Asaase
Photo: John Hill/World-Architects
David Adjaye's Asaase, billed as the architect's first "large scale autonomous sculpture," is on display at Gagosian Gallery in New York as part of Social Works, a group exhibition curated by Antwaun Sargent that "considers the relationship between space — personal, public, institutional, and psychic — and Black social practice."
Asaase is a maze-like sculpture of walls made from rammed earth, the stacked blocks increasing in height toward a "conical vertex" in the center. Adjaye notes a couple West African references for the installation on his website: the Tiébélé royal complex in Burkina Faso, which is confined by earthen walls painted with patterns, and the walled city of Agadez in Niger, with its famous 27-meter-high mud-brick minaret. With these references, Asaase captures the architect's "ongoing reflections on the origins of black architecture and its relationship to the earth."
Below is a quick tour of Asaase, which is on display at Gagosian Gallery (555 West 24th Street) as part of Social Works from June 24 to August 13, 2021.