David Adjaye: Making Public Buildings

July 18, 2007—October 28, 2007

David Adjaye: Making Public Buildings

David Adjaye: Making Public Buildings

In London, a cube floats above rows of brick buildings and blends in with the sky on a partly cloudy day. Much like a cake, it is built in layers, though these layers are each composed of vertical beams of color and light. It is the award-winning Idea Store in Whitechapel, a building that represents what the BBC calls “the library of the future.”

David Adjaye of Adjaye/Associates, architect of the Idea Store, was born in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, to Ghanaian diplomats. Since completing his studies at the Royal College of Art in 1993, the London-based architect and theorist has built or won ten public commissions, at an age before many architects have built a single structure. His projects range from private residences in London and Nanjing, China, to public commissions, such as the Nobel Peace Center in Oslo, Norway. Each building exhibits a myriad of global influences, such as west African sculptural forms and electronic music. Though celebrated internationally by architecture critics for his conceptual approach to building design, Adjaye is relatively unknown in the United States.

Making Public Buildings introduces Adjaye’s architecture to American audiences by carrying viewers through his working process-from inspiration to completion-through ten projects, both built and uncompleted. Co-organized with the Whitechapel Gallery in London and designed by Adjaye/Associates, this is Adjaye’s first solo architecture exhibition in North America.

David Adjaye: Making Public Buildings [ital] has been produced by the Whitechapel Art Gallery, London and The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; in collaboration with the Netherlands Architecture Institute, Maastricht, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver and Arario Gallery, Beijing and Arario Gallery Korea. David Adjaye: Making Public Buildings is supported in part, by a grant from the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts, and Elise Jaffe + Jeffrey Brown.