October 01, 2013

RICHARD ROGERS AT ROYAL ACADEMY OF ARTS BURLINGTON GARDENS




RICHARD ROGERS RA: INSIDE OUT
ROYAL ACADEMY OF ARTS BURLINGTON GARDENS
CURATOR JEREMY MELVIN
18 July 2013 – 13 October 2013




RICHARD ROGERS RA: INSIDE OUT
ROYAL ACADEMY OF ARTS BURLINGTON GARDENS
CURATOR JEREMY MELVIN
18 July 2013 – 13 October 2013
Richard Rogers RA: Inside Out will explore the ideas and ethos of the internationally renowned architect and urbanist Lord Rogers of Riverside. Timed to coincide with Rogers’ 80th birthday, the exhibition will examine his social, political and cultural influences and their connection to his architecture. Previously unseen original material, drawings and personal items, will present a unique insight into the thinking behind one of the world’s most celebrated architects. Richard Rogers RA: Inside Out will be held in Burlington Gardens, the Royal Academy’s new venue for contemporary art and architecture. The exhibition will draw on key stages in Rogers’ life, from the influence of his Italian family, his experience of wartime and post-war Britain, his education at the Architectural Association and Yale, and the impact of seeing new American architecture and technology. Visitors will be introduced to Rogers’ principles through the presentation of major projects and collaborations, revealing his pioneering ideas about architecture and his belief in the need to create vibrant cities for everyone.
Rogers has consistently worked with themes that are far wider than conventional architectural thinking, articulating them as a spokesperson, writer, politician and activist, as well as an architect. For over half a century, Rogers has advocated the social objectives of architecture, the importance of public space, urban regeneration and better planning, through innovative design. He has played a pivotal role in master-planning and shaping government policy on urban development, believing that architecture is the most powerful agent for social change.
A number of high-profile projects that incorporate Rogers’ architectural principles will be showcased. These will include the Centre Pompidou, designed with Renzo Piano and still considered one of the most radical modern buildings since its opening in 1977, the Grade 1 listed headquarters for Lloyd’s of London, and the Bordeaux Law Courts. Through these projects Rogers has established himself and his practice, Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, as standing at the forefront of the architecture industry.
The exhibition will bring together the far reaching effects that Rogers’ interest in the politics of social justice has had on architecture and public policy.
Richard Rogers comments, “For almost 300 years the Royal Academy has been at the heart of London’s artistic life, acting as a crucible for vital critical discourse and as one of the world’s leading exhibition spaces. I am delighted to have worked alongside the Royal Academy to hold this exhibition. I believe history judges us on the physical and social quality of our cities, and this exhibition aims to explore the role of architecture both as a physical discipline and as a framework to interpret our wider society.”
A series of debates, discussions and an innovative events and educational programme will support Richard Rogers RA: Inside Out. Focusing on urban design issues, contributors will include leading architects, politicians and artists. Many of the events and activities accompanying the exhibition will take place in a public space specially created inside the exhibition.
ORGANISATION
Richard Rogers RA: Inside Out is organised by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners (RSH-P) and the Royal Academy of Arts. The exhibition has been curated by Jeremy Melvin, Consultant Curator for Architecture, Royal Academy of Arts. The exhibition is designed by Ab Rogers Design with graphics by Graphic Thought Facility.

I had quoted some photographs from dezeen web page. You may reach the news to click above both links of Royal Academy of Arts web page and Dezeen web page to watch video from the exhibition. 
















ZIP – UP HOUSE COURTESY OF RICHARD ROGERS








CENTRE POMPIDOU








CENTRE POMPIDOU ELEVATION FROM THE COMPETITION




CENTRE POMPIDOU PHOTO BY KATSUHISA KIDA




ESCALATORS OF THE CENTRE POMPIDOU




CENTRE POMPIDOU PHOTO BY DAVID NOBLE






The key theme of the exhibition, Rogers explains, is social responsibility.
"We've decided to call the exhibition Inside Out, partly because I often put structure and ducts on the outside of buildings," he says.
"But the real title is Ethos. The idea is that we have a responsibility to society. And that gives us a role as architects that is more than just answering the client but also to answer the passerby and society as a whole."
Richard Rogers














ABOUT THE ROYAL ACADEMY OF ARTS AND BURLINGTON GARDENS
The Royal Academy of Arts was founded by George III in 1768. It has a unique position in being an independent, privately funded institution led by eminent artists and architects. Its public programme promotes the creation, enjoyment and appreciation of the visual arts through exhibitions, education and debate. 6 Burlington Gardens was designed by Sir James Pennethorne (1801-1871) and opened
by Queen Victoria in 1870 as the Senate House of the University of London. The Royal Academy of Arts has received initial support from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF). This consists of £458,700 development funding towards a £12.7m HLF bid for The Burlington Project, ‘Revealing, Celebrating and Exploring the Heritage of the Royal Academy of Arts’.





































