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Swissness Applied

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Swissness Applied

January 9, 2020 - February 5, 2020

Swissness Applied @ Yale Architecture

Swissness Applied is a traveling exhibition by Swiss­-born architect Nicole McIntosh, co­founder of Architecture Office. The third iteration of the exhibition will be on view at Yale Architecture Gallery in New Haven, Connecticut from January 9 – February 15, 2020.

Consisting of both documentation and original architectural explorations, Swissness Applied is part of a larger research project that focuses on the transformation of European immigrant towns in the United States, all of whom share the common aspiration of preserving and perpetuating the architecture of their cultural heritage. The project contributes to the ongoing discussion on the role of imagery and appropriation in architecture, urban design and planning.

Spread across the American landscape are enclaves that exude characteristics of their European antecedents. Towns such as: Frankenmuth, Michigan; Solvang, California; or New Glarus, Wisconsin have been appropriated within the American landscape by the immigrants they were founded by (from Germany, Denmark, and Switzerland, respectively). Highly curated, and containing imported historic forms of traditional architectural styles, they exude what we can identify as German, Danish, or Swiss design motifs.

These architectural features have since been codified, both to preserve the old buildings and regulate the aesthetic of new ones. Since 1999, Chapter 118: Building Construction, Article II: Swiss Architectural Theme in New Glarus building code offers guidelines that enforce the use of typical elements of the Swiss Chalet style. Using illustrations in seven picture books, and a collection of 41 photographs and postcards as examples, the code references a variety of traditional chalet styles in the cantons of Switzerland. However, in its entirety, the code and collection of images works to simplify many very distinct versions of “Swissness” in architecture into one composed style that is recognizable as, simply, Swiss. For this reason, New Glarus is a clear example of the generative form of urban mutation that such “theme” towns can produce.

The exhibition Swissness Applied explores New Glarus through architectural drawings, models and photographs, questioning the translation of the cultural image in architecture, and illustrating the consequences of themed building codes through representational means. The exhibition at Yale consists of 42 architectural models in total; 24 of the models in the show document actual buildings evincing Swiss characteristics in New Glarus, and are accompanied by a drawing series. Of these 24, 10 are monochromatic wooden models that represent the buildings and local construction techniques in New Glarus (subtitled Tell No Cabbage), and 14 are paper models built from unfolded front elevations that represent existing buildings’ overall form and shape in New Glarus (subtitled John what Henri). The remaining 18 models are fictional building forms that use the building codes as a way to explore alternative interpretations of Swiss architecture (subtitled It has as long as it has). The fictional models, designed by Architecture Office, remix building elements of Swiss architecture using Swiss­-themed Faller model kits, to exaggerate or re­interpret the same architectural details to produce new associations, and further distill the process of “Swissifying.”

The exhibition is made possible with generous support from the Consulate General of Switzerland in NY, Texas A&M University, Yale Architecture, Yale Architecture Ph.D. Dialogues, Yale MacMillan Center European Studies Council.

Exhibition Opening:  Friday, January 10, 2020, 1:00 PM // Yale Architecture Gallery, 180 York Street, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

Gallery Talk: Thursday, February 13, 2020, 1:00 PM // Yale Architecture Gallery, 180 York Street, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

Panel Discussion – “Image Architecture Place“: Thursday, February 13, 2020, 6:30 PM // Yale Architecture Gallery, 180 York Street, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

Details

Start:
January 9, 2020
End:
February 5, 2020

Venue

Yale Architecture Gallery
180 York Street
New Haven, CT 06511 United States
View Venue Website
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