– The little chapel by S-AR in Santiago features 1200 bricks attached to a metallic structure, but without binding between them, so they practically appear to float.
– The law court designed by Taller de Arquitectura in Pátzcuaro, Mexico, features an oval wall, allowing that inside of it there are placed a succession of open gardens.
– The solo exhibition at the 21er Haus, Vienna, comprises upwards of 40 sculptures and new works by Erwin Wurm, while the Upper Belvedere hosts one of his famous fat houses.
– True to Fondation Martell’s aesthetic of transparency and openness, SelgasCano constructed a pavilion in Cognac, France, from a metal framework covered by a translucent material.
– Allowing a closer experience of the pine forest, the house designed by Luciano Kruk in Costa Esmeralda, Argentina, establish a fluid relation between the inner spaces and the exterior.
– Immersed within the the olive trees on the Halkidiki hills in Greece, the small hut by Eva Sopeoglou is a sustainable retreat in harmony with its surrounding nature.
– The book published by Spector Books brings to light the imagination of Frei Otto with a narrative told through contemporary and archive photographic images.
– Product design meets fine leather-making with the glove clutch designed by Zaha Hadid Design and Perrin Paris: a small handbag fixed on your hand that recalls a sword guard.
– Palermo Atlas: the urban study by OMA serves both as a blueprint for Palermo and as a research framework to ensure that Manifesta 12 achieves a long-term impact for the city.
– The Cartoonmuseum Basel is honouring Christoph Niemann with a solo exhibition, which comprises 120+ original drawings, prints, adapted photographs and animations.
Top: Erwin Wurm, Fat House, 2003. © Belvedere, Vienna. Photo Johannes Stoll / © Bildrecht, Vienna, 2017