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PIN-UP 32. The Architecture of Art. Spring/Summer 2022 | PinUp magazine

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PIN-UP 32. THE ARCHITECTURE OF ART

Spring/Summer 2022

Uitgever:PIN-UP

  • Paperback
  • Engels
  • 256 pagina's
  • 1 jun. 2022

PIN–UP magazine captures an architectural spirit rather than focusing on technical details of design.

What is art? Where does it come from? And how and where is it shown? PIN–UP 32 is entirely dedicated to the architecture of art, from labor policies, to curatorial practices, to the physical context in which things are viewed. On the cover: a 1:10 model of artist Wolfgang Tillmans’s first exhibition in New York City in 1994.

Featuring:

DOUGLAS CARDINAL
The Canadian First Nation architect creates work informed by the indigenous values he was raised with
Interview by Whitney Mallett
Portraits by Yang Shi

HENRIKE NAUMANN
The Berlin-based artist uses the language of domestic interiors to express the complexities of political ideology
Interview by Victoria Camblin
Portraits by Nadine Fraczkowski

SABINE MARCELIS
The Dutch snowboarder turned designer’s shiny objects defy strict typologies of furniture design
Interview by Felix Burrichter
Portraits by Ari Versluis

ALSO IN THE ISSUE:

Wolfgang Tillmans tours his collection of 1:10 exhibition models. Thelma Golden discusses the importance of creating Black spaces. Christine Binswanger and Kathy Halbreich talk about Herzog & de Meuron's years of art experience. Designer Jonathan Muecke claims to make the same objects over and over again. Artists Lap-See LamSer Serpas, and Wang Shui complicate the physicality of space. Odd Matter pay tribute to the beaches of Corsica. Trevor McFedries and Dena Yago's attempt at explaining the architecture of the decentralized web. Curator Jordan Carter makes a case for two-dimensional architecture. Seoul's Cava Life discovers a new crop of designers. Architect Enzo Valerio praises in the benefits of hands-on architecture. Anonymous stage an institutional coup. Esther Choi, Durga Chew-Bose, and Paul Johnson spill their wisdoms. And lots of jewelry, glassware, sofas, and pretty leather loungers.

ALSO: Alice Bucknell on the architecture of game space.

PLUS: rediscovering Aldo Rossi; re-appreciating James Rose; and reclaiming outsider architecture by the likes of Bruno WeberFacteur Cheval, and Isaiah Zagar. And a pit stop at Dior in Paris.

PIN-UP is interviewing architects, designers, and artists, and presenting work as an informal work in progress, a fun assembly of ideas, stories and conversations paired with cutting-edge photography and artwork. Both raw and glossy, the magazine is a nimble mix of genres and themes, finding inspiration in the high and the low by casting a refreshingly playful eye on rare architectural gems, amazing interiors, smart design, and that fascinating area where these areas connect with contemporary art. In short, PIN–UP is pure architectural entertainment!

PIN–UP magazine captures an architectural spirit rather than focusing on technical details of design.

What is art? Where does it come from? And how and where is it shown? PIN–UP 32 is entirely dedicated to the architecture of art, from labor policies, to curatorial practices, to the physical context in which things are viewed. On the cover: a 1:10 model of artist Wolfgang Tillmans’s first exhibition in New York City in 1994.

Featuring:

DOUGLAS CARDINAL
The Canadian First Nation architect creates work informed by the indigenous values he was raised with
Interview by Whitney Mallett
Portraits by Yang Shi

HENRIKE NAUMANN
The Berlin-based artist uses the language of domestic interiors to express the complexities of political ideology
Interview by Victoria Camblin
Portraits by Nadine Fraczkowski

SABINE MARCELIS
The Dutch snowboarder turned designer’s shiny objects defy strict typologies of furniture design
Interview by Felix Burrichter
Portraits by Ari Versluis

ALSO IN THE ISSUE:

Wolfgang Tillmans tours his collection of 1:10 exhibition models. Thelma Golden discusses the importance of creating Black spaces. Christine Binswanger and Kathy Halbreich talk about Herzog & de Meuron's years of art experience. Designer Jonathan Muecke claims to make the same objects over and over again. Artists Lap-See LamSer Serpas, and Wang Shui complicate the physicality of space. Odd Matter pay tribute to the beaches of Corsica. Trevor McFedries and Dena Yago's attempt at explaining the architecture of the decentralized web. Curator Jordan Carter makes a case for two-dimensional architecture. Seoul's Cava Life discovers a new crop of designers. Architect Enzo Valerio praises in the benefits of hands-on architecture. Anonymous stage an institutional coup. Esther Choi, Durga Chew-Bose, and Paul Johnson spill their wisdoms. And lots of jewelry, glassware, sofas, and pretty leather loungers.

ALSO: Alice Bucknell on the architecture of game space.

PLUS: rediscovering Aldo Rossi; re-appreciating James Rose; and reclaiming outsider architecture by the likes of Bruno WeberFacteur Cheval, and Isaiah Zagar. And a pit stop at Dior in Paris.

PIN-UP is interviewing architects, designers, and artists, and presenting work as an informal work in progress, a fun assembly of ideas, stories and conversations paired with cutting-edge photography and artwork. Both raw and glossy, the magazine is a nimble mix of genres and themes, finding inspiration in the high and the low by casting a refreshingly playful eye on rare architectural gems, amazing interiors, smart design, and that fascinating area where these areas connect with contemporary art. In short, PIN–UP is pure architectural entertainment!

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