In Icelandic Oasis, Simon Irgens revisits Einar Thorsteinn's proposal to develop a new community in central Iceland. This exhibition represents a thinking process that bridges geometry, architecture, urbanism, and a sense of projection that brings back a spirit of Utopia prevalent in post-war modernism.
Icelandic Oasis
Curated by Einar Thorsteinn
Curated by Simon Irgens, in collaboration with architecture students from Prof. Wolfram Popp and Sven Pfeiffer's studio at the Technische Universität Berlin
Though the way we live continues to change, the places we live in have become fixed to forms and ideals that were determined by past generations. Traditionally, cities have grown and developed along physical information and transportation networks like roads and rivers. The shape, form and location of our settlements are often determined by these systems.
Today, as information moves increasingly along electronic networks,the constraints and determinants of geography when planning new settlements are brought into question. As social systems (like communication, trade and services) continue to move further into the virtual realm, engagement with an existing context becomes less of a physical consideration. Through continued advances in environmental technologies, it is now possible to build a community in previously uninhabited places.
In Icelandic Oasis, Simon Irgens, along with a group of architecture students from Professor Wolfram Popp and Sven Pfeiffer's studio at the Technische Universität Berlin, revisits Einar Thorsteinn's proposal to develop a new community in central Iceland.
Natural shapes and forms, as Thornsteinn attests, are representations of a logic based on five-fold symmetry space. Geometric sequences defined by the golden ratio (approximately 1.618) such as the Fibonacci series, are found in leaves, sea-shells and crystals. If our built environment were created from such geometries, would thinking and living through them harmonize the relationship between the constructed and natural world?
Thorsteinn, a native of Iceland, proposes a green community to be built in the center of the country, the entirety of which has never been settled, but possess a huge economic and ecological potential in its underground thermal springs. Thorsteinn's vision folds together several concerns pertinent to the crises in our current condition; unsettled areas should be developed in anticipation of a growing population (especially the expected numbers of displaced people as a result of global climate change), and communities should be designed around renewable natural resources, like thermal springs.
This exhibition is an idea in formation. It represents a thinking process that bridges geometry, architecture, urbanism, and a sense of projection that brings back a spirit of Utopia prevalent in post-war modernism. Much of the structures seen in the site model featured in the exhibition are a result of a workshop with the architecture students, led by Einar Thorsteinn, Sven Pfeiffer and Simon Irgens at PROGRAM.
Program
Invalidenstrasse 115 - Berlin