“What is Co-Dividuality?”, una mostra su architettura giapponese e il rapporto tra pubblico e privato

La mostra al Farm Cultural Park di Favara, in Sicilia, è curata da Salvator-John A. Liotta e Fabienne Louyot e investiga il vasto tema della ridefinizione fra spazio pubblico e privato in Giappone.

“What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park” è una mostra-evento curata dagli architetti Salvator-John A. Liotta e Fabienne Louyot dello studio LAPS Architecture di Parigi. La mostra offre una panoramica sulle share house, investiga il vasto tema della ridefinizione fra spazio pubblico e privato in Giappone e trasforma la galleria d’arte di Farm Cultural Park in una share house. Attraverso una selezione dei progetti dei nomi più importanti dell’architettura giapponese, la mostra delinea quello che i curatori hanno voluto chiamare — in modo retrospettivo — Co-Dividual Architecture: ovvero un’architettura che da una nuova risposta alla pratica del vivere condiviso nell’era del post-individualismo, dei social media e della shared economy.

Img.1 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.2 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.3 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.4 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.5 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.6 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.7 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.8 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.9 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.10 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.11 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.12 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.13 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.14 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.15 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.16 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.17 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.18 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.19 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.20 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.21 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.22 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.23 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.24 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.25 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.26 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017
Img.27 “What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017

L’allestimento della mostra è di grande impatto in quanto per ogni progetto è stato replicato un elemento in scala 1:1 e delle foto dei progetti stampate in grande formato immergono in un’intensa esperienza spaziale. I visitatori possono anche fisicamente partecipare alla nozione di co-dividualità potendo rimanere a dormire nelle capsule-letto progettate da Olga Bagnoli, Clémence Baudson, Nestor Beguin, Yi Tiang, Marco Baccaro e Andrea Sala. Le capsule sono state progettate durante un workshop internazionale di progettazione delle Università di Tokyo, l’Université Libre de Bruxelles e il Politecnico di Milano. Il fatto di potersi risvegliare in una galleria d’arte come fosse una shared house fa si che “What is Co-Dividuality?” sia anche un vero momento per attivare pratiche di partecipazione sperimentali e proporre nuove forme di comunità trasversali.

“What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park”, intallation view, Favara 2017

Divisa in quattro sezioni — Shared House, Private space in Public Buildings, Public Space in Private Buildings e Uncertain Boundaries — la mostra rende chiaro come l’architettura giapponese contemporanea stia dando un contributo a rivelare altre soluzioni abitative di una società post-individualista o meglio dove individuo e comunità sono termini che riscoprono nuove dimensioni, dove il valore dello stare e fare insieme è sempre più una realtà concreta. La mostra offre una panoramica sulla sperimentazione in atto nell’architettura giapponese. Ovvero case tematiche con spazi co-dividuali pensati come risultato di riflessioni progettuali calorose e semplici, divertenti e contemporanee dove i co-inquilini oltre alla loro stanza hanno degli spazi comuni ampi dove praticare il farming urbano, dove dare vita ad una start-up, dove cucinare insieme, dove sperimentare nuove ergonomie spaziali. I progetti —oltre allo spazio domestico— mostrano l’emergere di una commistione multiforme fra sfera pubblica e privata.

KAIT workshop, columns furniture
Alphaville, Koya san Guest House
Alphaville, Koya san Guest House
Ikimono Architect, Tenjinyama Architects
Kengo Kuma
Masuda, Boundary Window Shared House
MNM – Tsuneyama Mio, Shared House
MNM – Tsuneyama Mio, Shared House
MNM – Tsuneyama Mio, Shared House
Naka Architects, Soho
Naruse Inokuma, LT Josai Shared House
Naruse Inokuma, LT Josai Shared House
Shinohara Satoko + Share Yaraicho
Shinohara Satoko + Share Yaraicho
Shinohara Satoko + Share Yaraicho
Suppose Design, book and bed, Tokyo
Suppose House in Buzen
  • What is Co-Dividuality? Japanese Architecture and the Shared House of Farm Cultural Park
  • fino al 20 maggio 2018
  • Salvator-John A. Liotta, Fabienne Louyot
  • Kengo Kuma, Kazuyo Sejima, Ryue Nishizawa, Shigeru Ban, Sou Fujimoto, Satoko Shinohara, Ayano Uchimura, Taichi Kuma, Junya Ishigami, Studio MNM-Mio Tsuneyama, Naka Architects, Ikimono Architects, Alphaville Architects, Suppose Design, Yuri Naruse e Jun Inokuma, Shingo Masuda e Katsuhisa Otsubo
  • Farm Cultural Park
  • Cortile Bentivegna – Sette Cortili, Favara