review of musings on a glass box / diller scofidio + renfro

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   Musings on a Glass Bo x Diller Scofidio + Renfro In collaboration with David Lang and Jody Elff Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain 261, boulevard Raspail 75014 Paris October 25, 2014 - February 22, 2015 Published at Hyperallergic.com here http://hyperallergic.com/183396/architecture-that-integrates-the-human-body/ View of the left gallery of Musings on a Glass Box  Photo © Luc Boegly

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Review of Musings on a Glass BoxDiller Scofidio + RenfroIn collaboration with David Lang and Jody ElffFondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain261, boulevard Raspail 75014 ParisOctober 25, 2014 - February 22, 2015

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  • Musings on a Glass Box

    Diller Scofidio + RenfroIn collaboration with David Lang and Jody Elff

    Fondation Cartier pour lart contemporain

    261, boulevard Raspail 75014 Paris

    October 25, 2014 - February 22, 2015

    Published at Hyperallergic.com herehttp://hyperallergic.com/183396/architecture-that-integrates-the-human-body/

    View of the left gallery of Musings on a Glass Box Photo Luc Boegly

  • View of right gallery in Musings on a Glass Box Photo Luc Boegly

    View of screen in right gallery in Musings on a Glass Box Photo Luc Boegly

  • View of screen content in right gallery in Musings on a Glass Box Photo Luc Boegly

    Installation view of Musings on a Glass Box: Diller Scofidio + Renfro

  • The Fondation Cartier pour lArt Contemporain in Paris commemorates its 30th

    anniversary with Musings on a Glass Box, a two-part immersive installation by

    controversial New York design studio Diller Scofidio + Renfro, that nearly empties the

    museums ground floor. This huge emptiness, besides signifying a power and grandeur

    seen before in art museums in Paris, places the Jean Nouvels building its glass walls,

    mechanical systems, and acoustics under closer scrutiny. For its third installation at

    Fondation Cartier, Diller Scofidio + Renfro plays with the architecture of the building,

    incorporating a very effective integral sound art component by composer David Lang that

    offers the most rewarding sensual element to the installation.

    Visually, Musings on a Glass box looks kind of dumb in its bland emptiness, but it is

    actually technologically sophisticated, particularly when one learns of the robotics that

    engineer Marty Chafkin developed for it. The high ceilings and transparent walls of the

    Fondation Cartier building, made from the best glass technology of the 1990s, are used

    here as perverse starting points to goof on one of Frank Lloyd Wrights highest goals: to

    connect the interior to the exterior world. Diller Scofidio + Renfro takes that ambition to

    an extreme and presents us with the clich of a leaky roof when the rain drips in. This is

    the gag of the left half of the show, where one enters the theatrical setting of a cold,

    cavernous empty space to encounter only a single red plastic bucket on wheels. The

    windows have been blurred over with some sort of translucent material. Soon, the bucket

    begins slowly moving about the space and suddenly stops so as to catch a naughty

    leak from the ceiling. Only three drips drop into the bucket, before it starts to move

    around again. The bucket moves apparently on its own and in random directions, before

    precisely halting in position to receive three drops more, and so on, elsewhere.

  • However, in many ways it is the sound of the installation that rewards the visit, by

    delighting a focused mind with a textured symphony. The drop of water hitting the half-

    filled bucket below sets off an audio response that amplifies and expands into a

    mammoth reverberating noise that includes hints of a human chorus, creating one huge

    hum that makes for a meditative experience.

    The use of water, sound, sensors, robotics, and remote communications achieved

    through Jody Elffs real-time sound processing program recalls Diller Scofidio +

    Renfros extraordinary creation of an artificial cloud jutting out onto Lake Neuchtel at

    Yverdon-les-Bains, The Blur Building. It, too, had a powerful and restless sound

    environment, there designed by Christian Marclay.

    The second half of the installation, located on the right side of the building, consists of an

    immense jumbo-tron that looms from the ceiling close to the ground. One slithers under

    the screen by use of little black go-carts into a literally top-down architectural folly that

    results in a rather oppressive (but fun) experience.

    The Fondation Cartiers two ground galleries have been hooked up to interconnect in a

    feedback loop. As the drops of water fall into the bucket, they create light changes that

    are then captured in real time by a tiny camera (installed inside the bucket) and are

    transmitted and amplified onto a screen in the right gallery. Its a neat idea, but, visually,

    a big come down. All that potential visual impact of the suspended huge screen seems

    wasted on blurry and shaky abstract images that amount to almost nothing of visual

    interest. I assume that we are supposed to be satisfied with the grand scale of it all, as the

  • great screen hovers over us like a great truth that cannot be questioned, but only tinkered

    with.

    This out-of-whack sensual link between the two galleries reveals and rectifies the

    imbalances and incongruities between our visual perception of the outer world as

    captured by technology and our inner, less palpable audio experiences. Musings on a

    Glass Box suggests for architecture a new goal for connecting interior to exterior by

    designing spaces that integrate the human body. For Diller Scofidio + Renfro, that means

    spaces laced with intelligent computer-robotics run by an algorithmic code which

    connects our experiences of sight and sound into one seamless digital and spatial

    experience. As such, Musings on a Glass Box appears to be a rather modern musing on

    the tension between our personal, inner experiences and the dominant visual spectacle of

    architecture, a cogent apprehension that yields fantastic intellectual aftermaths.

    Many intelligent and visceral questions and obsessions are raised in this show concerning

    interfaces between body/mind/machine/structure. For example, the circulation of data in

    this in-and-out playhouse suggested to me that one challenge of our computer era, with

    its round-the-clock time zone, is in dealing with a shift away from sensual vision towards

    mechanical vision. This thought, in turn, encouraged me to enjoy the rest of the day

    outdoors.

    Joseph Nechvatal