Farhan Karim, chercheur en résidence 2016, présente ses recherches : Dans l’évolution récente de l’histoire de l’architecture, l’engagement d’architectes occidentaux auprès des nations postcoloniales émergentes a fait l’objet d’une relecture dans une perspective géopolitique plus vaste de décolonisation et de guerre froide planétaire. Une telle analyse n’est certes pas(...)
Maison Shaughnessy
7 juillet 2016, 18h
Séminaire de chercheur en résidence : Farhan Karim
Actions:
Description:
Farhan Karim, chercheur en résidence 2016, présente ses recherches : Dans l’évolution récente de l’histoire de l’architecture, l’engagement d’architectes occidentaux auprès des nations postcoloniales émergentes a fait l’objet d’une relecture dans une perspective géopolitique plus vaste de décolonisation et de guerre froide planétaire. Une telle analyse n’est certes pas(...)
Maison Shaughnessy
Blake Fitzpatrick et Robert Del Tredici parlent de leurs recherches à Port Hope dans une conversation animée par Louise Désy, Conservateur, Photographies au CCA. Port Hope est la première ville de l’atome au Canada et la porte d’entrée du pays dans l’univers du nucléaire. En 1932, l’Eldorado Nuclear Ltd. y construit une raffinerie de radium à un jet de pierre de la rue(...)
Salles principales
25 mars 2017, 15h
Port Hope à l'epoque des déchets nucléaires
Actions:
Description:
Blake Fitzpatrick et Robert Del Tredici parlent de leurs recherches à Port Hope dans une conversation animée par Louise Désy, Conservateur, Photographies au CCA. Port Hope est la première ville de l’atome au Canada et la porte d’entrée du pays dans l’univers du nucléaire. En 1932, l’Eldorado Nuclear Ltd. y construit une raffinerie de radium à un jet de pierre de la rue(...)
Salles principales
Olumuyiwa Adegun, chercheur en résidence 2016, présente ses recherches : Les villes d’Europe au XIXe siècle, à l’instar des villes d’Afrique aujourd’hui, ont souffert de graves problèmes de logement. Les bidonvilles ont marqué Berlin et Paris, tout comme dans les dernières décennies, le logement informel est devenu un trait particulier de Nairobi et de Johannesburg.(...)
Maison Shaughnessy
4 août 2016, 18h
Séminaire de chercheur en résidence : Olumuyiwa Adegun
Actions:
Description:
Olumuyiwa Adegun, chercheur en résidence 2016, présente ses recherches : Les villes d’Europe au XIXe siècle, à l’instar des villes d’Afrique aujourd’hui, ont souffert de graves problèmes de logement. Les bidonvilles ont marqué Berlin et Paris, tout comme dans les dernières décennies, le logement informel est devenu un trait particulier de Nairobi et de Johannesburg.(...)
Maison Shaughnessy
Les blocs pénitenciers en forme de H du Maze ont été le puissant symbole des conflits politiques et des mouvements de protestation souvent violents dont l’Irlande du Nord a été le théâtre. Ouverte en 1971 par le gouvernement britannique, la prison prévoyait d’enfermer les loyalistes et les républicains dans des lieux différents selon le statut des prisonniers : les(...)
Salle octogonale
5 septembre 2013 au 12 janvier 2014
BLOC H : Établissement carcéral – Donovan Wylie
Actions:
Description:
Les blocs pénitenciers en forme de H du Maze ont été le puissant symbole des conflits politiques et des mouvements de protestation souvent violents dont l’Irlande du Nord a été le théâtre. Ouverte en 1971 par le gouvernement britannique, la prison prévoyait d’enfermer les loyalistes et les républicains dans des lieux différents selon le statut des prisonniers : les(...)
Salle octogonale
Paraboles et autres allégories : L’Œuvre de Melvin Charney 1975-1990 présente une centaine de dessins, dont plusieurs à grande échelle, des esquisses, des photographies, ainsi que trois grandes constructions. Réunissant des pièces issues de diverses collections publiques et privées, dont celle du CCA, l’exposition permet une analyse globale de la démarche artistique de(...)
Salles principales
9 octobre 1991 au 12 janvier 1992
Paraboles et autres allégories : L'oeuvre de Melvin Charney, 1975-1990
Actions:
Description:
Paraboles et autres allégories : L’Œuvre de Melvin Charney 1975-1990 présente une centaine de dessins, dont plusieurs à grande échelle, des esquisses, des photographies, ainsi que trois grandes constructions. Réunissant des pièces issues de diverses collections publiques et privées, dont celle du CCA, l’exposition permet une analyse globale de la démarche artistique de(...)
