesy Columbia GSAPP

As photographic subjects, the models themselves were a unique provocation. Illustrating structural details rather than whole buildings, the models were made during the 1990s and early 2000s by Columbia GSAPP students of Professor Kenneth Frampton as a pedagogical exploration of the history of architectural tectonics. 

''One of the key aspects of architecture is the fact that it is constructed. My argument is that by making a didactic model, the students internalize the intrinsic nature of the work. It was important that the model should somehow exemplify the idea of its constructive poetic,'' said Professor Frampton.

''Before the rise of computer renderings, model photography was a really vital part of the ecosystem of architectural representation. There is a strong craft tradition of photographing models – just as there is a strong craft tradition of making models and making buildings. This project was a rediscovery of how those traditions are intertwined,'' said James Ewing.

James Ewing photographs Columbia GSAPP’s Stagecraft exhibition as miniature drama of history

Peter Zumthor, Saint Benedict Chapel, Sumvitg, Switzerland, 1988. Image © James Ewing, courtesy Columbia GSAPP

''This exhibition allows us to revisit a set of models that have long peppered the halls of our School,'' said Columbia GSAPP Dean Amale Andraos

''They serve as an integral part of Professor Kenneth Frampton’s pedagogical project to teach both architecture and architectural history. While offering a critique of the ways in which architectural history is normally taught, the process of building models allows students to access knowledge about architecture through making it again,'' Andraos added.

James Ewing photographs Columbia GSAPP’s Stagecraft exhibition as miniature drama of history

Le Corbusier, Pavillon des Temps Nouveaux, Paris, France, 1937. Image © James Ewing, courtesy Columbia GSAPP.

The exhibition will also held a discussion Arthur Ross Architecture Gallery -the opening reception and discussion will take place on Thursday, February 9, 2017 at 6pm. Kenneth Frampton and James Ewing will be in conversation with Dean Amale Andraos and Director of Exhibitions Irene Sunwoo.

Columbia GSAPP recently released its Visual Resource Collection as Online-is a two-year project that ultimately makes 20,000 images of 20th century architectural projects available. World Architecture Community interviewed with Curator Ayesha Saveri Ghosh about this online visual source. 

> via Columbia GSAPP