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 » Installation gives the impression of visitors hanging from a building
    Art

    Installation gives the impression of visitors hanging from a building

    May 10, 20235 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    After growing up with a family of architects in Argentina, artist Leandro Erlich has adopted a rather personal, and even “emotional,” relationship with the practice. The Building, one of the most vivid examples of this in the artist’s oeuvre, is on view at Jersey City’s Liberty Science Center. The participatory installation, which is the most recent edition of his Bâtiment (Building) series, invites visitors to crawl across a horizontal facade of a typical New York City apartment building. Made out of wood, steel, acrylic, fabric, and foam bricks, the platform holds a typical zigzag metal fire escape, balconies, air conditioners, and a storefront. A 45-degree angle mylar mirror intersects with the flattened exterior to give the illusion of people defying gravity as they climb balconies and hang from the fire escape. “Spaces we live in define our daily existence and rituals,” Erlich told AN. “I can create a narrative through references to architecture by stripping it off of its primary goal of function.”

    Liberty Science Center’s President and CEO Paul Hoffman invited Erlich to install the work as part of the center’s 30th anniversary celebration, which has also staged The Politics of Eternity, a glass and mixed-media sculpture by Brooklyn-based artist and Pioneer Works founder Dustin Yellin that weighs 10,000 pounds. While the opening of the science center’s new 30-acre campus extension is still a few years away, the two artists’ projects provide an invitation to explore the center’s prospective plans for the future through play.

    The Buenos Aires–based artist has previously exhibited similar installations in different iterations in Paris; Towada, Japan; Donetsk, Ukraine; and in his hometown. Humor, indeed, is a shared quality between the installation and the science center. “Humor is a perfect connection because although science represents hard facts and results, scientists come up with those findings through experimentation and playfulness,” Hoffman said.

    Erlich’s illusory building is a love song to New York City. While the artist lived in an apartment in the city in the early 2000s for three years, Hoffman was raised in a brownstone. They both agree that the horizontal sculpture embodies their emotional associations with the facades through a medley of key cues. “I felt like Frankenstein who assembled different parts of many buildings together,” Erlich said. He wove together fundamental elements of a typical West Village or Park Slope block to create a sense of familiarity and nostalgia subverted with the work’s ultimately eye-popping visuals. A three-story structure was a deliberate choice to convey a sense of thrill—even peril—in the impression of people hanging from balcony ledges or walking on all fours over the brick exterior á la Spider Man.

    Erlich’s practice flirts with the uncanny, working with a familiar or shared experience or imagery to attract viewers into participation and unusual engagement. The allure in the experiences he crafts is the exposure of his technique rather than an intentional mystery. “There is a shock effect in altering or subverting the logic, but this is not the work’s ultimate goal,” he explained. “I am not acting like a magician who is secretive about this trick—in fact similar to architecture, my entire process and reasoning is open to be understood.” He finds a connection between his work and architecture based on their mutual “honesty for the way they are.”

    The artist’s ongoing survey, Liminal, at Miami’s Pérez Art Museum, features a pool installation outside the museum where the participants enter the bottom of the pool through a door. From the inside the pool is empty, but for those viewing the work from above the participants look like as if they’re standing at the bottom of a filled pool—made possible by a thin water-filled glass layer Erlich installed to the basin’s surface.

    The artist’s other ambitious projects include building-like sculptures being pulled out of the ground with massive cranes, claustrophobic mirror-clad elevator mazes, and a house melting into the ground. While pulling attention to our psychological relationship with buildings, Erlich carves an alternative path forward to the surreal in architecture. “There is a moment of hesitation and doubt but the viewer eventually realizes the engineering behind what they’re looking at,” he added. Movies where “architecture is a character in the plot itself,” such as Roman Polanski’s The Tenant or David Lynch’s Blue Velvet are among his inspirations, too.

    The pandemic invited Erlich to see the Bâtiment series from a different perspective. The crisis changed our relationship to our own spaces as well as the environments we share with others; that memory adds a new layer to the work’s current adaptation. In the installation, the illusion of physical risk replaces the recent familiar danger of simply being outside.

    The play between interiority and exteriority as well as gravity are pillars in the artist’s concept, but socializing is a particularly essential intention in this case. “Bringing people together on an engaging platform and letting them be the protagonists of their experiences resonates with this moment,” Erlich said.

    The Building is on display through the summer on the first floor at Liberty Science Center.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

    Related Articles

    Met rooftop pavilion melds Egyptian iconography with visual culture of L.A.

    May 19, 2023

    Tony Rosenthal’s Alamo (Cube) goes for repairs

    May 11, 2023

    Nina Cooke John’s latest installation uncovers recently revealed histories

    May 9, 2023

    Sze Tsung Nicolás Leong to design memorial to victims of 1871 Chinese massacre

    May 8, 2023

    Isamu Noguchi Award honors Theaster Gates, Edmund de Waal, and Hanya Yanagihara

    May 8, 2023

    Willie Cole calls the Met Gala’s chandeliers “a blatant rip off” of his work

    May 4, 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.