Salles principales
archives
Niveau de description archivistique:
Fonds
AP196
Résumé:
Studio Gang Ford Calumet Environmental Center project records, 2003-2012, documents the design process for the Ford Calumet Environmental Center in Chicago, United-States. The records represent both phases during the competition and the full-term design, after the firm won the project. The records consist of born-digital material, sketches and drawings, textual records, photographs and seven models.
2003-2011
Documents d’archives de Studio Gang pour le projet Ford Calumet Environmental Center
Actions:
AP196
Résumé:
Studio Gang Ford Calumet Environmental Center project records, 2003-2012, documents the design process for the Ford Calumet Environmental Center in Chicago, United-States. The records represent both phases during the competition and the full-term design, after the firm won the project. The records consist of born-digital material, sketches and drawings, textual records, photographs and seven models.
archives
Niveau de description archivistique:
Fonds
2003-2011
L’exposition explore certains des moments les plus intenses et les plus marquants de l’histoire de l’architecture : ceux qui ont constitué la période fertile et explosive qui a succédé à la Révolution d’Octobre. Le travail des architectes et graphistes de l’avant-garde était motivé aussi bien par le productivisme que par un souci esthétique. Pour eux, l’architecture et(...)
Salles principales
19 juin 1991 au 8 septembre 1991
Dessins d'architecture de l'avant-garde russe, 1917-1935
Actions:
Description:
L’exposition explore certains des moments les plus intenses et les plus marquants de l’histoire de l’architecture : ceux qui ont constitué la période fertile et explosive qui a succédé à la Révolution d’Octobre. Le travail des architectes et graphistes de l’avant-garde était motivé aussi bien par le productivisme que par un souci esthétique. Pour eux, l’architecture et(...)
Salles principales
Ben Bradley présente comment lautomobile a influencé la manière dont les Canadiens ont fait lexpérience de leur pays cours du XXe siècle. Alors que des millions de personnes sont parties à la rencontre du Canada à travers le voyage automobile, elles ont aussi donné forme aux endroits quelles ont traversés, par leurs habitudes de visite, leurs goûts et leurs mouvements.(...)
Théâtre Paul-Demarais Mot(s)-clé(s):
Canada, Le temps presse, environnement, Bradley, halte-routière, roadside
23 février 2017, 18h
Faire du Canada une halte-routière
Actions:
Description:
Ben Bradley présente comment lautomobile a influencé la manière dont les Canadiens ont fait lexpérience de leur pays cours du XXe siècle. Alors que des millions de personnes sont parties à la rencontre du Canada à travers le voyage automobile, elles ont aussi donné forme aux endroits quelles ont traversés, par leurs habitudes de visite, leurs goûts et leurs mouvements.(...)
Théâtre Paul-Demarais Mot(s)-clé(s):
Canada, Le temps presse, environnement, Bradley, halte-routière, roadside
Sous-série
CI001.S2.D5
Description:
Charles Rohault de Fleury was architect for the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle from 1833 to 1862. His work for the Muséum is represented in the CCA collection by a diverse group of prints and drawings. In addition to documenting his built and unbuilt projects, the inclusion of prints and drawings of museum and zoo buildings by other architects record, if only partially, the resources available to Charles in designing his buildings. This reference material provides insight into the influences on Charles' work as well as the nature of the design process itself. His built works, with the exception of the 1854 addition to the greenhouses, are illustrated in a book of prints with a brief accompanying text - "Muséum d'histoire naturelle: serres chaudes, galeries de minéralogie, etc. etc." (published 1837) (DR1974:0002:004:001; a second copy is held by the CCA library) (1). While prints are included for the Galerie de minéralogie et de géologie, the monkey house and the reservoirs, the majority of the prints are of the greenhouses (serres chaudes) begun 1833 (2). Known for their technological innovations in iron construction, these greenhouses utilized the first multi-storey load-bearing cast-iron façades for the central pavilions as well as space frame roof structures and prefabricated parts. This structural system is well documented in the prints in the CCA collection. The design was apparently inspired by the English greenhouses - a plate of which are included in