• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join

PARIS REDUX - A New Museum for Constantin Brancusi

Registration Deadline:  Friday, Dec 21, 20077:50 AMEDT

Submission Deadline:  Monday, Mar 17, 20086:50 AMEDT

The Brancusi Museum in Paris is not, and perhaps it shouldn’t be one of the most relevant buildings in the great city. Yet, the way it is conceived and built it shows a lack of spirit that we think is not quite congruous with The City of Lights.

Paris, and French culture in general, always ‘flirted’ with the straight line and the ninety degrees angle. After all, Descartes was French. And its ‘urban trees’ have cubistic coiffures, impossible to imagine anywhere else.

Yet, when one thinks of The Brancusi Museum designed by Renzo Piano and built in front of Centre George Pompidou, one cannot but be alarmed, since through this very banal construction Piano, and his clients, reduced the straight line and the above mentioned angle to sheer prose. There are many people who think, looking from the outside, that this building is not in fact a museum, but a public toilet. And certainly not a museum for Brancusi!

The decision the French took to destroy the ‘shack-like studio’ (as one monograph on Piano calls it) Brancusi left as a gift to Paris as the most genuine place to display his art (since he lived and worked there), was certainly a sad one. But this tristesse is at least doubly amplified by the building that in quite an uninspired and uninspiring mode Piano designed and built. After all, would we imagine Milarepa (the Tibetan mystic and poet), whose modern incarnation Brancusi claimed being, living and working in the quite rational, secular structure that this museum is?

If we are to talk about architectural ecology, about corrective architecture, perhaps re-thinking and re-envisioning the way in which the subtle, ‘organic’ work of Brancusi could and should be displayed, might not be futile. Let’s imagine we could re-design this building in such a way that we will do justice not only to Brancusi, but also to Paris, where, in the past, the straight line and the right angle found more inspired manifestations.

In other words, we invite you to not necessarily renounce the poetical capabilities that geometric simplicity could offer, but to re-envision a museum that is not a mere repository of the works of a complex sculptor, well known for his élan vital towards loftier spheres of being. We invite you to envision a building that speaks (nay, sings!) about the heart and the mind, and less about the physiological functions of some lower parts of the human body. Again, we do not ask you to design a flamboyant building, but a building that would correspond to the spirit of Brancusi’s work, in large measure neglected, or not quite well understood, by Renzo Piano.

Anyone who is unhappy with the current situation is invited to participate, Piano included, if self-criticism would make him want to try again.

For registration and to receive all the necessary drawings and photographs plus any other additional information please contact: [email protected]. The deadline is March 16th, 2008 (Brancusi died on March 16th, 1957).

There is an entry fee of 30E (40$) for architects and 15E (20$) for students. Anyone who cannot pay is equally welcome, maybe even more so, if their desire to participate is intense and sincere. Equally welcome are those who can and are willing to pay more, since the goal here is to produce a beautiful book to be sent to all the participants and also to the mayor of Paris, other officials, libraries, universities, etc. The entry fee is payable only when submitting your work, but the registration deadline is January 1st, 2008. An exhibition with all the works received will follow, together with the promised publication.

Competition Email: {encode="[email protected]" title="[email protected]"}

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

PARIS REDUX - A New Museum for Constantin Brancusi

Register: Fri, Dec 21, 2007

Submit: Mon, Mar 17, 2008

Open Call: 13 White Houses

Register/Submit: Sun, Aug 2, 2026

New York High Falls Riverfront Market

Register: Wed, Jul 29, 2026

Submit: Mon, Jan 18, 2027

Open Access: Exploring 130 Years of American Design

Register/Submit: Sun, Jun 28, 2026

Open Call: Architectural Essay Writing, 7th Cycle: 'Thresholds of Movement'

Register/Submit: Mon, Aug 31, 2026

Envision Resilience National Design Studio Grant

Register/Submit: Fri, Jun 19, 2026

BIGFIELDS STUDENTS PRIZE 2026

Register/Submit: Mon, Aug 31, 2026

CCC Emerging Design Awards 2026

Register/Submit: Tue, Jun 30, 2026

Valli Wine Tasting Room

Register: Thu, Jul 30, 2026

Submit: Mon, Feb 15, 2027

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

International Architectural Competition for the Christo and Jeanne-Claude Center in Gabrovo, Bulgaria

Register: Fri, Jul 17, 2026

Submit: Mon, Jul 20, 2026

2026 NY Architectural & Interior Design Awards: Season 2

Register/Submit: Wed, Sep 16, 2026

2026 NY Product Design Awards: Season 2

Register/Submit: Wed, Sep 16, 2026

2026 TITAN Innovation Awards: Season 2

Register/Submit: Wed, Sep 16, 2026

2026 TITAN Property Awards: Season 2

Register/Submit: Wed, Sep 16, 2026

2026 iLuxury Awards: Season 2

Register/Submit: Fri, Sep 18, 2026

Designing with Lower-Impact Materials? Submit Your Project to revalu

Register/Submit: Mon, Jun 15, 2026

Next page » Loading

PARIS REDUX - A New Museum for Constantin Brancusi

Registration Deadline:  Friday, Dec 21, 20077:50 AMEDT

Submission Deadline:  Monday, Mar 17, 20086:50 AMEDT

Share

The Brancusi Museum in Paris is not, and perhaps it shouldn’t be one of the most relevant buildings in the great city. Yet, the way it is conceived and built it shows a lack of spirit that we think is not quite congruous with The City of Lights.

