• 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
Tagged: event

OMA completes ‘multi-dimensional’ exhibition design for Dior in Japan

By Niall Patrick Walsh|

Thursday, Dec 22, 2022

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

OMA has completed their third exhibition design collaboration with Dior, following the opening of the Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams exhibition in Japan. Located within the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, the OMA-designed scenography will be on view to the public until May 28, 2023.

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

The exhibition presents 70 years of history and relations between Dior and Japan, with a scenography and curation that “pays homage to Japanese culture and tradition.” Responding to the museum’s linear pathway of galleries, the exhibition creates a series of distinct spaces alternating between light and dark, expansive and intimate, to take visitors on a “multi-dimensional journey of discovery.”

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

“The fashion exhibition is a domain that requires architecture to become a narrative medium,” said Shohei Shigematsu, a partner at OMA. “We wanted to expand and diversify potentials for storytelling through a retrospective that not only looks back at history but brings new life and relevance to today’s culture.”

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

Each space in the exhibition seeks to showcase shared elements between Japanese tradition and culture, and Dior’s history and contemporary collections; elements including construction techniques and visual or spatial manipulations. Throughout the exhibition, surfaces host dynamic projects and graphics, as well as art pieces by Japanese artist Ayumi Shibata and photographer Yuriko Takagi.

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

“The scenography is a series of distinct set designs for diverse curatorial themes,” Shigematsu explained. “The starting point for each set was a common ground shared by Dior and Japan such as a mode of craft or material expression. By translating and manipulating that shared element into architectural forms and contemporary shapes, we provide a new set of surfaces for storytelling that feels surprising and tectonic, yet grounded in the inventive and disciplined beauty we found to be authentic to both the House of Dior and Japanese culture.”

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

News of the exhibition comes in the same month that OMA completed their stepped Greenpoint Landing towers in Brooklyn, and one month after it was announced that OMA and Cooper Robertson’s Buffalo AKG Museum restoration will open in May 2023. In September, OMA was selected to design the University of Illinois’ new DPI innovation hub, while in August, their long-awaited Taipei Performing Arts Center officially opened in Taiwan.

RELATED NEWS High fashion meets high church in The Met's “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination”

Related

exhibition ● christian dior ● tokyo ● japan ● fashion ● event ● oma
OMA (The Office for Metropolitan Architecture)
OMA (The Office for Metropolitan Architecture)

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

OMA completes ‘multi-dimensional’ exhibition design for Dior in Japan

Peter Barber elevates the role of craft in design for the Royal Academy's 2023 Architecture Room

'50 at 50' explores the impact of the New York Landmarks Conservancy through the lens of archival photography

LACMA's latest museum exhibition, designed by Bestor Architecture, presents an alternative to pre-set narratives on America's design history​ with Nordic countries

Blueprint Beijing: Ma Yansong invites architects to envision the city's future

Colloqate, WIP, FUNdaMENTAL, and Assemble showcase new exhibition at Art Omi celebrating the 'power of advocacy'

'Give Me a Sign: The Language of Symbols' at the Cooper Hewitt explores the legacy of design pioneer Henry Dreyfuss

In Helsinki, an award-winning pavilion prepares to serve its second biennial

Animatronic 'Supermodels' to dissolve the divide between analog and digital

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Condition_Lab’s 'delightful' Pingtan Children's Library is the 2022 INSIDE World Interior of the Year

World Architecture Festival 2022: Day Two winners revealed

World Architecture Festival 2022: Check out the winning projects of Day One

New exhibition celebrates the elaborate 'hard graft' sculptures of David Mach

NOMA awards Clemson University as 2022 Student Chapter of the Year

Five architects, designers, and researchers announced as 2022 ACADIA Awards of Excellence winners

On her 72nd birthday, two exhibitions honor the design legacy of Zaha Hadid

Next page » Loading

OMA completes ‘multi-dimensional’ exhibition design for Dior in Japan

By Niall Patrick Walsh|

Thursday, Dec 22, 2022

Share

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

Related

exhibition ● christian dior ● tokyo ● japan ● fashion ● event ● oma
OMA (The Office for Metropolitan Architecture)
OMA (The Office for Metropolitan Architecture)

OMA has completed their third exhibition design collaboration with Dior, following the opening of the Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams exhibition in Japan. Located within the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, the OMA-designed scenography will be on view to the public until May 28, 2023.

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

The exhibition presents 70 years of history and relations between Dior and Japan, with a scenography and curation that “pays homage to Japanese culture and tradition.” Responding to the museum’s linear pathway of galleries, the exhibition creates a series of distinct spaces alternating between light and dark, expansive and intimate, to take visitors on a “multi-dimensional journey of discovery.”

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

“The fashion exhibition is a domain that requires architecture to become a narrative medium,” said Shohei Shigematsu, a partner at OMA. “We wanted to expand and diversify potentials for storytelling through a retrospective that not only looks back at history but brings new life and relevance to today’s culture.”

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

Each space in the exhibition seeks to showcase shared elements between Japanese tradition and culture, and Dior’s history and contemporary collections; elements including construction techniques and visual or spatial manipulations. Throughout the exhibition, surfaces host dynamic projects and graphics, as well as art pieces by Japanese artist Ayumi Shibata and photographer Yuriko Takagi.

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

“The scenography is a series of distinct set designs for diverse curatorial themes,” Shigematsu explained. “The starting point for each set was a common ground shared by Dior and Japan such as a mode of craft or material expression. By translating and manipulating that shared element into architectural forms and contemporary shapes, we provide a new set of surfaces for storytelling that feels surprising and tectonic, yet grounded in the inventive and disciplined beauty we found to be authentic to both the House of Dior and Japanese culture.”

Image credit: Daici Ano, courtesy of Dior

News of the exhibition comes in the same month that OMA completed their stepped Greenpoint Landing towers in Brooklyn, and one month after it was announced that OMA and Cooper Robertson’s Buffalo AKG Museum restoration will open in May 2023. In September, OMA was selected to design the University of Illinois’ new DPI innovation hub, while in August, their long-awaited Taipei Performing Arts Center officially opened in Taiwan.

RELATED NEWS High fashion meets high church in The Met's “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination”

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Senior Architect (Dumbo)

Tom Winter Architects

Senior Architect (Dumbo)

New York, NY, US

Seinor Architect / Senior Designer

SWA Architecture PLLC

Seinor Architect / Senior Designer

New York, NY, US

Junior Architect

RZAPS | Ricardo Zurita Architecture & Planning P.C.

Junior Architect

New York, NY, US

Construction Project Engineer / Administrative Assistant

Molba Construction

Construction Project Engineer / Administrative Assistant

Little Ferry, NJ, US

Architect / Designer - REVIT

ZERZA

Architect / Designer - REVIT

New York, NY, US

Architectural Designer - Los Angeles Based

KAP Studios LP

Architectural Designer - Los Angeles Based

Los Angeles, CA, US

Intermediate Architect

Melamed Architect PC

Intermediate Architect

New York, NY, US

Construction Project Manager/Superintendent/Construction Manager

Molba Construction

Construction Project Manager/Superintendent/Construction Manager

Little Ferry, NJ, US

Intermediate Architect

RZAPS | Ricardo Zurita Architecture & Planning P.C.

Intermediate Architect

New York, NY, US

Preservation Architect

AYON Studio

Preservation Architect

New York, NY, US

Next page » Loading