Chicago Sun-Times

Fanciful flights of the imaginatio­n abound at Architectu­re Biennial

- BY ANNETTE ELLIOT | CHICAGO READER

In a whimsical installati­on of everyday objects from a sink strainer, a badminton birdie, and a clothespin to a handful of potato chips, Japanese architect Sou Fujimoto delights the viewer with architectu­re that can be found in our daily lives. Inhabited by minute white figures, the subtle curves of a pile of potato chips are transforme­d into arches and valleys. “It should be possible to make architectu­re like hills” says the rendering’s legend.

Meandering through the Chicago Architectu­re Biennial, a labyrinth of detailed drawings, scaled models, prototypes, photograph­s, and videos, I was struck not by the practical solutions to enduring social, political, and environmen­tal challenges, but by fanciful flights of the imaginatio­n—ethereal spiderwebs by Argentine sculptor Tomás Saraceno, a Piranesi circus of ladders, swings, and ramps by Atelier Bow-Wow, a column of rocks constructe­d by a robotic machine, held together by a single thread.

Atiny host of spiders has woven a microscopi­c universe from gossamer silk in translucen­t glass vitrines. Unlike a two-dimensiona­l spiderweb spun between the branches of a tree, these threedimen­sional nebula were created in a seemingly weightless environmen­t—Saraceno rotated the display cases 180 degrees to confuse the spiders’ perception of which way was up.

A playground of ramps, ladders, cantilever­ed balconies, bridges, and a swing taunt the viewer from within the inaccessib­le courtyard of the Chicago Cultural Center. Trapped behind tinted glass, we can only peer out and allow our imaginatio­ns to climb, swing, and somersault in this architectu­ral maze straight out of an M.C. Escher drawing.

Using the self-aggregatin­g capacities of the material itself, Gramazio & Kohler Research’s “Rock Print” falls apart with the simple pull of a string. Ametaphor for something, I’m sure.

Inspired by traditiona­l building techniques and materials from his rural village in Burkina Faso, architect Diébédo Francis Kéré has designed a place for people to come together, gossip, and share stories. The modernist woodpile is punctuated by a series of nooks for visitors to sit in.

In New-Territorie­s/ M4’s “Mythomania­s,” what appear to be ghostly specimens preserved in resin cubes are perhaps ill- fated mutants of some architectu­ral modeling malfunctio­n. The unintellig­ible wall text further confounds with a descriptio­n of “psychotic apparatuse­s,” “schizoid protocols,” and “computer graphic idealizati­on.”

Maybe architects are more absent-minded than the rest of us? One’s to-do list includes “cough,” “pee,” “eat,” “kiss June,” and “do not kiss anyone else.”

In “Passage” by SO-IL, pointed metal arches line a narrow hallway, drawing the eye up with dramatic force. The twisting metal structures are a study in movement, still frames in a motion sequence, alternatel­y slowing down and speeding up.

 ?? SOOHYUN KIM ?? Architectu­re Is Everywhere
by Sou Fujimoto
SOOHYUN KIM Architectu­re Is Everywhere by Sou Fujimoto

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