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Issue 66 - Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Issue 66

Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Kitchens and bathrooms are, arguably, the most consequential rooms in the home — and almost always the first to be considered. Whether approached through renovation or new build, their design has the power to recalibrate how a home is lived in and experienced. For this issue, our guest editor, Mardi Doherty, principal of Studio Doherty, explores what it truly means to transform these pivotal spaces — and why thoughtful design in kitchens and bathrooms delivers dividends far beyond the purely functional. Her insights both as an architect and as her own client give an open and honest account of the thinking behind creating a home.

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HappeningsEditorial Team

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EMBASSY is a transformation of the ready-made and an exploration of the unconventional. Annie Reid closes in on a new experimental project in Melbourne.


Above: Future Wagon by Matthew Bird and Phillip Adams (2013)

Experimental architect Matthew Bird (Studiobird) and choreography artist Phillip Adams (BalletLab) will collaborate once more as the 2014 Summer Residents at Pin-Up Architecture and Design Project Space, in Melbourne’s inner north.

Their installation – EMBASSY – is the first iteration of a two-year design research project, and presents as a playground of experimental architecture along with a visual design and performance component, which will be in full effect on opening night.

Bird says: “The premise was conceived in Brasilia, which contains over one hundred foreign embassies. I like the tension created by national architecture in an exotic location, and exploring issues of territory, identity, boundaries and gateways.”

future_wagon_1

Future Wagon by Matthew Bird and Phillip Adams (2013)

With an open brief plus support by MADA Monash University and curator Fleur Watson, the installation comprises a grid-like frame – referencing modernism – containing four neon white garage doors in a cross section, each operated by a central motor.

On opening night, the some-200 guests will be ushered around the space via markings on the floor. Once safely inside the gallery, the garage doors of the illuminated structure will start to open and close in a balletic sequence, before some of the guests are invited to transfer inside it.

“It’s about moving and ushering people through thresholds,” Bird says. “Phillip is interested in exploring issues of other and the unidentifiable, which I think we’ll find more about on the night.”

future_wagon_2
Future Wagon by Matthew Bird and Phillip Adams (2013)

For Bird, the architect and Adams, the choreographer, EMBASSY is an evolution of their unconventional work together, which includes Aviary (2011), All Things Return to Nature Tomorrow (2013), and Future Wagon, Melbourne Now NGV (2013-14).

And while both typically layer their work with rich, decorative elements, in EMBASSY the approach has been quite different.

“It just comes back to these four doors, and stripping it all back. There is no explicit baroque layering, rather testing spatial thresholds and experience through everyday garage doors and body in motion,” Bird says.

EMBASSY

Opening night 6pm – 9pm Thursday March 27

Exhibition runs 27-29 March

Studio Bird
studiobird.com.au

Ballet Lab
balletlab.com

Pinup Projects
pinupprojectspace.com

 


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Issue 66 - Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Issue 66

Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Kitchens and bathrooms are, arguably, the most consequential rooms in the home — and almost always the first to be considered. Whether approached through renovation or new build, their design has the power to recalibrate how a home is lived in and experienced. For this issue, our guest editor, Mardi Doherty, principal of Studio Doherty, explores what it truly means to transform these pivotal spaces — and why thoughtful design in kitchens and bathrooms delivers dividends far beyond the purely functional. Her insights both as an architect and as her own client give an open and honest account of the thinking behind creating a home.

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