Showing posts with label Farnsworth House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Farnsworth House. Show all posts

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Up on the Rooftop - Night and Art at Marina City with Luftwerk, soon to light Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House

click images for larger view
Saturday night marked another showing of the work of Luftwerk light sculptors Petra Bachmaier and Sean Gallero.
Marina City rooftop core at daytime
A large crowd made the trek up to the 60th floor rooftop of the west tower of Bertrand Goldberg's iconic Marina City to see a projection of  Luftwerk's geometric transformations wrapping around almost the entire circumference of the tall round service core that punctuates the top of each tower.
The presentation had major competition from the nighttime cityscape of Chicago stretching in all directions far into the horizon.

But then again, there was more than enough time to enjoy both.

Luftwerk has two other major projects coming up.  On September 17th to 20th, Couch Place, the theater district alley that runs between State and Dearborn behind the Ford Oriental Theater will be the site for the Chicago Loop Alliance sponsored FLOW/Im Fluss . . .
Inspired by the element of water and its all-encompassing connectivity, Luftwerk’s FLOW/Im Fluss visualizes the characteristics of the Chicago River and Hamburg’s River Elbe through video compositions projected on water screens.
Based on scientifically collected measurements like oxygen levels, currents, contamination, and chemical compounds FLOW/Im Fluss interprets data from the two rivers to create a visual experience. 
The projected video will illuminate screens made of water - inviting viewers to immerse themselves into the flow of data collected from both rivers.
The installation celebrates the 20th anniversary of the Sister Cities relationship between Chicago and Hamburg. (And since it's the Elbe and not the Rhine, you don't have to look for any shiny gold rings to grab at, or fear being pulled under by some river maidens with a funny sense of fun.)

There will also be performances of Birgit Uhler's Traces, for trumpet, radio, speaker, objects and tape feeds each night the FLOW/Im Fluss is on display.
Then on October 17th, through the 20th, Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House in suburban Plano will be the focus for INsite, in which Luftwerk will transform the iconic structure “into a canvas of light and sound, featuring original music by percussionist Owen Clayton Condon and curated by Steve Dietz.”  Tickets are $100.00 ($200.00 for opening night), which may seem a bit steep until you realize that it includes transportation from Chicago to the Farnsworth House and back, a trip of 58 miles each way.

Read More about Luftwerk in Chicago and Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House:

Luminous Field, at Millennium Park's Cloud Gate sculpture

Luftwerk takes over Cultural Center Facade and McCormick Rink ice to celebrate Chinese New Year

Glass House Struck by Gavel - the history and rescue of Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House

The Little Farmhouse that Roared: Cycles of Time at Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House






Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Only til Saturday for Luftwerk campaign to light up Mies' Farnsworth House, which Town Hall meetings this week will discuss saving



[UPDATE 6/2/14:  The Kickstarter campaign's goal was met and the project is on.]

You have only until May 31 to contribute to a Kickstarter campaign to make Luftwerk's INsite project a reality.
This new project, INsite, will invite the public to experience a public art intervention on the Farnsworth House from sunset into evening. Drawing from insights into the ways that digital projections interact with architecture, INsite will immerse the building in a composition of light and sound. 
The proposal, scheduled for this fall, would be a collaboration between Luftwerk designs Petra Bachmaier and Sean Gallero and video designer and Livius Pasara and percussionist and composer Clayton Condon.  The team also created Celebrating 75 Years of Nature at Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater and 2012's Luminous Field, which brought relief to a cold Chicago winter with color, light and sound centered on Anish Kapoor's Cloud Gate sculpture in Millennium Park.  This past February, Luftwerk's Spring Light brought color and pattern to the facade of the Chicago Cultural Center and the skaters at Millennium Park.
The Luftwerk designs describe Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth house “a space mirrored upon itself. As the projected light travelled through the glass walls, a myriad of reflections appeared, seemingly expanding the interior.” The INSite lighting project, requiring 10 weatherproofed projects, loudspeakers and a computer, would bring “ a heightened awareness of the house's innate characteristics. It dissolves the structure and distills it into a pure experience of light and space. It becomes an architecture of light.”

As of Wednesday morning, Luftwerk's INsite campaign was about 3/5 towards its $25,000 goal, from a total of 102 contributors.  The project will only be funded if the full goal is reached by 7:01 a.m., this Saturday, May 31st.  You can read more - and contribute - here.

Luftwork's illuminations are not only a mesmerizing, but they encourage us to see their subject structures in new and revealing way.  INsite would come at a crucial time for Farnsworth, which is struggling to cope with a series of devastating floods that are becoming far more common than the historical record would indicate.

Saving Farnsworth House subject of two Town Hall Meetings this week
The National Trust for Historic Preservation, which saved Farnsworth House for the public when it purchased it at auction in 2003, has initiated a Flood Mitigation Project and worked with architects, engineers, critics, DOCOMOMO, AIA, and other activists to come up with three proposals to remove the iconic house from future harm, from moving the structure to higher ground atop landfill, to raising it up on hydraulic lifts.

Those proposals will be the subject of two public meetings.  The first takes place this Thursday, May 29th, at the Mies designed Crown Hall on the IIT campus.  The second is mid-day Friday, May 30th at the Plano Community Public Library, not far from the house, itself.


Read More:
 新年快樂! Architecture as Canvas: Luftwerks takes over Cultural Center Facade to celebrate Chinese New Year in Chicago 
 Farnsworth House Flood Mitigation Project website
Glass House Struck by Gavel - the History and Saving of Farnsworth House
The Little Farmhouse that Roared: Cycles of time at Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House

Wednesday, May 09, 2012

The Little Farmhouse that Roared: Cycles of time at Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House

In a story published a couple years ago in the British tabloid The Daily Mail about the legal travails of Lord Peter Palumbo, reference was made to one of his global collection of homes, "a historic rural farmhouse near Chicago."

