{"title":"莉娜·波·巴蒂与弗里达·埃斯科韦多的对话:一种自发的纠缠","authors":"Michaela Prunotto","doi":"10.1080/10331867.2022.2075526","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACT In 2020, Mexican architect Frida Escobedo (1979–) designed the exhibition “Lina Bo Bardi: Habitat” at Museo Jumex in Mexico City. Lina Bo Bardi (1914–92) was an Italian émigré who became one of Brazil’s most important — and few female — modernist architects. Escobedo, too, is one of few Latin American women architects whose work is recognised internationally. Using the exhibition as touchpoint, this paper recontextualises the work and archives of Lina Bo Bardi through the lens of Frida Escobedo’s current practice, revealing the socially engaged and spontaneously playful artistry of each. Whereas Bo Bardi is prescient and forward-looking, Escobedo sensitively and inventively references her predecessor. By way of interview analysis, each architect’s praxis will be discussed as a transnational entanglement of objects, curation, persona, text, user, city, and building. Drawing on Olivia De Oliveira’s 1991 interview with Bo Bardi and the author’s 2021 interview with Escobedo, the former’s pioneering of adaptive reuse and urban revitalisation, as well as the latter’s continuation of these methods and preoccupation with ruins, will be addressed. Such topics are salient as Bo Bardi’s buildings today face material decline due to bureaucracy and neglect. A central aim of this paper is therefore to salvage and engage with the residues of Bo Bardi’s departed yet potent voice whilst simultaneously highlighting the contemporary importance of her legacy. The foregrounding of not only Bo Bardi and Escobedo’s voices but also, by default, the voices of their interviewers — Olivia De Oliveira and the author of this paper — is motivated by an enthusiasm to contribute to the collective transformation of the broader gendered communication terrain.","PeriodicalId":42105,"journal":{"name":"Fabrications-The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand","volume":"32 1","pages":"110 - 135"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2022-01-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Lina Bo Bardi in Dialogue with Frida Escobedo: A Spontaneous Entanglement\",\"authors\":\"Michaela Prunotto\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/10331867.2022.2075526\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ABSTRACT In 2020, Mexican architect Frida Escobedo (1979–) designed the exhibition “Lina Bo Bardi: Habitat” at Museo Jumex in Mexico City. Lina Bo Bardi (1914–92) was an Italian émigré who became one of Brazil’s most important — and few female — modernist architects. Escobedo, too, is one of few Latin American women architects whose work is recognised internationally. Using the exhibition as touchpoint, this paper recontextualises the work and archives of Lina Bo Bardi through the lens of Frida Escobedo’s current practice, revealing the socially engaged and spontaneously playful artistry of each. Whereas Bo Bardi is prescient and forward-looking, Escobedo sensitively and inventively references her predecessor. By way of interview analysis, each architect’s praxis will be discussed as a transnational entanglement of objects, curation, persona, text, user, city, and building. Drawing on Olivia De Oliveira’s 1991 interview with Bo Bardi and the author’s 2021 interview with Escobedo, the former’s pioneering of adaptive reuse and urban revitalisation, as well as the latter’s continuation of these methods and preoccupation with ruins, will be addressed. Such topics are salient as Bo Bardi’s buildings today face material decline due to bureaucracy and neglect. A central aim of this paper is therefore to salvage and engage with the residues of Bo Bardi’s departed yet potent voice whilst simultaneously highlighting the contemporary importance of her legacy. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
2020年,墨西哥建筑师Frida Escobedo(1979 -)在墨西哥城Jumex博物馆设计了“Lina Bo Bardi: Habitat”展览。Lina Bo Bardi(1914 - 1992)是一名意大利移民,后来成为巴西最重要的现代主义建筑师之一,也是为数不多的女性。Escobedo也是少数几个在国际上得到认可的拉丁美洲女性建筑师之一。本文以展览为接触点,通过Frida Escobedo当前的实践,将Lina Bo Bardi的作品和档案重新置于背景中,揭示每个人的社会参与和自发的俏皮艺术。博·巴迪具有先见之明和前瞻性,而埃斯科韦多则敏感而富有创造性地引用了她的前任。通过访谈分析,每位建筑师的实践都将作为对象、策展、人物、文本、用户、城市和建筑的跨国纠缠来讨论。通过Olivia De Oliveira在1991年对Bo Bardi的采访和作者在2021年对Escobedo的采访,作者将探讨前者在适应性再利用和城市复兴方面的开拓,以及后者对这些方法的延续和对废墟的关注。由于官僚主义和忽视,博·巴迪的建筑如今面临着物质上的衰退,这些话题变得尤为突出。因此,本文的一个中心目标是挽救和参与博·巴迪的离去,但有力的声音的残留物,同时突出她的遗产的当代重要性。不仅是Bo Bardi和Escobedo的声音,而且,默认情况下,他们的采访者——Olivia De Oliveira和本文的作者——的声音都是出于对更广泛的性别传播领域的集体转型做出贡献的热情。
Lina Bo Bardi in Dialogue with Frida Escobedo: A Spontaneous Entanglement
ABSTRACT In 2020, Mexican architect Frida Escobedo (1979–) designed the exhibition “Lina Bo Bardi: Habitat” at Museo Jumex in Mexico City. Lina Bo Bardi (1914–92) was an Italian émigré who became one of Brazil’s most important — and few female — modernist architects. Escobedo, too, is one of few Latin American women architects whose work is recognised internationally. Using the exhibition as touchpoint, this paper recontextualises the work and archives of Lina Bo Bardi through the lens of Frida Escobedo’s current practice, revealing the socially engaged and spontaneously playful artistry of each. Whereas Bo Bardi is prescient and forward-looking, Escobedo sensitively and inventively references her predecessor. By way of interview analysis, each architect’s praxis will be discussed as a transnational entanglement of objects, curation, persona, text, user, city, and building. Drawing on Olivia De Oliveira’s 1991 interview with Bo Bardi and the author’s 2021 interview with Escobedo, the former’s pioneering of adaptive reuse and urban revitalisation, as well as the latter’s continuation of these methods and preoccupation with ruins, will be addressed. Such topics are salient as Bo Bardi’s buildings today face material decline due to bureaucracy and neglect. A central aim of this paper is therefore to salvage and engage with the residues of Bo Bardi’s departed yet potent voice whilst simultaneously highlighting the contemporary importance of her legacy. The foregrounding of not only Bo Bardi and Escobedo’s voices but also, by default, the voices of their interviewers — Olivia De Oliveira and the author of this paper — is motivated by an enthusiasm to contribute to the collective transformation of the broader gendered communication terrain.