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A proposal for the pavilion of post-contemporary curating should
call upon entries that do not restrict themselves within given and obvious
formal and spatial arrangements. It should gain validity and emerge
within the temporal dimensions of a Plan B. We define Plan B as a period
(on a personal and collective level) of looking at things from a different
perspective, allowing opportunities to appear as a result of a creative
opposition to frustrating and mundane conventionalities.
However, architecture is a concrete establishment. Buildings are
erected for a purpose and one of their main functions is to sustain time.
Yet, architecture, like the human body, comes to life in order to
degenerate. It cannot escape degradation, disorganisation and dispersion,
just like any other living organism. Respectively, the current derelict state
of Sutton Scarsdale Hall reflects its long history and shares it with the
visitor through the merely natural decay of its body. As Reza Negarestani
notes …decay cannot be captured as either formation or destruction.
Decay is an artificialising process that is promulgated on the substratum
of all models of survival (beings). In other words, decay –unlike death- is
not external to survival, for it perpetuates itself on the substratum of
survival, in order to indefinitely postpone death and absolute
disappearance… In no way does decay wipe out or terminate; on the
contrary it keeps alive. We, therefore, believe that the decaying body of
Sutton Scarsdale Hall should remain intact, whilst comprising an integral
part of the pavilion that celebrates life.
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The pavilion of post-contemporary curating should ‘take place’ on
surfaces that can withstand new cultural, political and social activities. In
search of a conceptual trigger, the image of the roofless Sutton Scarsdale
Hall offers a valuable insight into the very substance of architecture. In
principle, an architectural composition emerges through and effectively is
a result of the interplay between solid and void, where void excludes solid
but solid includes void to architectonically survive (Nick Land). These
compositions of solid and void (i.e. architecture) communicate with us
through the surfaces they create. These surfaces provide the arena where
most actions take place. As James J. Gibson writes, the surface is where
most of the action is. The surface is where the light is reflected or
absorbed, not the interior of the substance. The surface is what touches
the animal, not the interior. The surface is where chemical reaction mostly
takes place. The surface is where vaporisation or diffusion of substances
into the medium occurs. And the surface is where the vibrations of the
substances are transmitted into the medium.
In search for new surfaces, which can tolerate Plan B activities for
the pavilion of post-contemporary curating, we propose the creation of a
Holey Network. The surfaces of holes created by subterranean activities,
such as digging and perforation, have limitless potentiality, as opposed to
the post-modern promise of a limitless potentiality available on the
periphery of an ecological whole (centre, body, outer layer). In A
Thousand Plateaus, Deleuze and Guattari write: Transpierce the
mountains instead of scaling them, excavate the land instead of striating
it, bore holes in space instead of keeping them smooth, turn the earth
into Swiss cheese. An image from the film Strike [by Eisenstein] presents
a holey space where a distributing group of people are rising, each
emerging from his or her hole as if from a field in all directions.
If architecture is the fixed stage for human events (Aldo Rossi),
then the Holey Network of Scardsdale Hall will constitute a Deleuzian
(post-) event as the constituent element of a narrative. The memory of
the fixed stage of the building will be re-enacted through its subterranean
holey representation. Scarsdale Hall will come to life again as an event
through its ability to contribute anew to a narrative. The aboveground
pre-existing surfaces will be mentally twined with their subterranean
mirrorings. There will be two main volumes here: one of positive and one
of negative space. Together, they will form an ideal nil; if one were
imposed into the other, the volume size would be zero. However, as they
stand side by side, they serve as the subverted memory of each other and
an expression of an event-led postcontemporary curating. |
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An architectural brief for the pavilion at this stage is redundant and
will be developed later in conjunction with the Centre for Attention
according to its needs. This is a conceptual proposal that respects the life
of Sutton Scarsdale Hall without fetishising its decaying process, whilst at
the same time tries to locate and justify the grounds upon which a
pavilion of post-contemporary curating can emerge.
Elena Papadaki & Stamatis Zografos during Plan B
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