Highlights from 'Global Citizen'
John Hill
11. enero 2016
All photographs by John Hill/World-Architects
On Sunday, the exhibition Global Citizen: The Architecture of Moshe Safdie, closed at the National Academy Museum in New York. World-Architects eMagazine Editor in Chief John Hill visited the exhibition on the 2015 AIA Gold Medal winner and filed this report.
Although Safdie certainly earned the right to a monographic exhibition with the AIA Gold Medal last year, Global Citizen actually began its run five years beforehand, at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, Ontario, a building designed by the architect. Curated by Donald Albrecht, and featuring an exhibition design by Nader Tehrani of NADAAA, Global Citizen subsequently traveled to two other Safdie buildings – the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles and the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Arkansas – before its arrival in Manhattan. Don't fret if you missed it: the final leg of the traveling exhibition opens next month at the BSA Space in Boston.
The aptly named exhibition traces the prolific career of the architect born in Israel, educated in Canada, and now based in Boston. The organization of the exhibition follows this geographical path: starting with his famous Habitat 67 in Montreal and subsequent attempts to realize modular multi-family housing, followed by some impressive work in Israel, and then returning to North America to realize primarily institutional buildings in Canada and the United States. The exhibition culminates in the large-scale, international work his firm is undertaking in parts of Asia; these residential, hospitality and transportation projects can be seen as coming full circle back to the ambition and scale of his project realized for Expo 67, but in a much different global context.
The most impressive aspect of Global Citizen – something that should come across in my photos of the exhibition – are the large models that are used to explain the projects. Accompanied by drawings and photographs (the latter sometimes large and immersive next to the models), the models convey the formal complexity of Safdie's buildings, but also their spatial qualities, indicating how he considers the buildings' habitation as much as their appearance.
Below are highlights from my visit to see Global Citizen at the National Academy Museum; click any of the photographs to launch a slideshow (recommended).