The November issue of Domus features a cover designed by Mexican architect Frida Escobedo that speaks to the process of stratification, negation and revelation that continuously occurs in architecture. In a wider survey of Latin America, Domus visits Escobedo's recently inaugurated La Tallera Siqueiros Museum, a masterful sociopolitical and architectural juggle; a building that masks itself as modern to become contemporary. Simultaneously, issue 963 visits Yasuní National Park — a conflicted landscape currently serving as the laboratory for
the development of a new counterintuitive economic model of infrastructural subtraction —, Taller de Arquitectura and Mauricio Rocha's conversion of a monastery into a cultural centre in Oaxaca, and Flávio de Carvalho's personal estate in Valinhos reconstructing the artist's highly aestheticised world.
Domus 963 explores new processes and methods of collaboration in design: from the strength in numbers found in design collectives CKR, KiBiSi and UVA, three design studios built around teamwork and networks, to the work of young graduates Gaspard Tiné-Berès and Jesse Howard, who question the process of industrial production. The Supernormal series embraces "personal informatics" devices such as the Nike FuelBand and the Fitbit, and using Tommaso Bonaventura and Alessandro Imbriaco's photos as a starting point, examines the many, mostly invisible wounds inflicted on the Italian landscape by the Mafia.
Table of contents:
Cover 963
Designed by Mexican
architect Frida Escobedo,
this issue's cover makes
reference to the relationship
between facia and facade,
and to the process of ruination,
stratification, negation and
revelation that continuously
occurs in architecture
Editorial: Prospective/Retrospective
Frida Escobedo
Op–Ed:
Our very own Pussy Riot
Journal
Edited by Elena Sommariva
Photoessay
Corpi di Reato ("Corpora Delicti"). Tommaso Bonaventura, Alessandro Imbriaco
An empathetic twist
Matthew Allen argues that through a series of
astute formal moves, and by evoking empathy, Chinese architecture practice MAD has
achieved a rare breakthrough in the edge city of Mississauga. Design
MAD Architects. Text
Matthew Allen. Photos
Tom Arban,
Morris Lum
Modernist masks
Wrapped in its enigmatic texture, the home/studio at Cuernavaca, where the Mexican muralist Alfaro Siqueiros lived during the last ten years of his life, is now the core of a new museum and cultural production centre. Design
Frida Escobedo. Text
José Esparza. Photos Rafael Gamo
A city in becoming
In the Mexican city of Oaxaca, a monastery re-emerges from 6,000 tons of rubble to begin a new life as a foundation and cultural centre for the city. Design
Taller de Arquitectura, Mauricio Rocha. Text Jose Castillo. Photos Luis Gordoa
The memory of landscapes
Marco Belpoliti examines
the wounds—many of them invisible—inflicted on the Italian
landscape by the Mafia. Text
Marco Belpoliti. Photos
Tommaso Bonaventura,
Alessandro Imbriaco. Edited by Rita Capezzuto
Flávio de Carvalho. The total aesthete
Italian
artist Paola Anziché travels to Valinhos, Brazil, to
reconstruct the brave, and highly aestheticised, world
of Brazilian artist Flávio de Carvalho. Text Paola Anziché. Photos Nelson Kon. Edited by Laura Bossi
Network: Z33 extension
A subtle and tactile use
of brick in the winning
proposal for the Z33
extension, designed
by Francesca Torzo, Aldo
Bakker and Piet Oudolf
The geopolitics
of subtraction
Yasuní National Park is arguably the most biologically diverse spot on Earth. It also
happens to be home to unexploited reserves of 846 million barrels of oil. Text Keller Easterling. Photos Santiago del Hierro, Gabriel Moyer-Perez. Edited by Loredana Mascheroni
Process is toast
Starting from complementary design strategies, two young graduates question the process of
industrial production to create a new family of tools and electrical appliances. Design Jesse Howard,
Gaspard Tiné-Berès. Text Tamar Shafrir. Edited by Loredana Mascheroni
Design your life
Brendan McGetrick pays Wurman a visit in his Rhode Island abode, and distills from their
conversation the seven secrets of a "Highly Effective Person". Text Brendan McGetrick. Photos
Yoo Jean Han. Edited by Laura Bossi
Strength in numbers
Maria Cristina Didero profiles three
design studios built around teamwork and networks. Text Maria Cristina Didero. Photos
Richard Nicholson,
Johan Ödmann. Edited by Loredana Mascheroni
Network: Axor Starck Organic
Low water consumption and
a sculptural, organic and
minimalist design characterise
the new collection of
taps by Starck for Axor
Fitness by design
Can data heal? Yes, argues Dan Hon, whose type 2 diabetes spurred him to embrace
"personal informatics" devices such as the Nike FuelBand and the Fitbit. Text Dan Hon. Edited by Rita Capezzuto
Rassegna
Finishes. Edited by Loredana Mascheroni
Panorama
Edited by Guido Musante
Cold Case
23 De Enero. Occupied space. Edited by Luigi Spinelli
domus 963 on newsstands now
The November issue of Domus presents a survey of Latin American architecture, explores new processes and methods of collaboration in design, embraces personal informatics, and examines wounds inflicted in the Italian landscape.
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- 07 November 2012
- Milan