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闺房巴比伦咖啡馆
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发布时间:2021-02-17
设计亮点
借鉴闺房、沙龙、俱乐部三种空间类型,以夸张的场景设计挑战人们社交聚会的常规。
This project, by Adam Nathaniel Furman and Sibling Architecture, transforms NGV’s Gallery Kitchen for NGV Triennial 2020 by drawing inspiration from three spatial typologies - the boudoir, the salon, and the club - to challenge and rethink norms of how people come together and socialise. The existing cafe is transformed with ludicrously vibrant scenography that plays with the appearance of how people gather and socialise. At the centre, a column becomes a circular catwalk. For those not prepared to strut, modesty screens, with bodily motifs, ruptures divisions between dinners, including as these modesty screens can be rearranged in the space. The oculi, or peepholes, provide a moment to peer through to a queer world.
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The project combines design strategies from the boudoir, salon and nightclub: in this process, it is important to remember that these historical interiors provided locations where activities and identities outside of the norm - such as being a woman or queer, or having certain political or religious beliefs - could occur and exist. One source of inspiration is Eileen Grey’s Boudoir de Monte Carlo (1923), which builds upon the boudoir as a space to retreat between the dining room and bedroom to a multidimensional space for rest, parties and pleasure. The indeterminacy of that space -where ‘use’ is not overdetermined by design – was foundational. Modesty screens, found in the boudoirs of the eighteenth century, also take part in the mis-en-scene. The nightclub is also a multifunctional space with a layering of different people that come together for a moment. We took inspiration from Piper in Turin and Inflation in Melbourne, among others, in how views across environments, and bodies, are layered.
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