As we were always impressed by people working for their community to make places better ones and to improve quality, education and health for others we’ll never forget a lecture held by Francis Kéré a couple of years ago in Piran (Piran Days of Architecture). Coming from Burkina Faso, one of the poorest countries in the world, Francis in the meantime grew a lot with his studio located in Berlin, Germany from where he works on projects in Europe as well as Burkina Faso .
A couple of years later we met Dario, President of the Building Peace Foundation who’s aim is to help and to support Syrian refugees in Jordan. The Zaatari Camp, the biggest camp in the world with more than 80.000 refugees.
Dario is involved in helping refugees and Francis tries to support his country of origin…what do they have in common? Ideas? Questions? Unsolved situations?
OK, there are many people trying to help in their ways but for us it’s the first time to really get in touch with who’s really involved and who knows how the situation is really there. In our last post we mentioned the Vienna based exhibition In the End: Architecture where a project of the Foundation is featured and the upcoming exhibition about Francis Kéré in Munich brought us to the point that we definitely should bring them together for an exchange of their personal and professional experience and to figure out how to get involved as Architect and Friends. It’s definitely worth it and we do hope to get in touch and to bring these two great guys together…more to follow!
About the upcoming exhibition:
FRANCIS KÉRÉ. RADICALLY SIMPLE
17. NOVEMBER 2016 – 26. MARCH 2017
The architect Francis Kéré, born in Burkina Faso and based in Berlin since 2005, is a leading figure in socially engaged building design. He won the internationally prestigious Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 2004 for his very first building, a primary school he designed in his home village of Gando, Burkina Faso. Kéré’s design received the award for its remarkable success in combining socially engaged and ecological design. The award heralded a series of building projects and architectural prizes. Within Africa, he has become an important role model for the coming generation through his commitment to combining ethical and aesthetic principles. In Germany, he is well known for his work with the director Christoph Schlingensief on the Opera Village in Burkina Faso in 2009.
The Architekturmuseum der TU München presents »Francis Kéré. Radically Simple«, the most comprehensive exhibition yet on Kéré’s work, covering both his completed designs and his ongoing projects. In addition to the buildings that he planned and realized in his home village of Gando, the exhibition displays his buildings in Africa and China, as well as his projects and designs in Germany, where he won two urban-planning competitions. The exhibition guides visitors through the unique personal and professional life-journey of the architect. In the architecture scene, Kéré is one of the exceptional talents working in the field today because he has succeeded in taking both the strong cultural influences of his home country and the experiences he accrued while studying at the TU Berlin in Germany and translating them into a new, third way.
The show also dedicates space to Kéré’s extensive exhibition activities, comprising contributions and competition entries in London, Humlebæk, Milan, Bordeaux, Chicago, Weil am Rhein, Philadelphia and Venice. Through his powerful, sensory installations, Francis Kéré succeeds in transposing the basic principles of his work to a museum context. It is his smart use of local resources and his deep respect for cultural practice that make his designs and executed projects so relevant and convincing. He specifically created the exhibition design for the exhibition at the Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich in order to create a unique experience for the visitor.
The photographer and video artist Daniel Schwartz has created many new images and videos of previously unpublished works for the exhibition, which now allow for a vivid and immediate encounter with the works of Francis Kéré, which are mostly located in geographically remote places. The curator of the exhibition is Ayça Beygo, who developed the concept for the exhibition in close collaboration together with the architectural practice Kéré Architecture.
Alongside the exhibition, the first catalogue documenting all of Kéré’s previous works and projects will be published by Hatje Cantz, including contributions from Lesley Lokko, Kerstin Pinther and Peter Herrle. An extensive events programme to accompany the exhibition is currently in the planning stages.
The exhibition has been supported by PIN. Freunde der Pinakothek der Moderne e.V., the Förderverein des Architekturmuseums der TU München and SIEDLE.
17. NOVEMBER 2016 – 26. MARCH 2017
Exhibition:
Pinakothek der Moderne
Barer Straße 40
80333 Munich
Opening times:
Tu – Su 10am – 18pm
Th 10am – 20pm
Images: architekturmuseum.de