Showing posts with label modern. Show all posts
Showing posts with label modern. Show all posts

Saturday, February 25, 2012

HERZOG & DE MEURON: TATE MODERN, LONDON


Photo courtesy of kayodeok
ESPAÑOL

The project of Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron for the Tate Modern in London, on the bank of the Thames, reminds me in many respects to the Jewish Museum in San Francisco, by Daniel Libeskind. Both are contemporary adaptations carried out on old disused power stations, although in this case, the laureated Swiss architects opted for a more rational composition than the one proposed by the famous Polish designer. This waterfront renovation project has had a similar effect to the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, revitalizing physical, environmental and culturally an area that was deteriorated not long ago.

Photo courtesy of R. Nagy

OVERVIEW

Bankside Power Station is located in a prime location on the River Thames, enjoying a magnificent sight to the famous St. Paul Cathedral (both structures are symmetrical, presided by a vertical element in the middle:  a fireplace in the case of the station, and a huge dome in the Cathedral).
Originally designed in 1947 by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott (who also designed the famous English red telephone box) and completed in two stages only in 1963, it is a steel structure covered with brick. The basically massive form of the building is interrupted by groups of fine, thin vertical windows that allow controlled lighting inside.


The building houses a turbine room of 152 m long and 35 m in height, and a room for smaller caldrons.
At the center, a long chimney of 99 m in height, which was intentionally made slightly smaller than the dome of St Paul's Cathedral, contrasts with the horizontality of the building.

Photo courtesy of Jon May
The station ceased to operate as such in 1981, and it was often threatened to disappear due to property speculation. In fact, in 1993 it began to be demolished, but this act was finally prevented by the intervention of the BBC.


TATE GALLERIES

The history of the Tate galleries dates back to the nineteenth century, when the National Gallery of British Art was created in 1847. In 1887 Sir Henry Tate was one of its major benefactors and the gallery mostly focused on Victorian art. Art collections grew until 1954 when the Tate was separated from the National Gallery and specialized in Modern Art. The gallery began to expand and was renamed as Tate Britain, then opened  branches such as the Tate Liverpool (1988) and the Tate St. Ives (1993). In 1996 Tate announced the purchase of the Bankside Station and organized a competition for what would become one of their most important venues: the Tate Modern.


The contest, won by the architects Herzog and De Mouron, was conceived as a plan to revitalize not only the station but also the surrounding area.

Lighting a garden before the Tate Modern
The creation of a pedestrian bridge over the Thames, called the Millennium Bridge, connects the new museum with the city center, particularly the Cathedral of St. Paul, the most important building in London.

Photo courtesy of Dave Gorman
Photos courtesy of Mergerita Spilutini
In this stunning view from Google Earth you can see the shadow of the long chimney of the Tate Modern over the Thames, and the connection with St. Paul's Cathedral across the Millennium Bridge, designed by Norman Foster.
See location on Google Maps

The proposal  Herzog and De Meuron was the only one who contemplated the preservation of the station building for the most part, considering it as a source of power and energy, which could be applied in turn to design.


For remodeling the building the huge turbine hall was recycled as an internal square with a gentle slope,  which is accessed by stairs descending from the street level.

The photo at the left shows the room from the plaza level, appreciating the slope of the ramp. The right view is from the entry level, about to descend the steps.


The room receives the dramatic effect of light from the both the vertical windows and overhead lighting. This  large space is devoted to exhibitions of large sculptures or installations. Next to the square, two levels of shops have been located.

Photos courtesy of Gabo and Cejayclarck

Adjacent to the turbine hall, the boiler room has been renovated to house art galleries, arranged in three levels and organized thematically into four groups: History/Memory/Society, Nude/Action/Body, Landscape /Matter-Environment and  Still Life/Object/Real Life.



The relationship of the galleries with the large square is spatially and visually remarkable, successfully combining monumentality and intimacy, and is highlighted by bright boxes attached to the facade of the gallery that serve as a balcony to the turbine hall. The glassy surface of these greenish balconies contrasts with the severe black metal of the structures that support the nave.


Some elements of the old station as the fuel tanks have been recycled to house art objects.
At the top, the building is crowned with a sober two-stories glass addition which houses areas for members of the Tate as well as a restaurant with stunning views of the waterfront. At night this area acts as a lamp, in contrast to the massive volume of the brick station.



At the end of the chimney, the artist Michael Craig-Martin also placed a luminous element. This artist was responsible for the spectacular opening of the Tate Modern in 2000, using laser beams projected onto the structure.

EXPANSION PROJECT

After the enormous success of Tate Modern, with nearly 2 million visitors a year (becoming the most visited museum of modern art in England) a series of expansion projects have been planned . The most important to be built over the old oil tanks, has also been designed by Herzog and de Meuron.

The first proposal of the architects for the expansion, marked a stark contrast to the existing building. It was  glass pyramid shaped as a ziggurat, with protruding elements in the form of boxes, in several directions.


This proposal aroused much criticism in the community, so the extension was redesigned as a block pyramid whose brick facade have a dialogue with the Bankside Station. It is a fairly dynamic, although it is basically a massive volume with thin horizontal grooves. This new approach not only fits better to the surroundings and needs of the Tate Modern, but it used a number of resources that will make it environmentally efficient, conserving energy as much as 40%.


It is expected to be ready for the Olympics in 2012.