Far from the picture of a rock-walled rustic retreat that this reference might suggest, the domicile in question is, of course, Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House, one of the most iconic structures in the history of modern architecture, now available in Lego.

Completed in 1951, it's shrine-like qualities were derived not only by its unmistakable posture and the trespassing acolytes it drew, braving the hawk-like gaze of the house's owner tracking their every move through binoculars, but by its isolation, 55 miles southwest of Chicago, on a wooded, 60-acre site overlooking the Fox River. 

The radical genius of Mie's glass house is its subversion of the homily of the house as castle.  These were no longer medieval times, or even the late nineteenth century, when the city's industrialists often secreted themselves in homes that looked like battlements, as security against their fears of violent reprisals from the working class. 

Now it was Eisenhower's America.  The brutal war had been won.  Labor had won its place at the bargaining table, and heated negotiations were now less likely to mean thugs and goons clashing in back alleys than lawyers in pinstripes facing off across a conference table.  It was gestation time for suburban sprawl, and Farnsworth House in Will County was at the country-estate cutting-edge of the great destabilizing waves to come.

“Here I am, Philip, am I indoors or am I out?” gibed Frank Lloyd Wright - whose own buildings tended to shut themselves up from the outside world - when confronted by another famous glass house, the home architect Phillip Johnson had designed for himself in New Canaan, Connecticut.  "Do I take my hat off or keep it on?”

Wright had begun to sour on Mies and his kind of modernism. But in this instance Mies was the one who got it right. “Before you live in a glass house you do not know how colorful nature is,” Mies said. “We should attempt to bring nature, houses, and human beings together in a higher unity.”  All those uninvited pilgrims never got the real story. You don't get the true experience of Farnsworth by looking in, but by looking out. This is the realization of an organic architecture  The border between the man-made and the works of nature dissolves to "almost nothing," and polar opposites reform as a single, flowing continuity.

Mies made no secret of thinking great architecture was the expression of the technology of its time, and so his architecture combined the lightness and strength of materials like steel and glass.  Yet, Mies was not only appreciative of nature, landscape was an integral part of his designs, working with masters such as Alfred Caldwell, for the design of the IIT campus.  Mies's drawings of trees are highly distinctive, to the point where Petra Blaisse incorporated them, full-size, in the 30-foot draperies she designed for Rem Koolhaas's IIT McCormick Tribune Student Center.
click images for larger view
At Farnsworth, Mies made sure there was a sweeping, sturdy Black Sugar Maple to shade the living spaces.  For over a half century, the great tree did its job well.  It endured, decade after decade, after Mies died in 1969; after Edith Farnsworth, who commissioned the house, died in 1978.  It saw the arrival of Lord Palumbo, and his departure.  Now its time, too, has come.   The long, low branch that reached down like a benediction to cover the house's great porch was lost a couple of years ago.  Just as, in his later years, Mies van der Rohe depended on crutches, the great tree, itself, is now held up by wires.
A great house is both backdrop and participant in the life stories of those who inhabit it.  The story of Farnsworth House is nothing short of an epic.  A tale of creation,  a love story, an affair gone sour, a bitter courtroom battle, floods of biblical proportions,  the threat of dismemberment, a dramatic auction, an unexpected twist, a last second triumph.  All the stuff of high melodrama - what more could a dramatist want?  We wrote our own version of the Farnsworth Saga (sounds like a Masterpiece Theatre series, doesn't it?) back in 2003.  Check it out here.
Farnsworth House is now a public museum, and is open April to November, Tuesday through Sunday - a perfect alternative for when city attractions are shut down for the NATO summit.  From May to October, the Chicago Architecture Foundation offers twice monthly all-day Farnsworth House excursions, buffet lunch included (but probably not cigars or martini's).

Sunday, March 27, 2011

A Birthday Offering for Mies - the debut of The Architects Page

click images for larger views
His birthday was actually on Sunday, but the Mies van der Rohe Society is celebrating the 125th anniversary of the great architect's birth with their annual bash at Crown Hall, Monday, March 28th.  It might not be the blowout of the 1950's student dance where Mies himself sat in his new Crown Hall happily puffing on his cigar as Duke Ellington and his orchestra set the huge panes of glass shaking, but you're still promised you'll be able to . . .
Celebrate the birth of a pioneer in Modern design and learn a little something about the unique characteristics of Mies van der Rohe’s work. Come for the company, stay for the cocktails! Just what are the marks of a Mies design? Wright auction’s Michael Jefferson will talk briefly about collecting the master’s work and will highlight market trends.
The party runs from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m., which leaves plenty of time for bar-crawling through your own more Miesian martini-run afterwards, and perhaps even participate in an all-out bar brawl over the size of the new window stops.  Tickets are $50.00, or $125.00 including a one-year membership in the Society, and will be available at the door.  A larger contribution, and maybe they'll let you operate the Crown Hall air vents that Ludwig Hilberseimer made it his job to open and close each day.  For more information, call 312/567.5030.
For our own celebration, we've launched The Architects Page: Mies van der Rohe, the first of what we expect will be a series of landing pages for important designers.  It's a collection of links to major articles I've done on Mies at IIT, the restoration of Crown Hall, the story of Farnsworth House and the battle to save it, and more, including links to books, websites, and even a brief video of Mies himself explaining the origin of a very famous phrase.   Plus a gallery of photographs.  Check it all out here.