the book - that Charles saw on a tour of England. The use of prestressed beams and curved roofs in the lateral wings attest to this influence. Charles' greenhouses, in turn, influenced the design of other greenhouses in Europe especially those at the Jardins Botanique in Liège and Ghent, Belgium (3). Although Joseph Paxton saw the greenhouses in 1833, it is unclear if they had an impact on the design of the Crystal Palace constructed 1850-1851 (4). The innovations of Charles' greenhouses continued to be acknowledged into the 20th century. Giedion in "Space, Time and Architecture", while erroneously attributing them to Rouhault (5)(6), refers to the greenhouses as "the prototype of all large iron-framed conservatories" (7). In addition to the greenhouses for the Muséum, the CCA collection includes three proposals (dated 1841) for a private greenhouse designed by Charles Rohault de Fleury (DR1974:0002:002:008 - DR1974:0002:002:013). The designs utilize the same curved roofs as the wings of the greenhouses at the Muséum combined with classically detailed stonework. An different aspect of Charles' work for the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle is represented in the album of unexecuted proposals -the only design drawings for the Muséum in the collection - for a Galerie de zoologie (DR1974:0002:024:001-079). Building on the typology of his earlier classical Galerie de minéralogie et de géologie (constructed 1833 -1841), the proposals, which date from between 1838 and 1862, illustrate a gradual enrichment of Charles' classical architectural vocabulary (8). They vary in their spatial configurations and façade treatments ranging from austere colonnaded designs with little ornament to more elaborate ones with richly encrusted facades, complex rooflines and more dramatic interior spaces characteristic of the Second Empire. The majority of the proposals consist of preliminary drawings illustrating the essential formal, spatial and ornamental aspects of the building. One proposal, dated January 1846, is substantially more developed than the others; in addition to general plans, sections and elevations, more detailed drawings are included for the layout of spaces, the elaboration of the facades, the configuration of the structure and even the designs for the specimen display cases. It is also worth noting that this album includes several plans outlining Rohault de Fleury's ideas for the overall development of the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle. In 1846, an album of prints of the Museo di fiscia e storia naturelle in Florence (DR1974:0002:005:001-018) was presented to Charles by the Grand Duke of Tuscany in response to his request for tracings of that building. These prints were probably used as reference material for the design of the new Galerie de zoologie described above. The portfolio of record drawings (ca. 1862) of the zoos in Antwerp, Brussels, Marseille and Amsterdam (DR1974:0002:018:001-027) is probably a dummy for a publication on zoological gardens as well as background documentation for the renovation and expansion of the zoo at the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle in Paris. Both drawings of the facilities for the animals and visitors and general plans of the zoological gardens are included. The Paris zoo project was apparently never undertaken. (1) These prints were reused in the "Oeuvre de C. Rohault de Fleury, architecte" (published 1884) (DR1974:0002:029:001-044). (2) Rohault de Fleury's greenhouses were destroyed in the Prussian bombardments of 1870. The greenhouses, which now stand in their place, are similar in layout and appearance to the original design, but their structural system is different. (3) John Hix, 'The Glass House' (Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, 1981), p. 115. (4) Ibid., p. 115. (5) This error has been repeated by other authors including Henry-Russell Hitchcock, 'Architecture: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries' (Baltimore, Maryland: Penguin Books, 1968), p. 120. (6) Leonardo Benevolo, 'History of Modern Architecture' Volume 1: The tradition of modern architecture (Cambridge, Mass.: The M.I.T. Press, 1971), p. 22. (7) Sigfried Giedion, 'Space, Time and Architecture; the growth of a new tradition' (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1941), p. 181. (8) Barry Bergdoll, "Charles Rohault de Fleury: Part two: Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle and Studies on analogous Constructions in Europe", 'CCA Research Report", n.d., p. 1.
