La Biennale di venezia: Kazuyo Sejima as Director of the 12th International Architecture Exhibition in 2010

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      

La Biennale di Venezia

The Board of Directors appointed

Kazuyo Sejima as

Director of the 12th International Architecture Exhibition in 2010

 

 

 

Venice , 9th November 2009

 

The Board of Directors of the Biennale di Venezia, chaired by Paolo Baratta, met today and appointed Kazuyo Sejima as Director of the Architecture Sector, with specific responsibility for curating the 12th International Architecture Exhibition to be held in Venice in the Giardini and Arsenale between 29th August and 21st  November 2010 (vernissage on 26th , 27th  and 28th  August). Kazuyo Sejima is the first woman to direct the Architecture Sector of the Biennale.

 

Born in Japan, in the prefecture of Ibaraki in 1956, Kazuyo Sejima is a leading exponent of contemporary architecture. In 1981, she took a degree in architecture at the Japan Women's University and began working in the studio of Toyo Ito. In 1987, she opened her own studio in Tokyo. In 1995, together with Ryue Nishizawa, she founded SANAA, the Tokyo studio that has designed some of the most innovative works of architecture built recently around the world, from the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York to the Serpentine Pavilion in London and from the Christian Dior Building in Omotesando (Tokyo) to the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa, which won the Golden Lion in 2004 for the most significant work of the 9th International Architecture Exhibition of the Biennale di Venezia. In 2000, she was also the curator for the Japanese Pavilion, called City of Girls, at the 7th International Architecture Exhibition of the Biennale di Venezia. Kazuyo Sejima has taught at Princeton University and at the Polytechnique de Lausanne. She is currently a lecturer at Keio University.

A constant focus on research characterizes all of her work, heir to the thousand-year tradition that has inspired the minimalist geometry of contemporary Japanese architecture. Toyo Ito describes her as “an architect who uses the maximum simplicity to link the material and the abstract”.

 

With regard to her ideas for the Biennale, Kazuyo Sejima has declared:

“The Biennale must be everything and anything, fundamentally inclusive, in dialogue with both contributors and visitors. Buildings, the atmosphere that they create and the way in which they are conceived, can be the central starting point of the coming Biennale. Very broadly, the process by which we design can be brought to bear on contemporary and future architectural discussion. We can select and arrange works such that they are understood as they are rather than as representations. This can be manifested with an architecture grounded in its use by people.

 

We are now well into the 21st Century. We can take this opportunity to step back and assess the zeitgeist of now through the process of the Biennale. This can clarify contemporary essentials of architecture and the importance of new relationships as we step into the future. One potent point of departure could be the boundaries and adaptation of space. This might include the removal of boundaries, as well as their clarification. Any part of architecture’s inherent multiplicity of adjacencies can become a topic. It might be argued that contemporary architecture is a rethinking and perhaps softening of those borders.

 

inside and outside

individual and public

program and form (form and function)

physical and virtual

contemporary and classical

past and future

harmony and discord

structure partition

art and architecture

nature and man

 

Perhaps the oxymoron can represent a productive new paradigm; can these binaries (intersections of public/private, global/local, artificial/natural, monumental/mundane, complex/simple, symbolic/pragmatic, fake/authentic, active/passive, thickness/thinness) lead to a duality capable of blurring these boundaries? How can the unexpected interdependency of extraordinary spaces create a communal/symbiotic dialogue between adjacencies? Equally, there is another thread of interest; people in architecture, human encounters in both public and private scenarios, both as creators and users. This is an issue of individual life in interplay with the community. It may be as simple as ‘people meet in architecture.’ In its totality the Biennale can both a new and active forum for contemporary ideas as well as a close reading of buildings themselves.”

 

 

For his part, the President of the Biennale, Paolo Baratta, has declared:

“The choice has fallen on one of the most highly-qualified and established representatives of the new masters of architecture of the new millennium. A generation that has established itself in the first decade of this century, and which has frequently developed through experiences gained in the company of the great historical masters dominating the world stage. Their presence has not, however, obscured, but rather fed a generation of new masters. This is an important phenomenon, worth recognizing as being the most significant new feature in the modern era of architecture. Their extraordinary quality reveals a sense of openness and optimism with regard to the evolution of architecture, which shows itself not to be petrified by the ‘archistars’, but on the contrary alive and full of vitality. Among these new masters, the Biennale had already noted Kazuyo Sejima, who won the Golden Lion in 2004 for the most significant work of the 9th Exhibition, named Metamorph. After a series of Architecture Exhibitions entrusted to eminent critics or historians, the decision was taken to give this Sector once more to an architect to bring the major theme of the quality of architecture back to the forefront through a person who has made quality into a personal vocation”.

 

For further information:

Press Office La Biennale di Venezia

Tel. +39 041 5218857-859


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