Todd Saunders has just inaugurated the first cabanon of the Residency Program curated
by The Fogo Island Arts Corporation – Shorefast Arts Foundation.
Fogo Island, population 2,700, lies
about 20 kilometres northeast of the
island of Newfoundland, the vast
and scarcely populated easternmost
region of a vast and scarcely populated
nation. As the result of a pioneering
experiment that took place
there in 1967, it is best known among
anthropologists and social scientists
as the namesake of the Fogo Process,
a practice that uses media technology
as a tool in participatory community
development. Its originators,
Donald Snowden and Colin Low,
demonstrated that the process of
community-based film production
could be instrumental in assisting
communities in coming to terms with
conditions of social malaise resulting
from isolation, a lack of infrastructure
and an economy imperilled by
the waning fishing industry.
It might seem like an unusual candidate
to the title of habitual location for
experiments in social improvement
through arts and media, yet today
Fogo Island is the site of another
social experiment that employs a very
different medium yet shares some
of the characteristics of Snowden's
film-based process. In 2001 Zita
Cobb, a native Newfoundlander and
a high-ranking officer in a publicly
traded tech company, retired from
her position to begin her own struggle,
34 years after Donald Snowden's experiment, against Fogo's creeping
indigence and seemingly unarrestable
depopulation. Having accumulated
considerable wealth through
industrial entrepreneurship, she
and her brothers Tony and Alan
assembled a team that came up with
a simple idea: to apply the same principles
of investment-based development
to Fogo Island and its communities,
in an attempt to rebuild
its economy by transforming it into
a rural epicentre for artistic production
of an international calibre.
The creation of a foundation and the architectural infrastructure for
a residency programme, according
to the Cobb plan, could attract wellknown
artists; the international visibility
derived from the programme
would bring high-end tourist dollars;
tourism would create jobs, and the
island's economy would rebound. It
is a process Cobb refers to as "social
entrepreneurship".
After the establishment of the Fogo
Island Arts Corporation itself, the
first step in the realisation of their
vision was the creation of a plan.
The decision to opt for a master
plan – as opposed to a single design
– represents a key feature of the definition
of the project's objectives: the
default manifestation of the arts centre,
i.e. a single, iconic, predictably
monumental edifice, was ruled out
from the start. In its place, a range
of sites scattered across the island
were identified; each would host a
portion of the art centre's programs,
allowing the Arts Corporation and its
resident guests to exist as a capillary
network tightly interwoven with the
daily lives of the local community.
A five-star inn, meanwhile, would
accommodate a high-yield stream of
well-endowed visitors.
Conceptually, the plan resonates with
Cedric Price's Potteries Thinkbelt:
it proposes a fluid and at least partially
indeterminate model, in which
cultural and artistic programs are
understood as instruments for the revitalisation of landscapes indelibly
marked by their association with an
industry in decline. It was clear from
the outset that a particular architectural
sensibility is required to engage
a social and geographical ecology
as fragile and severe as that of Fogo
Island, the Cobbs and their team
sensed that such empathy was to be
found in Todd Saunders, a Canadian
who has lived and worked in Norway
since 1997. The initial assignment the
architect received was to design six
studios for artists and writers in residence,
ranging in size from 20 m2 to
120 m2, as well as a five-star inn.
The first of these, the Long Studio,
was completed in May 2010. The
location offers as spectacular a backdrop
as any architect could wish for:
an isolated promontory, where foaming
breakers incessantly roll in from
the Atlantic and crash thunderously
on boulders just a stone's throw from
the site. No road leads here – a tenminute
walk from the point where
the nearest track ends ensures utter
isolation, both physical and mental.
In Saunders's design, this isolation
is offered a point of focus. The proportions
of the studio are linear, and
project the occupant towards the
Atlantic via an obliquely-slanted, fullheight
window that frames the horizon
or the shoreline, depending on
one's position within the building.
In all three studios, Saunders samples
or alludes to local construction
techniques: the pine-wood shell that
cites the clapboard of the "outports",
or local fishermen's houses; the pile
construction of Newfoundland's
waterfront huts; the proportions of
the volumes, particularly in the case
of the smaller studios. There is a risk,
in a context of such pronounced
isolation, that angular geometries
such as those that define the Long
Studio might appear as gratuitous
formal gestures; instead, the overall
simplicity of the concept – a spare,
open-space interior overlooking
the shoreline, plus a semi-enclosed
terrace area protected from the sea
breeze, enclosed in the elementary
form of a box – results in an architectural
entity that is both sober and
dynamic, bold yet not estranged
from its setting.
Long Studio, Joe Batt's Arm, Fogo Island, Canada
Architect: Saunders Architecture
Design team: Todd Saunders
with Ryan Jørgensen, Attila Berés, Colin
Hertberger, Cristina Maier, Olivier Bourgeois,
Pål Storsveen
Associate Architects: Sheppard Case Architects
Structural engineering:
DBA Consulting Engineers
Mechanical and electrical engineering:
Core Engineering Inc.
On-site supervisor: Dave Torraville
Building contractor: Arthur Payne,
Edward Waterman
Client: Shorefast Foundation,
The Fogo Island Arts Corporation
Total footprint area: 211 sqm
Design phase:
2008 – 2009
Construction phase:
2009 – 2010
An architectural archipelago
Off the Canadian coast of Newfoundland, there is an island that wants to become a privileged place for the production of contemporary art.
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- Joseph Grima
- 22 July 2010
- Fogo Island