Uncertain Ruins | Julie F Hill, Gauld Architecture

Swiss Cottage Gallery (within Swiss Cottage Library), 88 Avenue Road, London
Uncertain Ruins | Julie F Hill, Gauld Architecture image
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Event has ended
This event ended on Friday 10th of January 2020
Admission
Free
Venue Information
Swiss Cottage Library
Avenue Road, NW3 3HA
Nearest Tube/Rail Stations
Swiss Cottage 0.10 miles

Uncertain Ruins a site-responsive collaboration by artist Julie F Hill and Gauld Architecture that draws on the social, material and historical context of the Swiss Cottage Library in which the gallery is located.

Swiss Cottage Library, is a Modernist architectural landmark designed by Sir Basil Spence in the early 1960s, initially conceived as part of a much larger project for a grand civic site, comprising a new town hall and council offices. The library and its companion building, the Sports Hall (now demolished) – with which it formed an abstract composition – were the only parts built due to a change in the demarcation of council boroughs. The library building has a unique materiality, clad with vertical fins made of finely finished concrete with Portland stone aggregate – a visual play on the way the pages of a book fan out, giving the impression that one is entering the inner space of a book. The library is described by Historic England as ‘amongst the most ambitious architectural designs for a library found anywhere’ yet with continual shifts in the production and consumption of knowledge, including the rise of machine learning and AI, the functionality of such buildings is altered.

Julie F Hill’s monumental sculptures, video and photographic works respond to this context and have been made using a mix of artificial intelligence algorithms trained on astronomical datasets and related holdings from Swiss Cottage Library to consider the library’s potential as a container for all knowledge. Scaffolding structures produced in collaboration with Gauld Architecture reference the software architectures used in the construction of the artworks which increasingly produce, organise and distribute knowledge. Together they play with the notion of construction and ruin.

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Programme

The influence of technology and the ‘machine aesthetic’ in Modernist Architecture in relation to the design and planning of social housing projects such as the nearby Alexandra Estate will be further explored by artist Mary Yacoob through a workshop. This will culminate in artworks for the ground floor library windows as part of Camden Alive, a programme of arts and cultural events that celebrate the people of Camden.

An events programme featuring artists Disinformation and Paula Smolarska will expand on the themes of the exhibition and the context of the building. Details to be announced.

An accompanying publication will be launched at a special event at the library in late December that features a specially commissioned text, historical and installation imagery.

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Biographies

Passengers is a site-specific exhibition series that explores the historical, social and material contexts of various sites and architecture. This initiative was formed in 2016 by artist Julie F Hill in collaboration with the architectural practice Gauld Architecture. The series aims to promote dialogue between art and architecture, exploring the contemporary built environment. For its inaugural series, supported by Arts Council England, artists presented work sequentially to explore the real and imaginative associations of the Brunswick Centre, a Modernist, mixed residential and commercial development in Bloomsbury, London. The project has since expanded to incorporate offsite exhibitions, residencies and publications. www.passen-gers.co.uk


Julie F Hill is a British artist who employs an expanded approach to photography and image-making, creating sculptural installations that explore conceptions of deep-space and cosmological time. The astronomical image is shaped into formations that resemble uncanny meteorological or geological phenomena, creating immensities that we can walk amongst, and enter into. Enigmatic and illusory materials such as smoke or mirror act as conduits or portals, inviting us to cross a threshold to experience the unknowable. Through such environments she questi

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