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fugitive Structure 2015: Sway/Sack and Reicher + Muller with Eyal Zur
Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation's Fugitive Structures series has gathered considerable momentum since the Serpernntine Gallery-indpired idea was first conceived in 2011. The following year saw significant discussions with the award-winning large-scale architectural firm BVN. The firm's National Director, James Grose, and Principals Philip Rossington and Bill Dowzer have continued to play extraordinarily active roles in the unfurling of the concept and the management of the brief. Michael Moran, SCAF's Exhibition Manager, has risen admirably to the task of presenting projects that straddle the architect/artist divide- as has SCAF's general manager Danielle Devery.
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Sway now enters the field - the first Fugitive Structures pavilion to be commissioned from architects working in the wider Asian region. Israel, Iran, Turkey - and other countries in what was historically described as Asia Minor - have, from the very outset, been part of the Sherman Asia-focused vision. Sherman Galleries showed work by Kutlug Ataman and Sigalit Landau, to name just two arstist from this broader region, and the Gene & Brian Sherman Contemporarty Asian Art Collection includes work by the Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami, among others.
Now SCAF has turned to Sack and Reicher + Muller with Eyal Zur, a recently formed three-partner-plus-designer architectural collective based in the Israeli/Arab suburb of Florentine in south Tel Aviv. Inspiration for the previous Fugitive Structures pavilions was drawn from various conscious or subconscious sources: from Japanese tea houses to animal kingdom and extra-terrestrial iconography.
15-4604 | 730 1 Rei F | Praktek Seni Interdisipliner (Katalog Seni Instalasi) | Tersedia |
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