Patkau Architects: Matter Made Material
OPENING RECEPTION: Tuesday, May 13, 6-8 p.m.
About the exhibition
Patkau Architects are known for their innovative and deeply thoughtful approach to architecture, with a particular attention to light and its role in shaping spaces. The use of light often reveals the unique characteristics of a place, enhancing the connection between architecture and its surroundings. Light can influence the perception of space and the sensory experience of a building and its materials. In this exhibition, light, a material source determined by the interplay of materials such as wood, steel, and concrete, becomes a performative source of the architecture it represents. The movement of light throughout the day changes the representation of the materials.
The projects selected for this exhibition often emphasize the relationship between natural light and the built environment by considering how light interacts with materials and forms to create atmosphere and evoke emotional responses. In a way, the light performs with the built material to add visual layering to the structure.
We can enjoy being in these buildings and not know exactly why. Nevertheless, recognizing the consciously constructed relationship between the ephemeral qualities of light and the more solid materials employed by the architects is essential to our understanding of the multiple layers that make up these structures. By using light to define materials such as steel, wood, and concrete, the Patkaus initiate an ongoing and active interplay between the built environment and its natural context.
About the artists
Patkau Architects, founded in 1978 by John and Patricia Patkau, is a Canadian architecture and design research practice led by four principals, three senior associates, and two associates, all supported by a team of architects, designers, and administrative staff.
Working together with shared goals and ideas developed over the past 47 years, this team has led the studio on a great diversity of projects. Their portfolio comprises art installations and furniture, houses, medium-scaled community buildings, and major urban buildings. The commitment to the search for 'found potential' - those aspects of place, culture, and its people that can be gathered into an architectural form evocative of locale, circumstance, history, and landscape - is the through-line that distinguishes their work.
Patkau Architects also apply the search for found potential to materials themselves, looking for new ways to shape and combine familiar materials to explore new possibilities and applications. A guiding principle in this work is 'material + force = form', where form is simultaneously material, space and structure. Their studio’s design lab tests these ideas at full scale, both in-house and in workshops around Vancouver, conducting experiments that inform and inspire their building-scale work. Patkau Architects Material Operations, their most recent book, is a compendium of these research innovations (Princeton Architectural Press, 2017).
Deriving from this combination of architecture and research, Patkau Studio has emerged as a way to bring their deep fascination with materials, form, and craft into greater focus and accessibility. Art and furniture ideas often emerge concurrently with architectural designs. Each piece develops out of an experimental process by which every detail is considered and refined, the design evolving through making. Their aim is to enrich spaces with elegant and articulate objects that invite visual, tactile, and emotional engagement, all made in-house in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
This exhibition is generously supported by the Patterson Rozee Family Foundation.