Paris, and French culture in general, always ‘flirted’ with the straight line and the ninety degrees angle. After all, Descartes was French. And its ‘urban trees’ have cubistic coiffures, impossible to imagine anywhere else.

Yet, when one thinks of The Brancusi Museum designed by Renzo Piano and built in front of Centre George Pompidou, one cannot but be alarmed, since through this very banal construction Piano, and his clients, reduced the straight line and the above mentioned angle to sheer prose. There are many people who think, looking from the outside, that this building is not in fact a museum, but a public toilet. And certainly not a museum for Brancusi!

The decision the French took to destroy the ‘shack-like studio’ (as one monograph on Piano calls it) Brancusi left as a gift to Paris as the most genuine place to display his art (since he lived and worked there), was certainly a sad one. But this tristesse is at least doubly amplified by the building that in quite an uninspired and uninspiring mode Piano designed and built. After all, would we imagine Milarepa (the Tibetan mystic and poet), whose modern incarnation Brancusi claimed being, living and working in the quite rational, secular structure that this museum is?

If we are to talk about architectural ecology, about corrective architecture, perhaps re-thinking and re-envisioning the way in which the subtle, ‘organic’ work of Brancusi could and should be displayed, might not be futile. Let’s imagine we could re-design this building in such a way that we will do justice not only to Brancusi, but also to Paris, where, in the past, the straight line and the right angle found more inspired manifestations.

In other words, we invite you to not necessarily renounce the poetical capabilities that geometric simplicity could offer, but to re-envision a museum that is not a mere repository of the works of a complex sculptor, well known for his élan vital towards loftier spheres of being. We invite you to envision a building that speaks (nay, sings!) about the heart and the mind, and less about the physiological functions of some lower parts of the human body. Again, we do not ask you to design a flamboyant building, but a building that would correspond to the spirit of Brancusi’s work, in large measure neglected, or not quite well understood, by Renzo Piano.

Anyone who is unhappy with the current situation is invited to participate, Piano included, if self-criticism would make him want to try again.

For registration and to receive all the necessary drawings and photographs plus any other additional information please contact: [email protected]. The deadline is March 16th, 2008 (Brancusi died on March 16th, 1957).

There is an entry fee of 30E (40$) for architects and 15E (20$) for students. Anyone who cannot pay is equally welcome, maybe even more so, if their desire to participate is intense and sincere. Equally welcome are those who can and are willing to pay more, since the goal here is to produce a beautiful book to be sent to all the participants and also to the mayor of Paris, other officials, libraries, universities, etc. The entry fee is payable only when submitting your work, but the registration deadline is January 1st, 2008. An exhibition with all the works received will follow, together with the promised publication.

Competition Email: {encode="[email protected]" title="[email protected]"}

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Promoted Competitions

Kingspan MICROHOME 2026

Register by Wed, Sep 30, 2026

Submit by Mon, Nov 2, 2026

New York High Falls Riverfront Market

Register by Wed, Jul 29, 2026

Submit by Mon, Jan 18, 2027

2026 Fall 2x8 Exhibition and Scholarship Program

Register by Mon, Sep 14, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 19, 2026

Pavilion Atlas 2026

Register by Wed, Sep 16, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 19, 2026

100,000 € Prize / Buildner's Unbuilt Award 2026

Register by Thu, Jul 9, 2026

Submit by Tue, Oct 20, 2026

Re:Form - New Life for Old Spaces / Edition #3

Register by Thu, Jul 2, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 12, 2026

Portugal Long Table Restaurant

Register by Wed, Jul 8, 2026

Submit by Mon, Jan 11, 2027

50,000€ Prize / Mujassam Watan Urban Sculpture Challenge #8

Register by Thu, Jul 23, 2026

Submit by Thu, Aug 27, 2026

Valli Wine Tasting Room

Register by Thu, Jul 30, 2026

Submit by Mon, Feb 15, 2027

Museum of Emotions / Edition #8

Register by Thu, Jun 18, 2026

Submit by Mon, Jul 20, 2026

Underbridge / Edition #2

Register by Thu, Jul 16, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 19, 2026

Kinderspace: Architecture for Children's Development competition / Edition #4

Register by Thu, Jun 18, 2026

Submit by Mon, Nov 30, 2026

Next page » Loading