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		<title>LEADING LIGHT OF BRITISH ARCHITECTURE &#8211; David Adjaye</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Jun 2006 12:43:44 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Of the many aspiring architects that are part of the renaissance of a new young British Architecture, one name has in recent years begun to appear ever more frequently &#8211; David Adjaye. His name has made the crossover to mainstream media and begun to symbolise a new breed of architect, one whom is at the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3><span class="post_head">Of the many aspiring architects that are part of the renaissance of a new young British Architecture, one name has in recent years begun to appear ever more frequently &#8211; David Adjaye.</span></h3>
<p>His name has made the crossover to mainstream media and begun to symbolise a new breed of architect, one whom is at the forefront of young British architecture. He is very much a star in the ascendant and at 38, has already become an architect of international renown despite his youth.</p>
<p>Having set up his own practice in 1994 it was not long before he developed a strong reputation for quality modern design, with an architecture that is easily read and therefore accepted by the general populace and not lost in an egotistical intellectual vagueness. In the 12 years of his practice, his oeuvre has built up from small-scale private commissions (private houses, cafes, bars) on to a wide range of high-profile public buildings, which include libraries, art galleries and theatres. His current project list continues to include his iconic individual residences but now also has an impressive array of all manner of civic and cultural buildings across the globe, a portfolio of work that no doubt is looked on with envy by not only his contemporaries but also the established names, both at home and abroad.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/articles/art/images/david_3.jpg" class="imageleft" alt="Adjaye/Associates, Idea Store Whitechapel" align="left" /></p>
<p>Adjaye’s designs are often radical yet in a manner that allows his buildings to sit well in historical contexts, with designs that provide a new generation of building that is a world away from the pastiche and shallow commercialism that sadly blights much of today’s ‘standard’ architecture.</p>
<p>Adjaye has a uniquely intuitive design approach that allows him to root a building not only to its immediate context but also to imbibe a cultural and historical link that manages to anchor his work to local communities in a familiar and un-patronising manner. A strong sense of materials, texture and light and their interplay, absolutely critical to successful architecture, are all components present in his work.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/articles/art/images/david_2.jpg" class="imageleft" align="left" /></p>
<p>As an architect he has many artist friends, one of the most prominent of which is Chris Ofili, for whom he designed the artist’s studio (also in the east end of London) and who has collaborated with Adjaye on a number of projects. Much of Adjaye’s work has an artistic flair which is not only due to these close links with the art community but also no doubt from his having studied a fine arts foundation course prior to studying architecture.</p>
<p>Despite his rapidly increasing fame and international stature, Adjaye is rooted in the east end of London and several of his seminal early works (Elektra House, Ofili’s studio) and of late the Whitechapel Idea Store, not to mention his own office, Adjaye Associates, are to be found in the area. As such, the opening of a new two month exhibition (his first major show in the UK) at the Whitechapel Gallery is an absolute must-see.</p>
<p><strong>Key building by David Adjaye:</strong><br />
Idea Store, Whitechapel, east London</p>
<p><strong>New Buildings by Adjaye/Associates:</strong><br />
Timber-frame prefabricated house, de Beauvoir Town, Hackney, east London<br />
2007</p>
<p>Rivington Place, Rivington Street, east London &#8211; 2007</p>
<p>Manchester gallery project, northern England &#8211; 2007-<br />
David Adjaye with Maurice Shapero + Stephenson Bell<br />
£55m: Apartments, gallery, retail, market, bus station</p>
<p>Stephen Lawrence Centre, Deptford, southeast London &#8211; 2007</p>
<p>Bernie Grant Centre, Tottenham, east London &#8211; 2007</p>
<p>inVIA &#8211; Institute of International Visual Arts, London &#8211; 2007</p>
<p>Museum of Contemporary Arts, Denver, USA &#8211; 2007</p>
<p>Buildings by Adjaye/Associates (alphabetical):<br />
Dirty House, Shoreditch, east London, UK &#8211; 2001-02</p>
<p>Elektra House, Whitechapel, east London, UK &#8211; 1998-2000</p>
<p>Idea Store, Chrisp Street, Poplar, east London, UK &#8211; 2001-04</p>
