Previous
Lina Bo Bardi: Together
Friday, May 13 2016
All Day
Lina Bo Bardi: Together, will be on display at the Miami Center for Architecture and Design May 13 – 29th. The exhibition celebrates and explores the vision of Brazilian modernist Lina Bo Bardi. Curated by Noemi Blager, Together reveals Lina’s legacy on social design through both her own works in addition to new works by artists who brought to light her philosophy.
Born in Rome in 1914, Bo Bardi moved to São Paulo in 1946, where she lived, immersing herself in the politics and popular culture of Brazil, until her death in 1992. Throughout her works, which spanned architecture, furniture design, curating, writing, illustration, and stage sets, Bo Bardi sought to integrate art and life, conviction with playfulness,and creativity with honesty. Embracing the existing urban fabric and social and cultural practices of São Paulo and Salvador da Bahia, Bo Bardi drew on construction techniques and materials rooted in local practices, and integrated them with the values of the Modern Movement. Bo Bardi’s inclusive approach to building and design was above all grounded in the respect for people: their energy, expression, and collective freedom.
Marking the centennial of Lina Bo Bardi’s birth, Lina Bo Bardi: Together highlights the vitality and creative momentum that Bo Bardi’s work and writings continue to inspire today. It reveals Bo Bardi’s innovative designs for public use, including the Museu de Arte Popular do Unhão, Bahia (1959) and the SESC Pompéia, a recreational center built in an old factory building in São Paulo, as well as The Glass House (1951), which she designed for herself and her husband Pietro Maria Bardi.
This collection reflects the culmination of workshops that Vriesendorp conducted at the Solar do Unhão, a crafts center and industrial design school in Bo Bardi’s Museu de Arte Popular do Unhão, Bahia. Tapio Snellman’s film projections explores the textures, colors, sounds, and social lives of Bo Bardi’s buildings, including the SESC Pompéia. Ioana Marinescu’s photographs reveal the intimate world of the Glass House, investigates the objects that Bo Bardi choose to display in her own environment. Finally, the exhibition includes three Bowl Chairs, originally designed by Bo Bardi in 1951 and manufactured for the first time in a limited edition by Arper on the occasion of Lina Bo Bardi’s centennial.