Continuous Path 046

Code

CCA

Lieu

Kitakyushu, Jp

Typologie(s)

Installation,

Échelle

XS

Maîtrise d'ouvrage

Fondation

Matériaux

Bois, Textile,

Mission

Complète,

Année

2018

As archi­tects we are inter­es­ted in construc­ting frames that allows a new per­cep­tion of the exis­ting space. Visitor’s expe­rience depends on his own deam­bu­la­tion and rela­tion to time confu­sion.

‘Continuous path’ asks the pos­si­bi­lil­ty of redis­co­ve­ring the gale­ry space.

A two walls cor­ri­dor fills the gale­ry space, crea­ting a situa­tion of inter­io­ri­ty and exte­rio­ri­ty inside the space. Initial space gets blur­rier and more dia­pha­nous in terms of mate­ria­li­ty and rela­tion to time. It encou­rages visi­tors to walk eve­ry cor­ners accor­ding to his own curio­si­ty.

The fee­ling of time lin­gers on when wal­king around, like it would do in an ambu­la­to­rium. The posi­tion of the visi­tor in space and time gets ques­tio­ned when the visi­tor dis­co­vers a cor­ner room where a live image of the cor­ri­dor is pro­jec­ted.
A time-delay allows him to watch him­self deam­bu­la­ting.

‘The com­plexi­ty comes with the people’
Dan Graham

‘Architecture is not about space but about time’
Vito Acconci

Code

CCA

Lieu

Kitakyushu, Jp

Typologie(s)

Installation,

Échelle

XS

Maîtrise d'ouvrage

Fondation

Matériaux

Bois, Textile,

Mission

Complète,

Année

2018

As archi­tects we are inter­es­ted in construc­ting frames that allows a new per­cep­tion of the exis­ting space. Visitor’s expe­rience depends on his own deam­bu­la­tion and rela­tion to time confu­sion.

‘Continuous path’ asks the pos­si­bi­lil­ty of redis­co­ve­ring the gale­ry space.

A two walls cor­ri­dor fills the gale­ry space, crea­ting a situa­tion of inter­io­ri­ty and exte­rio­ri­ty inside the space. Initial space gets blur­rier and more dia­pha­nous in terms of mate­ria­li­ty and rela­tion to time. It encou­rages visi­tors to walk eve­ry cor­ners accor­ding to his own curio­si­ty.

The fee­ling of time lin­gers on when wal­king around, like it would do in an ambu­la­to­rium. The posi­tion of the visi­tor in space and time gets ques­tio­ned when the visi­tor dis­co­vers a cor­ner room where a live image of the cor­ri­dor is pro­jec­ted.
A time-delay allows him to watch him­self deam­bu­la­ting.

‘The com­plexi­ty comes with the people’
Dan Graham

‘Architecture is not about space but about time’
Vito Acconci