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Lebbeus Woods

ЛЕББЕУС ВУДС
レベウス・ウッズ

Wheel

Lebbeus Woods  Wheel

source: arqbacana

O artista e arquiteto novaiorquino Lebbeus Woods, que se tornou uma figura cult entre os estudantes e acadêmicos pelos seus desenhos visionários de edifícios desconstruídos e paisagens distorcidas, num parâmetro que beira a ficção científica e a arquitetura, faleceu recentemente aos 72 anos nos EUA. Seus traços em lápis de cor e tinta inspiram arquitetos, designers, escritores, cineastas e idealistas em prol de um mundo melhor.

Formado arquiteto na Universidade de Illinois, Woods chegou a trabalhar com o arquiteto finlandês Eero Saarinen, mas deixou a prática para se concentrar na teoria e experimentação.

O arquiteto também co-fundou o Instituto de Pesquisa para Arquitetura Experimental, onde desenvolveu uma série de projetos conceituais com propósito de encontrar respostas arquitetônicas aos problemas do mundo contemporâneo. Sua série de 1993, em resposta à guerra na Bósnia, por exemplo, evoca quadrinhos de ficção científica – com cabos trançados, edifícios em ruínas e fragmentos de aço voando.

No início do ano, Woods teve seu primeiro projeto construído, o Pavilhão de Luz. A escultura de grande escala está anexada a uma das cinco torres do complexo multiuso projetado pelo arquiteto e amigo íntimo Steven Holl, na China.

Para homenagear o artista e arquiteto pela sua extensa contribuição às artes e a arquitetura, uma seleção de diferentes tipos de croquis e desenhos de obras que foram construídas feito por grandes nomes da arquitetura mundial, como Frank Gehry, Renzo Piano e Frank Lloyd Wright.
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source: artsy

Lebbeus Woods is an Archetype includes an exhibition in the SCI-Arc Gallery and a public art installation in the L.A. Arts District’s Bloom Square, both aiming to demonstrate the fearless nature with which the late visionary architect and draftsman created. It is assembled by an exhibition team including SCI-Arc graduate programs chair Hernan Diaz Alonso, Christoph A. Kumpusch, and design faculty Dwayne Oyler and Alexis Rochas.

Three blocks away from its campus in downtown Los Angeles, SCI-Arc completed Woods’s Earthwave, an “inhabitable drawing” originally designed, but never built, for the 2009 Biennale of Architecture and Art of the Mediterranean in Reggio Calabria (BaaM), Italy.

Earthwave was initially designed by Lebbeus Woods and Christoph a. Kumpusch in collaboration with Adam Orlinski, and is based on a Lebbeus Woods drawing from 1997. It is an installation that proves to a new generation that there is a fine line between “unbuilt” and “unbuildable.”

The temporary 18’x 18’, two-and-a-half-ton steel structure built by SCI-Arc is set to be unveiled on June 28. It includes four parallel steel frame “swarms,” each frame penetrated by a dense field of steel vectors, using the urban Arts District as a backdrop for Woods’s dystopian vision.

The public is invited to conceptually inhabit the sculpture in a 1:1 scale, giving the piece a new dimensionality and relating back to the 2-D and 3-D nature of the project.

The site of the project—a busy walkable intersection in downtown L.A.’s Arts Distric—will free it from being perceived as an object to be viewed from a distance and transform the structure into a metric of urbanity meant to be freely moved through.

The SCI-Arc Gallery component of Lebbeus Woods is an Archetype, opening October 11, will include several original, rarely seen Woods drawings from private collections, and most notably, recently uncovered video footage from a 1998 interview recorded in Vico Morcote, Switzerland, then part of a SCI-Arc European campus program. The video articulates Woods’s philosophy and the forces and influences which shaped his thinking, including the work of Heinz von Foerster and the systems-thinking theory of Cybernetics. A public symposium on opening night will feature a panel of young architects who will discuss Woods’s influence on their generation.
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source: nytimes

Lebbeus Woods, an architect whose works were rarely built but who influenced colleagues and students with defiantly imaginative drawings and installations that questioned convention and commercialism, died on Tuesday in Manhattan. He was 72.

In an era when many architecture stars earned healthy commissions designing high-rise condominiums or corporate headquarters, Mr. Woods conceived of a radically different environment, one intended for a world in conflict.

He conceived a post-earthquake San Francisco that emphasized its seismic vulnerability. He flew to Sarajevo in the 1990s and proposed a postwar city in which destruction and resurgence coexisted. He imagined a future for Lower Manhattan in which dams would hold back the Hudson and East Rivers to create a vast gorge around the island, exposing its rock foundation.

“It’s about the relationship of the relatively small human scratchings on the surface of the earth compared to the earth itself,” Mr. Woods said of his Manhattan drawing in an interview several years ago with the architectural Web site Building Blog. “I think that comes across in the drawing. It’s not geologically correct, I’m sure, but the idea is there.”

Mr. Woods’s work was often described as fantasy and compared to science-fiction imagery. But he made clear that while he may not have expected his designs to be built, he wished they would be — and believed they could be.

“I’m not interested in living in a fantasy world,” Mr. Woods told The New York Times in 2008. “All my work is still meant to evoke real architectural spaces. But what interests me is what the world would be like if we were free of conventional limits. Maybe I can show what could happen if we lived by a different set of rules.”

