Junya Ishigami interview: Serpentine Pavilion 2019 | Architecture | Dezeen

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • In this exclusive Dezeen video, Japanese architect Junya Ishigami explains how his design for this year's Serpentine Pavilion was built to resemble a "stone hill".
    Ishigami's pavilion was unveiled yesterday at the Serpentine Gallery in London, following the resignation of the gallery's CEO Yana Peel over her connection to an Israeli cybertech firm.
    The pavilion is a 350 square-metre "cave-like refuge" covered by a slate-clad canopy that appears to grow out of the ground of the surrounding park.
    The design is influenced by Ishigami's "free-space" philosophy which seeks to create structures that mimic natural forms, a common theme in the work of his architecture studio Junya Ishigami + Associates.
    "I knew that the Serpentine site is in the middle of a park so I wanted to make the architecture part of the landscape rather than making it an independent building," Ishigami told Dezeen.
    Read more on Dezeen: www.dezeen.com...
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Комментарии • 20

  • @ricardobarrios9858
    @ricardobarrios9858 5 лет назад +5

    Worst pavillion ever. Ugly as hell

  • @the-ornamentalist
    @the-ornamentalist 5 лет назад +22

    All clear Mr Ishigami, but are you paying your interns?

    • @SoSo-wb6gt
      @SoSo-wb6gt 5 лет назад

      isn't he?

    • @AtelierFleur
      @AtelierFleur 5 лет назад +3

      Almost all japanese architects don’t pay interns and “open desk” (local students who work in office as part-time) it’s their culture and even though I found it not very good but it does provide an amazing opportunity for overseas architecture students to learn exclusive japanese craftsmanship

    • @the-ornamentalist
      @the-ornamentalist 5 лет назад +5

      @@AtelierFleur www.dezeen.com/2019/03/25/architects-unpaid-internship-serpentine-pavilion/

    • @siddhiacharya83
      @siddhiacharya83 5 лет назад

      Nope

  • @labudovojezero
    @labudovojezero 5 лет назад +3

    it reminds me a lot of 2009 SANAA pavilion, but i guess it makes sense, since he worked for them, but still..

  • @arturocarrasco4520
    @arturocarrasco4520 2 года назад

    A free interpretation of the landscape, without taking into account codes and processes that establish a link with the human being ???? ...the proposal is closer to proposals such as land art than to architecture .....And it gives us a reflection about the limits of the discipline (architecture) ........in any case I seems valid as a conceptual proposal that demonstrates in particular the oriental sensitivity towards the landscape....

  • @rr7firefly
    @rr7firefly 2 года назад

    One of the most satisfying things in architecture is how different materials come together. Buildings have details that show the artistry in articulating these joints. Laying one thing on top of another somehow leaves all of that behind. And leaves some of us unsatisfied with the result. The architect refers to this concern as embracing artificiality. Well, from that standpoint most architecture is "artificial."

  • @andresleal7262
    @andresleal7262 2 года назад

    How did the water not filter through the space between the slates?

  • @MammothBehemoth
    @MammothBehemoth 5 лет назад +1

    exquisite subtlety

  • @dominicholness4589
    @dominicholness4589 5 лет назад

    I need to go and see this..

  • @mahmoudramdane2848
    @mahmoudramdane2848 5 лет назад

    kilkhra

  • @KingHumphrey
    @KingHumphrey 5 лет назад +2

    An accident waiting to happen. Someone will absent-mindedly walk into the slate and there will be a few people who can't resist the temptation/bet to run on top of it. I wouldn't like to be the architect's insurer or one of the people who approved this death trap.

    • @ДанилаЛимонов-ж3е
      @ДанилаЛимонов-ж3е 5 лет назад +1

      Its not a heavy construction, it wouldn't be able to Hurt anybody

    • @audriputranto2078
      @audriputranto2078 4 года назад

      @@ДанилаЛимонов-ж3е i blv the stone itself is super heavy, with that light structure, rain climates and earthquake moment in japan, who knws one day itll collapse, just quick observation mate.

    • @kayem3824
      @kayem3824 4 года назад +1

      @@audriputranto2078 It's a temporary structure.

    • @kayem3824
      @kayem3824 4 года назад

      John Senior. It's quite difficult to move slate.