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Shedding New Light On MoMA'S Art


Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)

* Sector: Public space
* Location: New York , New York
* Architect/Specifier: Yoshio Tanaguchi and KPF
* Product(s): Solar Control Internal Roller Shades and Skylight Systems Custom Skylight Systems

With its long-awaited, much-talked-about expansion, the Museum of Modern Art in New York got an interior as artfully grand as the masterworks that hang in it. Created by architect Yoshio Tanaguchi with support from the firm of Kohn Pedersen Fox (KPF), MoMA's design balances indoor spaces with memorable external views of the sculpture garden and the city beyond.



To keep the inside suitable for art viewing while allowing for both light to come in and visitors to look out, the designer used a specially designed system of glass, mullions, and solar shades. And, the architects created openings that temper and control the light going into and out of the museum galleries and educational spaces, especially on the light-soaked upper level.



Tanaguchi and KPF worked carefully to "conceal the details" of glass, mullions, and fabric that frame these views, in order to retain an unfussy look. The large spans of glass sit inside the slenderest metal mullions and contain highly functional, integrated shading systems that provide light control.



This dual-shade system -- custom-engineered by Hunter Douglas Contract-- uses white, translucent fabric to moderate light entering the building during the day; at night, blackout fabric prevents light pollution from bothering the museum's neighbors. In short, from both inside and out, the view is first-rate. It’s a New York icon, reborn.



Description of the project from Hunter Douglas's Project Portfolio

The expansion of MoMA, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, has been widely acclaimed for its elegant sense of space. Architectural Record called it "a monumentally scaled, serene series of cubiform volumes and slabs [that] seems to have evolved naturally out of the institution's own architectural unconscious."



Created by architect Yoshio Tanaguchi with support from the firm of Kohn Pedersen Fox (KPF), MoMA's design balances pure internal spaces with striking external views. Using a specially designed system of glass, mullions, and solar shades, the architects created openings that temper and control the light going into and out of the museum's galleries and educational spaces, especially on the upper level.



In his architectural statement, Tanaguchi says the MoMA project is "an opportunity [for the museum] to regenerate itself and to express what is current in the areas of modernism." In this project, he and KPF connected an "ideal environment" for art (the museum galleries) with the surrounding physical elements of nature (the sculpture garden) and the city environment. This connection makes the views into and out of the museum one of the more important elements in the design.



According to one of their main design principles, KPF and Tanaguchi worked carefully to "conceal the details" of glass, mullions, and fabric that frame these views. The large spans of glass sit inside the slenderest metal mullions and contain highly functional, integrated shading systems that provide light control. This dual-shade system -- custom-engineered by Hunter Douglas -- uses white, translucent fabric to moderate light entering the building during the day; at night, blackout fabric prevents light pollution from bothering the museum's neighbors.



According to Stephen Rustow, Senior Associate Principal at KPF, specially selected operating mechanisms and fiberglass shading fabrics allowed the architects to continue the clean, flat planes of the walls across both windows and skylights.

Tanaguchi says "one of architecture's most critical tasks is to establish a relationship between a particular site and its environment." Defining the views between the museum and its environment expresses architecturally the MoMA's role as an exhibitor and educator of Modern Art.

Meet Andrea Branzi & His Portali Collection





I quite accidentally came across this amazing collection of limited edition ceramic vases for SUPEREGO by the famous italian architect Andrea Branzi. Each piece is designed to hold flowers but is much more than that. Small sculptures and unique art that interacts with the organic flowers within them.

Take a look at some of my favorites:










Buy one here before they're all gone!

About the Artist:

Andrea Branzi, architect and designer, born in Florence in 1938, where he graduated in 1967, lives and works in Milano.

From 1964 to 1974 he was a partner of Archizoom Associati, first vanguard group internationally known, whose projects are preserved at Centro Studi e Archivio della Comunicazione in Parma and at Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris.

Since 1967 he works in the fields of industrial and research design, architecture, urban planning, education and cultural promotion. He is also a Professor at the Third Faculty of Architecture and Industrial Design of Politecnico di Milano.

Since the beginning Andrea Branzi’s work has dealt with urban planning, architecture and design, meant as professional activities integrated and engaged in the production of innovation.

In this sense there has always been a close relation between project and research, meant as activities engaged to foster knowledge and critical reflection about design and its historical context. Since the birth of the radical movement (his graduation thesis is preserved at Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris), to his present educational and research activities about the models of weak urbanisation.

His archive is preserved at Centro Studi e Archivio della Comunicazione in Parma (Italy), while the photographic archive of Archizoom Associati is at Centre Georges Pompidou

To read more about the artist, click here.

The Classic Nelson Platform Bench Gets A Modern Makeover



above: The Classic George Nelson Platform Bench manufactured by Herman Miller and originally designed in 1946

Forgive me George, because I will forever be a fan of your slat bench, the Nelson Platform Bench, as it's formally known.

However, Simply Italian's maple and stainless steel legged slat bench is clearly an hommage to yours with a few proportion and material differences. (manufactured by Cumin).

And they did a pretty darn nice job.


Below: Simply Italian's Modern Bench



Buy Simply Italian's bench here.


Buy the classic Nelson Platform Bench Here.


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