The January issue of Domus 1064 inaugurates the new year by identifying the character as the leitmotif of the coming months of the magazine. In his first Editorial as Guest Editor, Jean Nouvel emphasizes the fundamental role of architectural practice in defining expression. For him, the social and legitimate role of architecture, and therefore of the architect, thus lies in the expressiveness of the place, in deepening it, imagining it, and concretely inventing a life that brings out the spirit of the place. “I hope,” writes Nouvel, “that Domus may crystallise its evocative power, expressing sensations, sensibilities, anomalies and exceptions through its choice of architecture or objects, and endeavouring to convey the genuine impressions experienced when
faced with those chosen subject.”
Domus 1064 is on newsstands, an issue dedicated to the character
The January magazine identifies character as the leitmotif of the coming months. Browse the gallery to discover the contents of the magazine.
Text Jean Nouvel. Photo Bridgeman Images
Text Jean de Loisy. Photo © Pierre Huyghe. Courtesy of the artist
Text Gianluca Peluffo. Photo Lisa Ricciotti
Text Francis Marmande. Photo Carl Van Vechten
Text Angela Maderna. Photo Charlotte Kruk
Text Donatien Grau. Photo Anne Frémy
Text Alessandro Benetti. Photo Dane Alonso
Text Donatien Grau. Photo Aurélien Mole. Courtesy of the artist, Galerie Buchholz and Sprüth Magers
Text Martine Bedin. Photo Charlotte Kruk
Text Fabrice Lextrait. Photo Glasshouse Images / Alamy Foto Stock
Text Giulia RIcci. Illustration Anna Sutor
Text Valentina Petrucci. Photo © Estroick Collection / Bridgeman Images
Text Francesca Sisci. Photo Marco Cappelletti
Text Antonio Armano
Text Andrea Bajani. Illustration Anna Sutor
Curated by Massimo Valz-Gris. Photo Mirko Cecchi
The Goddess (1963) and The Wall (1968), Fondation Maeght, Saint-Paul de Vence, France. Photo Jean Nouvel
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- La redazione di Domus
- 07 January 2022
Cover of Domus 1064. The Goddess (1963) and The Wall (1968), Fondation Maeght, Saint-Paul de Vence, France. Photo Jean Nouvel
Following in the Essays is the French art critic and curator Jean de Loisy, who speaks of the importance of the unexpected in the process of artistic creation, a necessary element in contemporary monotony. The architect Gianluca Peluffo tells us about the parable of the Vitrolles Stadium designed by Agence Rudy Ricciotti in 1994, closed after only four years due to an explosive attack. The municipality has never found a way to recover and reuse the monolith, and the Stadium still remains as a fracture in the city through its massive and brutal force.
The first part of the Architecture section is dedicated to Miró’s Labyrinth at the Fondation Maeght in Saint-Paul de Vence, an open-air exhibition route that is articulated as a white line – its Ariadne’s thread – and that develops by following bare nature. “It is a path that follows the slopes and levels, being careful, above all, not to change them, which would be not so much a crime as nonsense. It gathers the waters as it marries the sky,” writes Francis Marmande. “Stunning, to think about it, this Labyrinth by Miró, yet another re-edition of one of the most fundamental, most prolific myths of humanity, a myth that is said to date back, well before the Greeks, to the Bronze Age.”
This is followed by Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s posthumous project for the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, wrapped with 25,000 square meters of silver-blue recyclable polypropylene fabric and 3,000 m of red rope. Stopping in the French capital, Donatien Grau tells us about the project to reuse the La Samaritaine department store, where Japanese studio SANAA’s transformation of the façade on rue de Rivoli is a convincing testimony to the power of diaphanousness in architecture, radicalizing this shift towards a non-monumental grandeur. Following, HW Studio’s recent design for a vacation home nestled in a conifer and oak forest near Morelia, Mexico.
The pages of the Art section are dedicated to the Palais de Tokyo where, after the critical restoration work carried out by Lacaton & Vassal, “Natures Mortes” by Anne Imhof could be the first project to tackle all the layers of history of this place with such a level of ambition and precision. For Design, architect Martine Bedin – one of the founders of the avant-garde group Memphis – describes the furniture and lighting project Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec developed for the major restoration project of the Bourse du Commerce in Paris, now home to the Pinault collection.
We close the issue with the Reaction section, where Fabrice Lextrait writes about the importance of cultivating community spirit. “Today, the imperative of architects, composers, filmmakers, authors or artists is no longer to create and build ‘for’, but to create and build ‘with’. This revolution is naturally part of the process of integration with the context, strengthening and deepening the work with users, the public and the citizenry.”
