A massive interactive installation that opened this week fills the US National Building Museum's cavernous Great Hall with an all-white house, pool and pavilion designed by New York-based design firm Snarkitecture.
The idiosyncratic group – which sees itself as creating neither art nor architecture, but rather something in between – invites Washingtonians to immerse themselves in a tactile show that captivates with a sprinkling of whimsy.
"We are looking to make architecture accessible and engaging. Part of doing that is to integrate this concept of play," said Alex Mustonen, who co-founded Snarkitecture with Daniel Arsham. Ben Porto joined the pair in 2014.
Sound is muffled in Snarkitecture's "Light Cavern" (2015), a contemplative space created using some 30,000 perforated white fabric strips suspended from the ceiling and cut away to form a light-filled grotto of sorts. /AFP Photo
Sound is muffled in Snarkitecture's "Light Cavern" (2015), a contemplative space created using some 30,000 perforated white fabric strips suspended from the ceiling and cut away to form a light-filled grotto of sorts. /AFP Photo
"We like people to experience architecture and environments in ways that children might experience them," he said. "Ideally to let your guard down to approach something in a new way."
Visitors enter the free-standing structure filled with interactive pieces through what looks like a primitive cavern entrance, created by hammering and chiseling away at a solid piece of EPS (expanded polystyrene) architectural foam.
A carved out skylight appears after clambering through one of the openings, the tightly packed foam beads crunching beneath your feet.
Snarkitecture's "Playhouse" (2017) is a play on how adults see the world compared to children. /AFP Photo
Snarkitecture's "Playhouse" (2017) is a play on how adults see the world compared to children. /AFP Photo
Forced perspective – an optical illusion that makes objects appear a different size than they actually are – gives an impression of depth in "Playhouse" (2017), scaled for adults in front and growing increasingly smaller for children.
In the larger house, wall shelves emerge from excavated forms, a tilted white oak chair becomes usable thanks to a tapered black marble stone and a cabinet that looks cracked open at the center is completely functional.
"People could take home that the most normal and simple things can be looked at in different ways. This is a sign of (creative) freedom and freedom is the seed of the future," said Milan-based curator Maria Cristina Didero.
'Tabula rasa'
Working mostly in monochrome tones is "like a tabula rasa where you are open to everything," said Didero.
In the open living room of the house, Snarkitecture's "Pillow Fort" (2016) encourages play and relaxation, the pillows in various gray hues can be arranged in various configurations. /AFP Photo
In the open living room of the house, Snarkitecture's "Pillow Fort" (2016) encourages play and relaxation, the pillows in various gray hues can be arranged in various configurations. /AFP Photo
The main structure looks like a typical American house, complete with a white picket fence – except this one was built with EPS foam.
The precisely milled siding, gutters, and roof eventually dissolve in an irregular pattern – as though chomped off by some large, hungry animal – to reveal the frame and rafters beneath.
The kidney-shaped pool filled with some 175,000 anti-microbial and recyclable plastic balls is a highlight of Snarkitecture's installation. /AFP Photo
The kidney-shaped pool filled with some 175,000 anti-microbial and recyclable plastic balls is a highlight of Snarkitecture's installation. /AFP Photo
It's a "balance between precision and looseness," Mustonen explained.
One of the highlights of "Fun House" – the fifth installation in the museum's annual Summer Block Party series that runs through September 3 – is a kidney-shaped pool.
After dipping in some 175,000 translucent balls, visitors can lounge on beach chairs under parasols, white astroturf mimicking sand all around.
A visitor plays in the pool of plastic balls. /AFP Photo
A visitor plays in the pool of plastic balls. /AFP Photo
It's a new take on Snarkitecture's uber-popular 2015 installation at the museum, "The Beach."
While "Fun House" is sure to be an Instagram hit, Mustonen encouraged people to also lift their eyes from their tiny screens to "appreciate the moment and have a more physical, tangible, tactical, memorable experience."
Source(s): AFP