Bustler's editor picks for architecture & design events: London, 18-25 October
By Abigail Banfield|
Monday, Oct 17, 2016
Related
This week, there are plenty of opportunities to look at architecture's origins, both collectively and personally. Whether you admired the experimental, striking work of Cedric Price as you first explored an architectural career, or whether this spark was born from playing The Sims, this week is a chance to reflect and question your origins.
Check back regularly to keep up to date with London's latest happenings and our weekly recommendations!
Lygia Pape Exhibition | 22 October - 19 November
What is architecture without light? Neo-Concrete artist Lygia Pape's work is well know for its take on light; showing the subject as both medium and focus. This exhibition will showcase her talent for representing concepts of expression and relationship between reason and nature through geometric forms.
RELATED EVENT Lygia Pape Exhibition
Cedric Price Works 1952-2003: A Forward-Minded Retrospective | Open now until 29 October
Cedric Price studied at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in the '50s, and has now, returned (in spirit) to where he started at the London establishment. Accompanying Samantha Hardingham's book launch, this exhibition, Cedric Price Works 1952-2003: A Forward-Minded Retrospective, features work by this experimental and inspiring architect in the form of the Memory Bank Project - an interactive living memory of Price's design process and theories.
RELATED EVENT Exhibition: Cedric Price Memory Bank
Video Games and Architecture: Cities in Virtual Worlds | 24 October
For many young architects, a key factor in beginning architectural exploration were teenage years spent exploring
virtual worlds and cities on screens in bedrooms. In this talk, speakers include the Director of the Interactive
Architecture Lab (Bartlett School of Architecture), Ruairi Glynn, Dr Diane Carr
(UCL), Nic Clear (Greenwich University), Andrew Caleya Chetty (Umbrellium) and
Bartlett School of Architecture graduate Ed Mascarenhas. The talk will cover
how space and community is expolored through virtual worlds, and how this has affected the next generation of designers.
RELATED EVENT Video Games and Architecture: Cities in Virtual Worlds
Talk: Where Architecture Begins | 24 October
Commissioned by the Royal Academy, Ordinary Architecture has created interventions throughout Burlington House to explore the origins of architecture, and the myths surrounding them. This talk will see Charles Holland and Elly Ward discuss the effects of these interventions, the 'creative possibilities of erroneous theories, misunderstood histories, personal mythologies and speculative ideas'. This facinating work is part of the Origins project, which aims to invoke discussion and open up different perspectives to architectural theories and ideas.
RELATED EVENT Talk: Where Architecture Begins
Georgia O'Keeffe at The Tate Modern | Open now until 30 October
This week marks a last chance to see Georgia O'Keeffe's work in the Tate Modern. This celebration of such a prolific and successful artist life's work shows some of her most famous works, the first of which debuted a century ago in 1916. O'Keeffe's work has always been subject of many discussions, especially surrounding gender, to the trailblazing artist herself's dismay.
RELATED EVENT Georgia O'Keeffe at The Tate Modern
Talk: Rowan Moore on the Future of London | 24 October
This free talk from Rowan Moore will build on themes covered in his book "Slow Burn City: London in the Twenty-First Century", and explore the concept of connecting the 'political and architectural decisions of London’s enfeebled and reactive government '. Moore, with a steadfast background in architecture, was Director of the Architecture Foundation (2002-2008), and has used this vast experience in becoming an established architecture critic for the Observer and notable author.
Have an event you want to submit? Send it to Bustler for review here.
Find more events in London here.
Share
0 Comments
Comment as :