Site icon Inexhibit

15th Venice Architecture Biennale | Pavilion of Ireland

  • Ireland pavilion Losing my Mind 15th Venice architecture biennale inexhibit 04

    Pavilion of Ireland, Losing myself, installation view, photo © Inexhibit, 2016

    Losing Myself – Ireland Pavilion at the 15th Venice Architecture Biennale

    The Pavilion of Ireland at the Arsenale features an immersive installation that presents the experience gathered by Niall McLaughlin and Yeoryia Manolopoulou when designing the Alzheimer’s Respite Centre in Dublin.

    Yeoryia Manolopoulou and Niall McLaughlin, portraits

    Alzheimer’s Respite Centre, Dublin: View of the Quiet Room Over the Brick Wall © Nick Kane, 2011

    Drawing of the Alzheimer’s Respite Centre © Níall McLaughlin Architects, 2010

    Alzheimer’s is a form of neurodegenerative disease that damage the brain’s synaptic connections, leading to progressively worsening spatial disorientation and loss of short-term memory.

    The installation at the Biennale, part of a larger project entitled Losing Myself, consists of audio recordings and video projections of the plan of the center. Yet, such a plan is well far from usual, and intentionally incoherent.

    Losing myself, installation view, photo © Inexhibit, 2016

    Indeed, the two architects have tried to understand how people with dementia actually perceive the building they stay in.
    Since those persons have a perception spatially limited to their immediate surroundings and temporally restricted to the present, their experience of a building is not unitary, it is fragmented and confused.
    While architects try to create buildings based on organized relationships between spaces and on a coherent scheme, people with dementia “can no longer synthesize their experience to create a stable model of their environment. This produces a fragmentary world”. (from the curators’ presentation)

    Furthermore, people with Alzheimer’s still retain much of their deep memory; consequently, they fill such “voids” in their reconstruction of the environment with images from other places and times, thus creating a kaleidoscopic impression of what for the architects should have been an orderly whole.

    Losing myself, installation view, photo © Inexhibit, 2016

    To redraw such kind of fragmented experience by the inhabitants of the center, Niall McLaughlin Architects and Yeoryia Manolopoulou created a mosaic of 16 video projections, each reproducing the vision of the plan of their building as seen by one among 16 inhabitants suffering from dementia. Inevitably, the installation questions the idea of architecture, and of its representation, as the logical outcome of a coherent and deterministic conceptual process.

     

    Polyphony (Video Still), 2016

    Drawing Layers © Yeoryia Manolopoulou and Níall McLaughlin, 2016

    Losing myself, installation views, photo © Inexhibit, 2016

    Losing Myself is a collaboration between Niall McLaughlin Architects and Yeoryia Manolopoulou of AY Architects

    Exit mobile version