[1837-ca. 1862]
Muséum nationale d'histoire naturelle
CI001.S2.D5
Description:
Charles Rohault de Fleury was architect for the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle from 1833 to 1862. His work for the Muséum is represented in the CCA collection by a diverse group of prints and drawings. In addition to documenting his built and unbuilt projects, the inclusion of prints and drawings of museum and zoo buildings by other architects record, if only partially, the resources available to Charles in designing his buildings. This reference material provides insight into the influences on Charles' work as well as the nature of the design process itself. His built works, with the exception of the 1854 addition to the greenhouses, are illustrated in a book of prints with a brief accompanying text - "Muséum d'histoire naturelle: serres chaudes, galeries de minéralogie, etc. etc." (published 1837) (DR1974:0002:004:001; a second copy is held by the CCA library) (1). While prints are included for the Galerie de minéralogie et de géologie, the monkey house and the reservoirs, the majority of the prints are of the greenhouses (serres chaudes) begun 1833 (2). Known for their technological innovations in iron construction, these greenhouses utilized the first multi-storey load-bearing cast-iron façades for the central pavilions as well as space frame roof structures and prefabricated parts. This structural system is well documented in the prints in the CCA collection. The design was apparently inspired by the English greenhouses - a plate of which are included in the book - that Charles saw on a tour of England. The use of prestressed beams and curved roofs in the lateral wings attest to this influence. Charles' greenhouses, in turn, influenced the design of other greenhouses in Europe especially those at the Jardins Botanique in Liège and Ghent, Belgium (3). Although Joseph Paxton saw the greenhouses in 1833, it is unclear if they had an impact on the design of the Crystal Palace constructed 1850-1851 (4). The innovations of Charles' greenhouses continued to be acknowledged into the 20th century. Giedion in "Space, Time and Architecture", while erroneously attributing them to Rouhault (5)(6), refers to the greenhouses as "the prototype of all large iron-framed conservatories" (7). In addition to the greenhouses for the Muséum, the CCA collection includes three proposals (dated 1841) for a private greenhouse designed by Charles Rohault de Fleury (DR1974:0002:002:008 - DR1974:0002:002:013). The designs utilize the same curved roofs as the wings of the greenhouses at the Muséum combined with classically detailed stonework. An different aspect of Charles' work for the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle is represented in the album of unexecuted proposals -the only design drawings for the Muséum in the collection - for a Galerie de zoologie (DR1974:0002:024:001-079). Building on the typology of his earlier classical Galerie de minéralogie et de géologie (constructed 1833 -1841), the proposals, which date from between 1838 and 1862, illustrate a gradual enrichment of Charles' classical architectural vocabulary (8). They vary in their spatial configurations and façade treatments ranging from austere colonnaded designs with little ornament to more elaborate ones with richly encrusted facades, complex rooflines and more dramatic interior spaces characteristic of the Second Empire. The majority of the proposals consist of preliminary drawings illustrating the essential formal, spatial and ornamental aspects of the building. One proposal, dated January 1846, is substantially more developed than the others; in addition to general plans, sections and elevations, more detailed drawings are included for the layout of spaces, the elaboration of the facades, the configuration of the structure and even the designs for the specimen display cases. It is also worth noting that this album includes several plans outlining Rohault de Fleury's ideas for the overall development of the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle. In 1846, an album of prints of the Museo di fiscia e storia naturelle in Florence (DR1974:0002:005:001-018) was presented to Charles by the Grand Duke of Tuscany in response to his request for tracings of that building. These prints were probably used as reference material for the design of the new Galerie de zoologie described above. The portfolio of record drawings (ca. 1862) of the zoos in Antwerp, Brussels, Marseille and Amsterdam (DR1974:0002:018:001-027) is probably a dummy for a publication on zoological gardens as well as background documentation for the renovation and expansion of the zoo at the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle in Paris. Both drawings of the facilities for the animals and visitors and general plans of the zoological gardens are included. The Paris zoo project was apparently never undertaken. (1) These prints were reused in the "Oeuvre de C. Rohault de Fleury, architecte" (published 1884) (DR1974:0002:029:001-044). (2) Rohault de Fleury's greenhouses were destroyed in the Prussian bombardments of 1870. The greenhouses, which now stand in their place, are similar in layout and appearance to the original design, but their structural system is different. (3) John Hix, 'The Glass House' (Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, 1981), p. 115. (4) Ibid., p. 115. (5) This error has been repeated by other authors including Henry-Russell Hitchcock, 'Architecture: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries' (Baltimore, Maryland: Penguin Books, 1968), p. 120. (6) Leonardo Benevolo, 'History of Modern Architecture' Volume 1: The tradition of modern architecture (Cambridge, Mass.: The M.I.T. Press, 1971), p. 22. (7) Sigfried Giedion, 'Space, Time and Architecture; the growth of a new tradition' (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1941), p. 181. (8) Barry Bergdoll, "Charles Rohault de Fleury: Part two: Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle and Studies on analogous Constructions in Europe", 'CCA Research Report", n.d., p. 1.
File 5
[1837-ca. 1862]
L’exposition souligne le rôle primordial du Panthéon dans la vie artistique et politique française depuis les débuts du projet en 1774 jusqu’au 20e siècle. Coïncidant avec les célébrations internationales du bicentenaire de la Révolution française, elle porte essentiellement sur l’une des principales manifestations architecturales de la Révolution : la transformation de(...)
Salles principales
19 septembre 1989 au 19 novembre 1989
Le Panthéon, symbole des révolutions
Actions:
Description:
L’exposition souligne le rôle primordial du Panthéon dans la vie artistique et politique française depuis les débuts du projet en 1774 jusqu’au 20e siècle. Coïncidant avec les célébrations internationales du bicentenaire de la Révolution française, elle porte essentiellement sur l’une des principales manifestations architecturales de la Révolution : la transformation de(...)
Salles principales