
He proposes two different angles of approach to the space: cut_paste a construction of floor plans and PdT a three-dimensional composition, digging into the mass to remove matter. The two faces of a certain idea of architecture in an open space set up to his precise instructions. cut_paste is a reflection on the act of covering edifices.
It refuses to pander to standardised logic; the designer integrates the illusion of a random gesture to a piece that links back to a constructivist vision. This series of structures uses combined floor plans that are cut at right angles, freeing up constructed spaces that go beyond their strict utilitarian function. In the gallery space, the horizontal and vertical presences inhabit the space with their minimal beauty, paradoxically decorated with graphic motifs on the marble and onyx.

The materials chosen for cut_paste are architectural. Robert Stadler builds using composite panels for facades, sheets of marble stuck on panels of aluminium honeycomb. He cuts, sticks, juxtaposes and shifts the elements to give the shapes the necessary stiffness, and provokes mixtures of varied and contradictory motifs. It is reminiscent of the spirit of shapes collected on building sites, sawn-off discarded waste that he recycles. A fictional dream of the disappearance of modern architecture.
Through this operation, he traps the eye, making it impossible to take in the entire shape at once. In doing so, he invites the spectator to approach the piece dynamically as it reinvents itself according to each point of view. He formulates a new proposal on the gallery’s blank page using graphic signs.

Robert Stadler invents another story with PdT, taking the archaeological approach as he proceeds to (re)discover architectural elements such as columns, arches and edifices on which time has taken its toll. The volume and the mass of the cut stone, architecture’s most noble material, is exposed to the vagaries of time, but at an accelerated pace. The material transforms into polished shapes, the eloquent traces of the past.
The only things to survive are the joints that bear witness to the builder’s actions. The lines characterise the object, where it comes from, telling its story. This emphasis on the sedimentary meshing brings us back to the contemporary practice of computer-generated design and establishes a dialogue between an archaic room and a digital programme. Unlike cut_paste, PdT stops air, letting nothing filter through and imposes its presence. The three shapes created by the designer are defined in contemporary terms as a bench, a mirror and a coffeen table.
The bench, blocks of stone left over from an imaginary building site is worn down on one end, the column/mirror evokes the remains of a door, the coffee table a free shape, the elements are all melancholic traces of an architectural past. These shreds, these remains of porous stone are worked over by a digital machine, the mass is emptied and the ensemble is finshed off by hand.
PdT comes from Robert Stadler’s public commissioned ensemble Traits d’union (2014) in Nancy where he worked on a building by creating extensions, it is a sculpture and a piece of urban furniture celebrating stone and the joints that make up the project’s “graphic cage”. The constant metamorphosis of the object upends the user’s perception. Robert Stadler’s work is rare and escapes all definition.

January 17 – April 4, 2015
Robert Stadler
Airspace
Carpenters Workshop Gallery
Rue de La Verriere 54, paris

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