CURATOR JEREMY MELVIN






NEW AREA TERMINAL MADRID AIRPORT PHOTO BY MANUEL RENAU






















WIMBLEDON HOUSE SKETCH




WIMBLEDON HOUSE PHOTO BY RICHARD BRYANT




Rogers goes on to explain that he believes that good architecture is the result of teamwork, rather than one person's vision.
"I work very much with colleagues, with friends," he says. "Architecture is about teams. The idea that you suddenly wake up and do a sketch is not true. The only time I do that, I usually wake up with a hangover the next morning."

Richard Rogers










THE ROOM AT LLOYD’S OF LONDON PHOTO BY JANET GILL










RICHARD ROGERS’ S OFFICE










RICHARD ROGERS
ROGERS STIRK HARBOUR + PARTNERS ( RSHP )
Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners (RSHP) is an international architectural practice based in London. Over three decades, RSHP has attracted critical acclaim and awards with built projects across Europe, North America and Asia. The practice is experienced in designing a wide range of building types including: office, residential, transport, education, culture, leisure, retail, civic and healthcare. The quality of its designs has been recognised with some of architecture’s highest awards, including two RIBA Stirling Prizes, one in 2006 for Terminal 4, Madrid Barajas Airport and the other in 2009 for Maggie’s London.
RSHP employs around 200 people, including 9 Partners, 10 Associate Partners and 57 Associates, in offices across the world – London, Sydney and Shanghai. A ‘Think Tank’ philosophy is employed at every level, to enable design and management leaders to collaborate and contribute their individual expertise. Weekly meetings – open to all employees – provide a vital forum for discussion of current competitions and on-going projects, as well as a platform for creativity and new solutions appropriate to each design. This ‘collegiate’ approach to the work of the practice is embodied in a constitution that consciously brings a moral dimension to our work and takes the form of, among other initiatives, a staff profit-sharing scheme and significant contributions to charity, with staff members nominating the charities of their choice.
RSHP Chairman, Richard Rogers, is the 2007 Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureate, winner of the 2000 Praemium Imperiale Prize for Architecture and the recipient of the RIBA Gold Medal in 1985. Richard was awarded the Légion d’Honneur in 1986, knighted in 1991 and made a life peer in 1996. He was Chief Advisor on Architecture and Urbanism to the former Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone and has played an advisory role on design to the current Mayor of London, Boris Johnson. He has acted as Chairman of the British Government’s Urban Task Force and was a member of the Mayor of Barcelona’s Urban Strategies Advisory Council.
Richard Rogers Partnership became Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners in 2007 to reflect the growing importance of two of the younger Partners, Graham Stirk and Ivan Harbour, and their role alongside Richard Rogers in the practice’s future. Together with other long-standing Partners, Stirk and Harbour represent the inherent continuity and consistency of the philosophy which the practice applies to all its work. The name change also demonstrates the practice’s confidence in its ability to continue to meet those challenges still to come.
Principles
Over three decades, RSHP (formerly Richard Rogers Partnership) has evolved a set of core principles that guide all our work:
CITY & CONTEXT
At RSHP, we believe that cities are the physical framework of our society, the generator of civil values, the engine of our economy and the heart of our culture. Compact, multi-centred cities are the only environmentally sustainable form of urban development for future generations. They are a rational and economical way of creating human settlements that offer a high quality of life.
PUBLIC REALM
Public space between buildings influences both the built form and the civic quality of the city, be they streets, squares or parks. A balance between the public and private domain is central to the practice's design approach. Buildings and their surrounding spaces should interrelate and define one another, with external spaces functioning as rooms without roofs.
LEGIBILITY
Work, leisure and domestic activities are becoming interchangeable, leading to the creation of open-ended, flexible structures. The structure of buildings set the scale, form and rhythm of the architectural environment, within which change and improvisation can take place. The practice searches for a more subtle world between solid and transparent, a sequence of spaces where the eye is led through overlapping strata, where light and shadow enhance the impression of transparency.
FLEXBILITY
Today's buildings are more like evolving landscapes than classical temples in which nothing can be added and nothing can be removed. Open ended, adaptable frameworks with large, well-serviced and well-lit floors, on the other hand, offer the possibility for a long life span for the building and a variety of possible uses.
ENERGY
It has become clear that the risk associated with climate change will pose serious challenges to society. Buildings, neighbourhoods and cities should be designed to minimise pollution and carbon emissions. This implies not only using renewable energy sources (including wind, sun and water), but designing energy efficient buildings and masterplans that encourage vegetation and biodiversity.
TEAM WORK
RSHP believes that a strong social vision is the driving force behind a happy and productive workforce, which is critical for the development of a sustainable civil society. With this in mind the practice has produced a constitution that enshrines ideas about community, teamwork, equity, collaboration and social responsibility.