He spread his message from many platforms. He was a professor at Cooper Union, spoke at symposiums around the world and built sprawling temporary installations in Austria, Italy, Southern California and elsewhere. He also wrote a well-read blog.

Earlier this year, in a post explaining why he chose to become an architect, he said winning commissions was not a major motivation.

“The arts have not been merely ornamental, but central to people’s struggle to ‘find themselves’ in a world without clarity, or certainty, or meaning,” he wrote.

Mr. Woods often criticized what he saw as a complacent and distracted status quo in his field. But his colleagues said his commitment to creating an alternative showed that he had hope.

“If he really felt as cynical and skeptical as he sometimes would say, then why the hell draw this stuff?” Eric Owen Moss, an architect and longtime friend, said in an interview on Wednesday. “There’s an incredible amount of power just in the draftsmanship. He’s like Durer — you know, woodcuts, 15th-century stuff. There’s content — intellectual content, social content, artistic content, political content — but the very act of making these sort of remarkable things and his drawing capacity made a kind of new language.”

Christoph A. Kumpusch, a longtime friend and colleague who, like Mr. Woods, taught at the Cooper Union in New York, said Mr. Woods “wanted life and architecture to be a challenge” and “always wanted us to feel a little uncomfortable in order to make things change.”

Mr. Kumpusch collaborated with Mr. Woods on the only permanent structure he built, a pavilion for a housing complex in Chengdu, China, designed by Mr. Holl. Called the Light Pavilion, and completed in October, the pavilion is reached by several glass and steel bridges and ramps.

Lebbeus Woods was born on May 31, 1940, in Lansing, Mich. His father, an engineer in the military, died when he was a teenager. His survivors include his wife, Aleksandra Wagner; their daughter, Victoria; and a son, Lebbeus, and daughter, Angela Bechtel Woods, both from a previous marriage, and seven grandchildren.

An exhibition of work by Mr. Woods will be on display at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art beginning in February.

“Outside-the-box” thinking has become a cliché used in advertising, corporate strategy and politics, Mr. Moss said, but Mr. Woods took it to another level.

“There’s another box, and he’s outside it,” he said, “He’s outside all the boxes.”
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source: metalocus

Lebbeus Woods nació en Lansing, Michigan, en 1940. Hijo de un ingeniero militar conocido, Woos estudió en el Purdue University School of Engineering (1958–60) y en la University of Illinois School of Architecture (1964–68). Trabajó con Kevin de Roche en Eero Saarinen y Asociados (1960–64) antes de pasar de manera radical, en la década de 1970 a un trabajo independiente, conceptual, escenificado a través de dibujos, maquetas e instalaciones. Fue co-fundador del Instituto de Investigación de Arquitectura Experimental y Profesor de Arquitectura de la Cooper Union hasta su muerte en 2012, así como profesor en la European Graduate School. Autor de numerosos libros y objeto de exposiciones en todo el mundo muchos de sus escritos y dibujos han inspirado a arquitectos, cineastas, escritores historia-y soñadores de todo tipo. Los dibujos de Woods se han presentado en numerosas colecciones públicas, como el Museo de Arte Moderno de Nueva York, el Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, el Museo Whitney de Arte Americano, el San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, el Museo Carnegie de Arte Moderno, el Getty Research Institute, y el Museum für Angewandte Kunst (MAK), Viena.
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source: baunetz

Lebbeus Bigelow Woods, geboren am 31. Mai 1940 in Lansing, Michigan, arbeitete nach seinem Architektur-Studium zunächst für Eero Saarinen, widmete sich ab 1976 aber ausschließlich der Architekturtheorie. 1988 gründete er das Forschungsinstitut für Experimentelle Architektur, zudem lehrte er als Professor für Architektur an der Cooper Union in New York.

Woods’ Entwürfe sind bekannt für ihre destruktiven, verstörenden Momente. Zur Ausführung gelangten die wenigsten – gleichwohl inspirierten seine radikalen Ideen nicht nur andere Architekten, sondern auch Filmemacher: Er war zu großen Teilen für das Design von Alien 3 verantwortlich. Die Produzenten von 12 Monkeys verklagte er erfolgreich, weil sie ohne sein Wissen eine seiner Zeichnungen als Filmset adaptiert hatten. Viele Werke erinnern an Science-Fiction, gleichzeitig thematisieren sie aber auch die Vergangenheit. Die visuelle Spannung, die im Nebeneinander von Konstruktion und Zerfall gründet, erinnert nicht zufällig an die Zeichnungen Piranesis.

In Woods’ Visionen sind das Gewaltmoment und das Motiv des Krieges allgegenwärtig: Er zeichnet ein San Francisco, in dem sich nach einem Erdbeben, und ein Sarajevo, in dem sich nach dem Krieg Spuren der Zerstörung und der Wiederauferstehung verbinden; auch sieht man ein Manhattan, dessen Südspitze von riesigen Dämmen gegen die Wasser des Hudson und des East Rivers abgeschirmt wird.

„Ein Architekt ist in meinen Augen ein Entwerfer des Lebens“, zitiert die Wiener Tageszeitung Der Standard aus einem Interview mit Woods. „Schmerz und Gewalt sind Teil des Lebens, insofern darf man diesen Aspekt nicht ausblenden.“ Woods starb an dem Tag, als Wirbelsturm Sandy über New York hereinbrach.