Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary
A light installation by Olafur Eliasson and David Adjaye. The connected symposium "Patronage of Space" try to answer to the following questions: Can the Art Pavilion become the catalyst for a dialogue between the practitioners of sustainable development and those of the contemporary art movement? Is there a relationship between contemporary art and cultural tourism?
Olafur Eliasson and David Adjaye
Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary Art Pavilion is traveling to the Island of
Lopud, accompanied by the symposium 'Patronage of Space'
Your black horizon, a remarkable light installation by Danish-Icelandic artist
Olafur Eliasson, was commissioned by Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary and
inaugurated to great critical acclaim in June 2005 as an official project at the
51st Venice Biennale of Visual Arts. London-based architect David Adjaye was engaged
to work in close collaboration with Eliasson and to conceive an environment in which
art and architecture were from the outset considered as one, "an interlocking
equation". It is this relationship, one of engagement and response, and a
constant revision of prescribed boundaries between disciplines, that T-B A21 aspires
to encourage on a broad and courageous scale.
The Art Pavilion is traveling to the island of Lopud, Croatia - just a few sea miles
away from the UNESCO world heritage city of Dubrovnik. This distinctive location
allows the artist and architect to test the conceptual nature of the project: to
develop art and the spaces for art with respect for the site they inhabit. Embedded
in an historic context, Lopud’s rich Renaissance heritage and lively tourist
development, the pavilion is a model for art destination travel and contemporary
interventions. The challenge is to make a portable and temporary museum, which sits
comfortably in its surrounding natural site.
Patronage of Space
Can the Art Pavilion become the catalyst for a dialogue between the practitioners of
sustainable development and those of the contemporary art movement? Is there a
relationship between contemporary art and cultural tourism? How can we offer an
alternate space for local reflection and critique through contemporary art and
architecture, which are themselves heritage-in-creation? As an attempt in this
direction, T-B A21 will host a symposium titled 'Patronage Of Space',
exploring the concept of Art Pavilions and contemporary positions in remote
locations as well as the very idea of "patronage" of space which bridges
contemporary and historical contexts, infused by simultaneous concern for historical
continuity and sustainability, at the same time taking a meaningful role in the
present.
11.00 am-1.00 pm Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Pavilion project
Branka Escaron, Assistant Minister, Ministry of Culture of Croatia
Francesca von Habsburg, Chairman, T-B A21
Olafur Eliasson, Artist, Berlin
David Adjaye, Architect, Adjaye/Associates, London
Matthew Ritchie, Artist, New York
Mark Wigley, Dean of Graduate School of Architecture, Columbia University, New York
Crist Inman, Visiting Lecturer of Management and Organizations, Cornell University,
Ithaca, New York
2.00–4.00 pm Current Practices, breaking with tradition, again ...
Beatriz Colomina, Professor of Architecture, Princeton University, New Jersey
Rem Koolhaas, Architect, OMA – Office for Metropolitan Architecture, Rotterdam
Hans Ulrich Obrist, Co-Director for Exhibitions, Serpentine Gallery, London
Jorge Otero-Pailos, Assistant Professor of Historic Preservation, Columbia
University, New York
Dinko Pera i, Architect, Platforma 981, Split
Francois Roche, Architect, Paris
Moderator: Andreas Ruby, Architectural critic and theorist, Berlin
Under the official patronage of the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia
and City of Dubrovnik, with kind support of Lopud town council
Lopud Island