Beauty-Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial
We were delighted to design "Beauty—Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial," the fifth installment of the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum’s signature exhibition series (on view until August 21, 2016).
Drawing on 335 works by 63 contemporary designers, the triennial explores seven kinds of beauty: extravagant, intricate, ethereal, transgressive, transformative, emergent, and elemental.
In an interview with Andrea Lipps (who co-curated the Design Triennial with Ellen Lupton), Calvin Tsao and Zack McKown explain the exhibition design: “The primary challenge is to sequence these themes and works so that the show constructs a narrative and dynamic procession.
We began by looking at the relationships among the themes and objects, paying attention to how the designers speak to each other both in counterpoint and/or symphony...
Just as we wanted the individual and collective voices of the works to be audible, we also sought to offer the audience relationships with each piece and more contextual views.
To achieve this, we identified a strategic parti - a context and structure for the show.
The concept is to create a landscape of varied platforms and
volumes that float in space and meander through the Museum. All objects exist within this ribbon.
Our design and curatorial concept also considers the historical character of the Carnegie Mansion.
By congregating display volumes in the center of the spaces, we allow the exhibition to float in counterpart to the architectural envelope.
...As architects, we are practitioners rather than theorists. We believe that the search for meaning and answers comes from investigation, iteration, and practice.
Beauty is infinite; it’s a pursuit that should never end. To find beauty is a revelation that you’ve captured a little bit of truth.”