Displaying architecture in a gallery is
always a challenge. This is especially true with a building still under
construction. And even more so when that building is Taiwan ’s
National Taichung Theater—unarguably Tokyo
architect Toyo Ito’s most ambitious project to date. Taking Ito’s structural
know-how and spatial ingenuity to new limits, this extraordinary complex
appears as a rectangular block. But contained within is a spectacular 3D grid
of tubular voids hinted at by the hourglass-shaped cutouts that define the
elevations. Expanding and contracting, the hollows accommodate the various
programmatic pieces, including a 2014-seat theater, an 800-seat theater, and a
200-seat black box. Slated for a grand opening in November 2015, the design and
construction of this important work is the subject of TOTO Gallery MA’s latest
exhibition titled The Making of the Taichung Metropolitan Opera House
2005-2014. (Built by the Taichung City Government, Republic of China (Taiwan ), the building was renamed
the National Taichung Theater shortly before the exhibit opened.)
The building began in 2005 when Ito was
awarded its commission after winning an international competition. But the
exhibition opens with Ito’s earlier competition entry for the Forum for Music,
Dance and Visual Culture in Ghent ,
Belgium . In
response to the medieval city’s poche-style urbanism, he proposed a boxy volume
and carved out the needed spaces. Though his idea did not succeed in Belgium , it
wooed the jury overseeing the Taiwanese competition and is the starting point
of the Gallery MA show.
Mounted chronologically on the walls of the
gallery’s lower level, drawings and photos document the complex’s initial
development, while study models in the middle of the room are evidence of the
trial and error approach necessitated by Ito’s unique architecture. Upstairs,
the gallery turns its attention to construction via video commentaries and
photo essays. But the most of effective means of explaining Ito’s architecture
is the 360-degree, virtual site visit.
Donning a programmed headset transports the
viewer to the heart of the building as it is taking shape. A tilt of the head
in one direction orients the eye towards a shadowy recess, while leaning in
another unveils a cavernous room. Here skin and structure become one and
floors, walls, and ceiling merge into a single, but complexly, curving surface.
Both primordial and futuristic, the interior morphs continuously, like a
dreamscape come to life.
Unsurprisingly, the nuts and bolts
construction is one of the most curious aspects of this building. Offering a
behind-the-scenes look is the full-scale mock up of a wall section displayed in
Gallery MA’s exterior terrace. It illustrates the walls’ assembly by revealing
an elaborate web of rebar bent by hand that functions as a three-dimensional
truss. This is covered with metal mesh and finally topped with a smooth coating
of concrete, completely concealing all of these intricate underpinnings. On its
own, the fragment resembles an abstract sculpture, but its bold shape enables
the viewer to imagine how the walls’ irregular geometry will mold the interior
space.
Considering the theater’s unconventional
form and construction, the displays are pretty conventional by and large. But
they succeed in building expectation and excitement for what shows signs of
becoming a masterpiece.
structural
know-how: 結構知識
spatial
ingenuity: 空間智慧
3D grid of tubular voids : 3D網狀格子(網格
hourglass-shaped:
沙漏狀
programmatic:
綱領性
Belgium:
比利時
Woo: 拉攏
nuts
and bolts construction: 螺母和螺栓建設
exterior:
外觀
terrace:
陽台
What: National Taichung Theater
When: 23
November 2014
Who: Toyo
Ito
Where: Taichung City
Why:
How:
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