Projects

Espace Riopelle

Year
2023
Status
Concept
Location

CONTEXT Last spring, the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec organized a multidisciplinary competition to design the future Espace Riopelle, a pavilion dedicated to the work of Jean Paul Riopelle, integrated into the existing architectural complex. The creation of the new building was intended to propel the MNBAQ into the future, by creating a true crossroads, a place of convergence within its museum campus. It was to completely renew the museum experience, magnify the premises by placing the human being at the center of this new adventure, in a space that would encourage encounters, and increase accessibility to the national collection. LIFE-SIZE « Je ne tire pas de la nature, je vais vers la nature. » - "I don't take from nature, I go towards nature." Riopelle was a man of movement who constantly invented and reinvented his formal language. The Riopelle pavilion must, in our opinion, be in tune with the energy and audacity of this immense artist. Bézier curves are parametric polynomial curves developed to design car body parts at the turn of the 1960s for Citroën and Renault. Knowing Riopelle's love for beautiful cars, this detail becomes inspiring. These curves are present in certain paintings, as signs and codes that tell, in symbolic form, episodes in the artist's life. The Bézier curves represent a source of inspiration for the volumetry of the building to be constructed. They create a dialogue in contrast with the existing pavilions, which are organized according to classical architectural patterns. The form participates in the heterogeneous character of the whole and guarantees a strong architectural signature, distinctive and identitary. SHORELINE -

CONTEXT Last spring, the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec organized a multidisciplinary competition to design the future Espace Riopelle, a pavilion dedicated to the work of Jean Paul Riopelle, integrated into the existing architectural complex. The creation of the new building was intended to propel the MNBAQ into the future, by creating a true crossroads, a place of convergence within its museum campus. It was to completely renew the museum experience, magnify the premises by placing the human being at the center of this new adventure, in a space that would encourage encounters, and increase accessibility to the national collection. LIFE-SIZE « Je ne tire pas de la nature, je vais vers la nature. » - "I don't take from nature, I go towards nature." Riopelle was a man of movement who constantly invented and reinvented his formal language. The Riopelle pavilion must, in our opinion, be in tune with the energy and audacity of this immense artist. Bézier curves are parametric polynomial curves developed to design car body parts at the turn of the 1960s for Citroën and Renault. Knowing Riopelle's love for beautiful cars, this detail becomes inspiring. These curves are present in certain paintings, as signs and codes that tell, in symbolic form, episodes in the artist's life. The Bézier curves represent a source of inspiration for the volumetry of the building to be constructed. They create a dialogue in contrast with the existing pavilions, which are organized according to classical architectural patterns. The form participates in the heterogeneous character of the whole and guarantees a strong architectural signature, distinctive and identitary. SHORELINE -

Collaborators

2
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Espace Riopelle — Architizer