<p>Idea Store Whitechapel, Whitechapel, east London, UK &#8211; 2001-05</p>
<p>Nobel Peace Center &#8211; Exhibition Centre, Oslo, Norway &#8211; 2002-05</p>
<p>T-B A21 Olafur Eliasson Pavilion &#8211; Art Installation, Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy &#8211; 2005</p>
<p>Adjaye/Associates &#8211; Stirling Prize nominated 2006 for Idea Store<br />
Client: London Borough of Tower Hamlets</p>
<hr size="2" width="100%" />Born 1966 : Dar-Es-Salam, TanzaniaDavid Adjaye &#8211; Education:<br />
Royal College of Art &#8211; MA Arch 1993</p>
<p>David Adjaye reformed his studio in 2000 as Adjaye/Associates</p>
<p>David Adjaye &#8211; Teaching Positions:<br />
Architectural Association, London : unit tutor</p>
<p>Previously:<br />
Royal College of Art, London : lecturer</p>
<p>David Adjaye &#8211; Awards:<br />
RIBA First Prize Bronze Medal : 1993</p>

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		<title>VISIONS OF UTOPIA &#8211; Utopianism &amp; Post-Ideological Art</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 09 May 2006 15:02:11 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Ambitious beyond its means, an international line up of some 150 artists, designers, musicians, writers, thinkers and performers wrestle with the theme of utopia in and around the birthplace of William Morris through exhibitions and installations. News From Nowhere: Visions Of Utopia promises to be one of the largest art events in London this year. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/art/visions_of_utopia.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="William Morris" align="right" height="246" width="250" />Ambitious beyond its means, an international line up of some 150 artists, designers, musicians, writers, thinkers and performers wrestle with the theme of utopia in and around the birthplace of William Morris through exhibitions and installations.</h3>
<p>News From Nowhere: Visions Of Utopia promises to be one of the largest art events in London this year. A number of public sites in North East London, including The William Morris Gallery, the Changing Room Gallery, The Waltham Forest Theatre situated on an island and surrounded by a moat, Lloyd Park, and a massive building site in the centre of Walthamstow, The Vestry House Museum and Walthamstow Town Hall will be used as stages for exhibitions, interventions, installations, audio visual works, music performances and public art activities during September/ October 2005.</p>
<p>CarnegieBased on the title of the William Morris novel News From Nowhere, and set in and around his birth-place, the project aims to re-examine the legacy of utopianism: upheld by the idealists of the 19th and early 20th century, who believed passionately in the possibilities of radical social change, with visions of a future egalitarian world, it is a distant cry from our post-modern, post-ideological times.</p>
<p>An international line-up of artists, designers, musicians, writers, thinkers and performers will be presenting their work in the context of the various spaces. The events, works in progress and completed pieces will be documented and published on-line in the Visions of Utopia web site. The site will also provide a global forum for open contributions, reports and sightings of utopia.</p>
<p>A special limited edition newspaper, News from Nowhere will be published and distributed, including essays, documentation and interviews with local and global residents, as well as those of the participating artists and organisers. The 18th-century Water House, Morris’s family home from 1848-1856 is now the William Morris Gallery. It is the only public museum in the world devoted to this country’s best known and most versatile designer with internationally important collections illustrating Morris’s life, achievements and influence.<img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/art/visions_of_utopia2.jpg" class="imageright" alt="Art Utopia" align="left" height="230" width="300" /></p>
<p>Art Utopia For the first time, a selected group of artists, designers and writers will be given a unique opportunity to place work within the House and permanent displays, resulting in a series of juxtapositions and interventions alongside the work of Morris and the Pre-Raphaelites; featuring the legendary Tony Benn, designers Ralph Ball and Maxine Naylor, architect Meredith Bowles, artists Stephen Williams, Liane Lang, Anderson Inge, Malcolm Barrett, Luis Gonzago Barriera Bras Keith Ball and Steve Wheeler. With sonic work by Isobel Jones and video performance from Claire Robins.</p>
<p>Other Venues<br />
The Changing Room Gallery<br />
Vestry House Museum<br />
Arcadia (a massive building site)<br />
Waltham Forest Theatre, The Moat, Lloyd Park</p>

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