SEE ALSO


- MUSEUMS OF ART.
Night view of the Cathedral of St. Paul taken from the cafe at the top of Tate Modern

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

LE CORBUSIER: MUSEUM OF WESTERN ART, TOKYO

Photo courtesy of Purple Cloud .


The National Museum of Western Art, NMWA, in Tokyo, is the only work by Le Corbusier in the Far East. It is also the best example of his theory of "unlimited growth museums." Due to its conceptual innovation, quality of space and valuable collection, the museum has been included as one of the 100 most important public buildings in Japan. It is also in the tentative list of World Heritage by UNESCO, at a request made by the French government.

THE MUSEUM OF UNLIMITED GROWTH

In 1929 Le Corbusier designed a model of Unlimited Growth Museum (Musée à croissance illimitée) for the Mundaneum in Geneva. It was a square spiral that would eventually develop and grow according to the needs of the project. Since this project was widely discussed and often criticized as utopian, it was never realized in the West.


There are only three versions of this type of Corbusian museum in the world : Sanskar Kendra in Ahmedabbad (1957), the Governmental Museum and Art Gallery in Chadigarh (1965) in India and the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo, Japan (1959). Of these, the latter is the one closest to the original concept as the ones made in India had to adapt to the climatic conditions of the site.

Government Art Gallery in Chadigarh

BACKGROUND

Kojiro Matsukata (1865-1950) was a Japanese industrialist who amassed a remarkable collection of Western art between 1916 and 1923, particularly paintings and sculptures of the French impressionist Auguste Rodin (in fact outside the museum one of several replicas of " The Thinker " is displayed, a replica of which I have also seen at the Kyoto National Museum).


After the Second World War the collection was transferred to the French government. In 1956 Japan requested to France the return of these works, so the French government agreed on the condition that it was a French architect who developed the project of the building to house such works.

The museum for the Matsukata collection was commissioned to the French Swiss architect Charles-Edouard Jeanneret-Gris (known as Le Corbusier), and the project was completed by three Japanese apprentices of his studio in Paris: Kunio Maekawa, Junzo Sakakura, and Takamasa Yoshizaka.

Later, in addition to the Matsukata collection, the museum (the only national institution dedicated to Japanese Western art) acquired other works, from the fifteenth to the twentieth centuries.

Miro's painting displayed at the museum.

LOCATION

The National Museum of Western Art is located on the east side of Ueno Imperial Park, perhaps the most important public space in Tokyo, and the Tokyo equivalent of the Central Park in New York. Nearby, is the National Children's Literature Library , renovated by Tadao Ando.


It called my attention the modest proportions of the museum, compared to the much more imposing scale of its neighbor, the Tokyo Bunka Kaikan (Culture Hall of Tokyo). Both museums are linked by a square.


THE PROJECT

The building has 3 levels and a basement.

Photo courtesy of Emmanuelle Mastrangioli

Following the concept of unlimited museum, the proposed square stands on pilotis. The facade, almost blind with no windows, emphasizes the horizontality of the composition, covered by greenish pebbles on top of exposed concrete.


At one end of the main facade lies a large screen that leads to a balcony. Similar detail is observed on the lateral side as well.


The organization of the building is based into two parts: the main building based on a square layout and the new administration wing that is located to the north. Both buildings are organized around their own courtyards; in the case of the main building is a covered space, while the new wing encloses a garden.

Photo courtesy of Emmanuelle Mastrangioli

The first level, is organized on a 6.35 x 6.35 m. grid of columns supporting the galleries.

Photo courtesy of Emmanuelle Mastrangioli

Here we are welcomed by an impressive double-height space (the Hall of the nineteenth century), illuminated by a skylight.


Le Corbusier, a master of light, achieved a dramatic effect when composing this overhead window, defined by cross beams at the center of the triangular skylights and supported by a central column.


From here we ascended through a ramp, one of the architect's favorite resources, as used in Curutchet House or the Secretary of Chandigarh . The ascent allows a three-dimensional perception of the double-height space.

The upper level galleries are built around a concentric pattern from this central space.


Originally the building was illuminated from the top, a resource that somehow reminds me of that used in the Renzo Piano expansion of the High Museum in Atlanta . Today, these openings have been closed, and the works of art are artificially illuminated.


Le Corbusier achieved spatial richness, despite the apparent simplicity of the concept. The structural elements (columns of circular cross section) are released from the enclosure walls, while the use of double-height spaces and low walls offer a varied repertoire of scale and proportion in the space, which, however, is arranged under a consistent and orderly logic. This type of columns, typical of the work by Le Corbusier, has been applied by several architects who admire him, particularly by Richard Meier .


Of course, all the proportions of the building have been developed based on the modulor system created by Le Corbusier.

EXTENSIONS

In 1979 a new wing was added to the museum, developed by Maekawa, creating a second court, this time around an open garden. In 1997 he added a new hall for special exhibitions, while the entire building was reinforced with new seismic techniques. The curious thing is that none of these additions followed the pattern of "unlimited growth museum" proposed by Le Corbusier, which suggested to increase the exhibition area by adding more turns to the spiral. Instead it was chosen (and wisely I think) to leave the original building intact and to attach a group of separated buildings that complement it.


SEE ALSO:

- Other works of Le Corbusier.


In front of "the Gates of Hell", a work by Auguste Rodin, located at the plaza outside the museum.