new book! MEDIATING SPACE soft geometries. textile structures. body architecture

books.catalogues
october 15 2009

/to be presented at the frankfurter buchmesse 2009

will be published by merz&solitude in October 2009; graphic design by Kerstin Lauck

including essays by Jean-Baptiste Joly, Johan Bettum, Jessica Blaustein, Peter Cook, Susanne Hauser, Sarah Scaturro, Adi Shamir

The work of the architect Gabi Schillig engages with the space of the human body. Schillig’s wearable spatial structures mediate between private users and public spaces, provoking new relationships between bodies, clothing, and the built environment. Redefining the garment as tactile architecture, Schillig explores the potential for soft geometries and surfaces of textiles, conventionally associated with individual bodies and human scale, to generate alternative arrangements of social space and modes of interaction.

MORE IMAGES >CONCEPTUAL DESIGN >MEDIATING SPACE

merz&solitude / mediating space
Akademie Schloss Solitude
Kerstin Lauck
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Akademie Schloss Solitude / merz&solitude
English, ca.200 pages, with various images, DVD, will be published in October 2009

inlcuding essays by Jean-Baptiste Joly, Johan Bettum, Jessica Blaustein, Peter Cook, Susanne Hauser, Sarah Scatturo, Adi Shamir and others.

ISBN 978-3-937158-48-8

> For Schillig, multiple users, desires, and urban contexts are necessary to materialize her work. Designed to be interconnected and shared, her second skins evolve as an architecture built upon the creativity of its participants. Over the course of the past years, Schillig has developed a set of textile structures with which she has conducted a series of site-specific experiments for their implementation. Made from felt, latex, and a variety of fastening devices, the structures are designed for attachment to both the individual and collective body, or to specific building surfaces and street conditions. Those textile structures are there to be improvised and appropriated for clothing, furniture, habitat, or other uses. Upon contact, they transform in geometry, texture, and color from two-dimensional and often camouflaged elements in the city to three-dimensional interfaces that sensitize and reassociate urbanbodies to environments at multiple scales.

The work that emerged in Frankfurt, Stuttgart, Berlin and New York, is presented in three parts that interconnect and refer to each other – RESEARCH / PROJECTS / TEACHING – including Schillig’s experiments with documentation of her research processes and material investigations, her activities in the work with students and her interest in the work of the Brazilian artist Lygia Clark.