Architecture BuildingArchitecture Building

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest Architecture and Interior Design News directly to your inbox

    What's Hot

    10 days left to enter WA Awards 10+5+X 44th Cycle

    May 28, 2023

    Rural Housing Competition

    May 27, 2023

    Tamayouz Excellence Award launches the 2023 Dewan Award for Architecture

    May 27, 2023
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Trending
    • 10 days left to enter WA Awards 10+5+X 44th Cycle
    • Rural Housing Competition
    • Tamayouz Excellence Award launches the 2023 Dewan Award for Architecture
    • AN Interior in conversation with Fyrn
    • Eleven things we loved at the Venice Architecture Biennale
    • Birdsong Brackenridge spins an ecological message
    • Wutopia Lab wraps cafe with copper plates to evoke nautical machinery and ships in Shanghai
    • At Columbia GSAPP inflatable pavilions light up using solar power
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Architecture BuildingArchitecture Building
    Demo
    • Home
    • Latest News
    • Architecture
    • Interior Design
    • Art
    • Design
    • Urbanism
    Architecture BuildingArchitecture Building
    Home » Snøhetta’s shading canopy opens at Blanton Museum of Art
    Architecture

    Snøhetta’s shading canopy opens at Blanton Museum of Art

    May 23, 20233 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Outside the University of Texas at Austin’s Blanton Museum of Art, 12 three-story-tall, fan-like pillars form a canopy that shades an expansive outdoor community space. Moody Patio, as the shade structure is called, is the primary addition of a Snøhetta-led renovation project which saw a revitalization of the museum’s grounds.

    As previously reported by AN, the renovation to the Blanton was announced in 2021, with plans to “unify and revitalize” the museum campus, an expansive, 200,000-square-foot site housing two main buildings and Ellsworth Kelly’s chapel-like Austin. Blanton’s new grounds culminate the recently completed Texas Capitol Mall, a new pedestrian greenway that runs down Congress Avenue, connecting the Blanton with the Texas State Capitol Building.

    Moody Patio is just one of several initiatives to place art outside of museum walls. In addition to Moody Patio, named for the Moody Foundation’s $20 million gift to the museum, there are several large scale artworks, including murals and a site-specific sound gallery.

    “This is what we have been waiting for: the opening of a new gathering place for Austin that offers a different way to experience the Blanton,” museum director Simone Wicha said in a press release. “I cannot wait for visitors to stroll along the pathways, pass under the stunning shade canopy, explore the powerful, immersive new artworks, and enjoy performances on the Moody Patio’s outdoor stages.”

    The shade canopy is sited within the reimagined landscape. Between the towering sculpture-like shade structures are winding paths linking the museum to the city, as well as a series of public stages, organic-shaped benches and other seating, and new plantings, of which 95 percent are native to Texas. The perforated petals forming the pillars act as shading devices, while also serving as a rainwater collection system for the native foliage around the pathways.

    Over each of the two main entrances to the museum Snøhetta has inserted a large “vault” conceived as an inverted form of the rounded arches lining the loggia of the building. Painted bright yellow, the intervention stands out against the beige backdrop of the museum, matching the yellow-hued check-in entrance. Those inside the volume can look out to the revamped patio while seated on a staircase that occupies the enclosed space.

    “Snøhetta’s design expands the museum’s world-class art collection beyond the museum’s galleries and creates a highly visible public place of—and for—the arts and Austin,” said Craig Dykers, founding partner of Snøhetta and an alumnus of the UT School of Architecture.

    Spanning the wall behind the loggia is a mural by the late Cuban American artist Carmen Herrera. Verde que te quiero verde (Green How I Desire You Green)  is the artist’s first public mural commission. Just east of the Kelly’s chapel-like work is the new Butler Sound Gallery, the first of its kind at a major American museum. As previously reported by AN, the inaugural commission for the sound galley is an installation from composer and sound art pioneer Bill Fontana, who has pulled from the ecology of Texas Hill Country to bring the sounds of wildlife to Austin.

    Other new art commissions include a billboard-like mural from Kay Rosen, and a rainbow-colored embroidered installation by Gabriel Dawe in the new visitor check-in lobby. The new grounds and all exhibits are now open to the public.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

    Related Articles

    Eleven things we loved at the Venice Architecture Biennale

    May 26, 2023

    At Columbia GSAPP inflatable pavilions light up using solar power

    May 26, 2023

    A visit to a pavilion in the Netherlands renews questions about sustainability

    May 26, 2023

    PRODUCTORA selected to renovate Chile’s national rail headquarters

    May 26, 2023

    NYC Parks announces $33 million in renovations for parks in Rockaway Peninsula

    May 25, 2023

    The 2023 AIA Small Project Awards announce winners

    May 25, 2023
    Top Posts

    Sasaki transforms Boston’s City Hall Plaza into an accessible landscape

    April 11, 202317

    The Dallas Museum of Art announces finalists for campus renovation

    April 27, 202310

    Design team selected to reimagine St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts

    March 16, 202310

    Design Shanghai 2023 will be a place of ‘exemplary design’ with its stellar exhibitors and speakers

    April 21, 20238
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest Architecture and Interior Design News directly to your inbox

    Don't Miss
    Design

    Birdsong Brackenridge spins an ecological message

    By adminMay 26, 20230

    The drive on I-35 from Austin to San Antonio unfolds like a master class on…

    Wutopia Lab wraps cafe with copper plates to evoke nautical machinery and ships in Shanghai

    May 26, 2023

    At Columbia GSAPP inflatable pavilions light up using solar power

    May 26, 2023

    Estonian Pavilion is turned into a Home Stage to look at housing crisis

    May 26, 2023
    © 2023 Architecture Building. All rights reserved.
    • About
    • Contact
    • Terms
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.