Graduate student Andrew Campbell, 27, of Centerville, Ohio, who worked on the project as part of a Spring 2018 studio in preparation for its international debut, agreed, "There's something important and innately human about toiling away at something with your hands instead of at a computer. It's a different kind of work. It teaches you a different kind of persistence and a different kind of patience entirely."
The project makes use of forgotten and discarded materials such as reclaimed wood from a 150 year-old Cincinnati church, copper scraps, hundreds of handmade tiles rejected by a local tile manufacturer, fragments of decorative limestone from an Indiana stone quarry and more.
School children in Columbus, Indiana, helped transform the project’s century-old wood by imprinting it with geometric patterns by using pieces of copper — doing so thanks to a custom-made press crafted by the UC students. Moreover, poetry about living in Cincinnati is laser etched in this same wood — poetry written by local high-school students who have participated in “Louder Than A Bomb,” an annual poetry, spoken word, hip-hop competition.
The end result, according to graduate student Bailey Stultz, 25, of Columbus, Indiana, is "focused on the combination of materials to make up two very distinct curved walls: one made of wood and the other made of tile." At the center is a sheltered and sheltering space where all the elements serve to guide attention to and frame a bejeweled tile room.
“As a deliberately designed human-scale space, that little tile room, it just feels good when you’re in it,”said Probst.
Graduate student Campbell added, "I would hope people who experience the project feel a sense of age, workmanship and treatment of the materials as well as a general inquisitiveness towards Cincinnati. After all, at it's most essential, this project is about locality and cooperation, between people and materials here in Cincinnati."
Explained Boling, “This project is like how your mom used to make soup from whatever was in the refrigerator. Take the left-overs and combine them into something new and delicious. I think it also reflects both our Cincinnati heritage and our sustainable, urban futures. After all, we’re the city where a commercial empire (consumer products giant P&G) was originally built from turning 18th-century waste pig fat into candles and soap. Our future will, by necessity, reflect that heritage and the need to creatively reuse what we have to hand.”
In Venice, the UC installation will be set within a larger “TIME SPACE EXISTENCE” exhibition in multiple locales curated by the Global Art Affairs Foundation and the European Cultural Centre. These multiple exhibit spaces include works by professional architects, photographers, sculptors and universities.
For instance, UC’s “Alchemy” installation will be exhibited in its garden space, which will also contain a large-scale sculptural work by architect Daniel Libeskind. Yet another exhibition site will display work by architects Richard Meier and Curtis Fentress along with a project from North Carolina State University. Other schools represented in this year’s “TIME SPACE EXISTENCE” exhibitions include the University of Buffalo, University of Oklahoma, and international schools such as the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands, Monash University in Australia, and Victoria University in New Zealand. However, UC is the only school exhibiting work that includes contributions by undergraduate students.
The “Alchemy” project is supported by the Orville Simpson Fund at DAAP. In 2011, the University of Cincinnati received a substantial gift from Orville Simpson, a Cincinnati real estate investor and entrepreneur with a futuristic outlook for architecture, design and urban planning. Simpson spent his adult life thinking about the problems of urban sprawl, overcrowding, crime and pollution. During this time — with no formal architectural, planning, or artistic training — Simpson dedicated his life to designing and documenting his solution to these problems: Victory City, “the City of the Future.” Some of the concepts he envisioned are now accepted as good practice or even cutting edge, e.g., farm-to-table meals with no additives and preservatives, and efficient land use.
University of Cincinnati Press is also partnering with DAAP and will be featured in wall panels that accompany the “Alchemy” installation. This DAAP-UC Press partnership will focus on a number of Urban Futures initiatives, including a book series edited by Edward Mitchell, director of the School of Architecture and Interior Design, and Danilo Palazzo, director of the School of Planning, and other publications that will document and build upon Simpson Center archives and programs.
Launched in 2017 with a focus on publishing scholarship which focuses on global social justice and community engagement theories, practice, research and solutions. UC Press is cultivating accessibleand transdisciplinary books by scholars and practitioners including architects, planners, designers, engineers, educators, activists, health practitioners and community stakeholders bringing new modes of scholarship that can help sustain and reinvent the vitality of urban spaces. As a unit of UC Libraries, UC Press offers cutting-edge tech to create new interactive lenses on the written word. Besides digital projects, UC Press’ Cincinnati Library Publishing Services (CLiPS) is developing new affordable and open textbooks, conference proceedings and journals. Its inaugural list includes books on a wide array of social justice and community-engagement topics from city benefits agreements to postcolonial Indian architecture and design-build urban studio profiles as well as the journal, "Issues in Race & Society" (Association of Black Sociologists). Among its first transdisciplinary publications is a book series on community-engaged public health research, edited by UC’s Farrah Jacquez, associate professor of psychology, and Lina Svedin of University of Utah, identifying best practices in health leadership with integrated approaches to housing/health/mental health that provide stronger foundations for new jobs and community development opportunities to revitalize neighborhoods.
The GAA Foundation was founded in 2002 in New York, opened its Italian branch in 2011 and started the Venice-based activities in the same year. Since 2014, The GAA Foundation has partnered with the European Cultural Centre in the field of culture and education. From 2011-2016, the GAA Foundation served as an official, accredited, collateral part of the Venice Architecture Biennale. Starting in 2017 and this year, the Foundation made the choice to run during the same time period but independent of the Venice Architecture Biennale in order to fulfill its purpose of making the arts and architecture as open and available to all as possible. This non-commercial approach provides a welcome alternative to the ticketed, commercial events of the official Biennale/collateral events. As such, the GAA Foundation promotes an equitable and inclusive approach to making the arts available to all.