Art & Culture

All you need to know about this year's Serpentine Pavilion

Words by Clare Dowdy

29 June 2020

Image

This summer, Kensington Gardens’ Serpentine Gallery has a new neighbour: a vast, sloping slate roof on stilts. It’s the vision of Junya Ishigami for this year’s Serpentine Pavilion in London – a commission given annually to an architect who has not yet built in the UK. The first went to Zaha Hadid in 2000, so Ishigami, who undiscovered outside the architecture world, is in good company.

Ishigami’s pavilion is informed by the natural world. This ties in with the Serpentine’s ‘general ecology’ strand, which the Serpentine Galleries director Hans Ulrich Obrist describes as “an ongoing investigation into complex systems, interspecies landscapes and the environment”.

Ishigami, who is based in Tokyo, likens his pavilion to a hill made of rocks. The single canopy slate roof will look as if it has come out of the ground on one side, while the other is raised high on svelte columns. “Possessing the weighty presence of slate roofs seen around the world, and simultaneously appearing so light it could blow away in the breeze, the cluster of scattered rock levitates, like a billowing piece of fabric,” he says.

The 45-year-old architect set up Junya Ishigami + Associates in 2004, after leaving Pritzker Prize-winning studio SANAA, who created 2009’s Serpentine Pavilion. His highly experimental work - which interprets traditional architectural conventions and reflects natural phenomena, often giving them dream-like qualities - borders on art.

Such completed projects include a kindergarten with cloud-shaped walls in the Japanese city of Atsugi, which won the Golden Lion at the 2010 Venice Architecture Biennale. Meanwhile, his KAIT Workshop for Tokyo’s Kanagawa Institute of Technology reflects the surrounding cherry blossom trees in its glazed façade.

Next up for his practice is a place of worship in Rizhao, China; Moscow’s Russian Polytechnic Museum; a visitor centre in a Dutch park; and housing in Dali, China.

Junya Ishigami’s Serpentine Pavilion 2019 will be displayed from 21st June – 6th October 2019 (Sponsored by Goldman Sachs).

Please contact your lifestyle manager for further details on access.

More to explore

Art & Culture

The 60th La Biennale di Venezia: review

Our in-house art specialist gives her take on the Biennale before the official opening on 20th April.

Read more
Art & Culture

The book that’s covered in a thousand diamonds – and looks a million dollars

A bookbinder, a birdcage, and Bentley & Skinner: this is the story of the $1.5 million rebirth of Breakfast at Tiffany’s.

Read more
Art & Culture

Discover Dubai’s art hotspots

If you’re visiting Art Dubai, make time to check out these permanent galleries around the city whilst you’re there.

Read more
Image

NOTED

Stay in the know with our monthly newsletter – a complimentary edit of everything new and noteworthy in the luxury world.

Loading Loading

By signing up to the newsletter you confirm you have read & agree to the Privacy Policy.

Make an enquiry