Antony Gormley and David Chipperfield
The 2008 pavilion for Kivik Art Centre in southeast Sweden has been designed by
Antony Gormley and architect David Chipperfield. The pavilion, which was constructed
in only two months, is a sculpture entirely in concrete. Formed of three interlocked
100 m3 volumes – 'The Cave', 'The Stage' and 'The Tower' – the pavilion offers three
different ways of experiencing the nature and landscapes around Kivik.
'The Cave' – a solid, dormant space in the base of the sculpture where one can rest
on a wall-fixed bench, offers the enclosed feeling of being in the dark forest.
Stairs then take the visitor up to the first floor – 'The Stage' – a horizontal
volume open to the landscape, where one looks out but is also exposed. The third
volume – 'The Tower' – takes the visitor up spiral stairs to a platform almost 18
metres above the ground, where one is rewarded with a spectacular view over the
trees towards the Baltic Sea.
Kivik Pavilions is a project that combines architecture with art and design.
Fundamental are issues of environmental solutions, a symbiosis of the landscape and
the pavilion, local materials, and corporate partnership with industries in the
region. The 2007 pavilion, called 'Mother Ship', was designed by Norwegian
architects Snohetta, in conjunction with the photographer Tom Sandberg.
Opening: Saturday 19 July 2008, 2pm
Kivik Art Centre
Bergdala gard, Svinabergavagen - Kivik
Open 11.00 to 17.00