This month’s Diario, pages dedicated to current events, is opened by the section Points of View, where a dialogue between historian Irénée Scalbert and architect Philippe Rahm delves into the antithetical relationship between architecture and nature. However, a revision of this relationship has been triggered by the climate crisis, a phenomenon to which the profession is giving differing responses, sometimes limited to technical solutions. For Opinioni, Ugo La Pietra writes about places of waiting: “our life, both individual and collective, is constantly characterized by the category of waiting, a fact that is not only mental but also physical, i.e. linked to real places”. This is followed by the project for the Music School of Bressanone. Focusing on sharing space and functions, the Carlana Mezzalira Pentimalli studio designed an open music school that dialogues with the city its tradition. For Company Stories, Fabrizio Cameli tells the story and mission of his company, founded in 2004 and to become a joint-stock company in 2021, to have an increasingly widespread control of the supply chain. Finally, at the end of the issue, writer Andrea Bajani describes the house, on the second floor of a late 19th-century Genoese building that he lived in for a couple of months 20 years ago. “A hundred square feet, ceiling bookcases crammed with books,” where he wrote his most famous novel If You Consider the Faults.
This month, you will also find as an insert the story of what happened during the fourth edition of domusforum, the day dedicated to the future of cities that took place on November 24 at the Leonardo da Vinci National Museum of Science and Technology in Milan. Planetary consciousness, education, design-thinking, and co-participation in the innovative effort: these are the keys to the future that emerged from the confrontation between the different areas of knowledge gathered on the domusforum stage.
In his first Editorial, Guest Editor Jean Nouvel emphasizes the fundamental role of architectural practice in defining character. For him, the social and legitimate role of architecture, and therefore of the architect, thus lies in the expressiveness of the place, in deepening it, imagining it, and concretely inventing a life that brings out the spirit of the place.
The art critic Jean de Loisy talks about the importance of the unexpected in the process of artistic creation, necessary - in contemporary globalization - to invent forms that escape the monotony of systems and that are inscribed in the uniqueness of sites, geographies and cultures.
The project for the monolith of the Vitrolles Stadium by Agance Rudy Ricciotti after its completion in 1994 was the scene only four years later of an explosive attack. After this event the municipality has never found a way to recover and reuse, and the Stadium, now abandoned, remains as a fracture of the city, through its massive and brutal force.
At the Fondation Maeght in Saint-Paul de Vence, Miró’s Labyrinth is an open-air exhibition that is articulated like a white line - his Ariadne’s thread - and that develops by following bare nature, as it offers itself, in a realm that cannot be touched. It is a path that follows the slopes and levels, taking care above all not to change them.
The public projects of Christo (1935-2020) and Jeanne-Claude (1935-2009), starting in the early 1960s, have always been titanic undertakings, and the wrapping of the Arc de triomphe in Paris - a posthumous project, carried out just over a year after Christo’s death and about 12 after Jeanne-Claude’s - is a case in point. The Arc de Triomphe, Wrapped with 25,000 m2 of silvery blue recyclable polypropylene fabric and 3,000 m of red rope, was visible for 16 days.
In the reuse project of the Parisian department store la Samaritaine, Japanese studio SANAA’s transformation of the facade on rue de Rivoli is a compelling testament to the power of diaphanity in architecture, radicalizing this shift toward a non-monumental grandeur.
HW Studio’s recent design for a vacation home nestled in a conifer and oak forest near Morelia, Mexico. “The hill in front of the gorge” is the poetic appellation for a land architecture that its authors describe as a barely lifted, softly curving sheet.
At the Palais de Tokyo, after the major renovation carried out by Lacaton & Vassal, Anne Imhof’s “Natures Mortes” may be the first project to address all the layers of history of this place with such a level of ambition and precision. Thanks to the ruins, she returned to the neoclassical element that was at the heart of the architectural project: the interior as agora.
In the important restoration project of the Bourse du Commerce in Paris - now home to the Pinault collection - Tadao Ando collaborated on the furniture and lighting with Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, whose challenge was not only to measure themselves against architecture, but also against art.
In closing, Fabrice Lextrait narrates the importance of cultivating community spirit. “Today, the imperative of architects, composers, filmmakers, authors or artists is no longer to create and build ‘for’, but to create and build ‘with’.”
Architecture and nature are often linked by an antithetical relationship. A revision of this relationship, however, has been triggered by the climate crisis, a phenomenon to which the profession is giving differing responses, sometimes limited to technical solutions. The comparison between Rahm and Scalbert explores the theme from different positions.
“The boundaries between design, interior design, interior architecture, exterior architecture and landscape architecture are all very blurry,” the magazine’s 2018 Guest Editor Architect tells us. “In fact, I’d rather not consider them boundaries, just as I wouldn’t consider the one between art and architecture a boundary.”
Focusing on the sharing of space and functions, the Carlana Mezzalira Pentimalli studio has designed an open music school that dialogues with the city and tradition.
Fabrizio Cameli tells the story and the mission of his company, founded in 2004 and becoming a joint-stock company in 2021, aiming to have a more and more capillary control of the supply chain.
Andrea Bajani tells about the house, on the second floor of a late nineteenth-century Genoese building, that he lived in for a couple of months 20 years ago. “One hundred square meters, ceiling bookcases crammed with books,” where he wrote his most famous novel, Se consideri le colpe.
Planetary consciousness, education, design-thinking and sharing of the innovative effort. These are the keys to the future that emerged from the confrontation between the different areas of knowledge gathered on the domusforum stage.