Nanjing Sifang Art Museum / Steven Holl Architects

Nanjing Sifang Art Museum / Steven Holl Architects - Facade, Column, BeamNanjing Sifang Art Museum / Steven Holl Architects - Image 3 of 76Nanjing Sifang Art Museum / Steven Holl Architects - WindowsNanjing Sifang Art Museum / Steven Holl Architects - Windows, GlassNanjing Sifang Art Museum / Steven Holl Architects - More Images+ 71

Nanjing, China

Text description provided by the architects. The new museum is sited at the gateway to the Contemporary International Practical Exhibition of Architecture in the lush green landscape of the Pearl Spring near Nanjing, China. It explores the shifting viewpoints, layers of space, and expanses of mist and water, which characterize the deep alternating spatial mysteries of early Chinese painting. This coming fall the Nanjing Sifang Art Museum will open to the public.

Nanjing Sifang Art Museum / Steven Holl Architects - Image 35 of 76
© Steven Holl Architects

Perspective is the fundamental historic difference between Western and Chinese painting. After the 13th Century, Western painting developed vanishing points in fixed perspective. Chinese painters, although aware of perspective, rejected the single-vanishing point method, instead producing landscapes with “parallel perspectives” in which the viewer travels within the painting.

Nanjing Sifang Art Museum / Steven Holl Architects - Windows
© Li Hu

The museum is formed by a “field” of parallel perspective spaces and garden walls in black bamboo-formed concrete over which a light “figure” hovers. The straight passages on the ground level gradually turn into the winding passage of the figure above. The upper gallery, suspended high in the air, unwraps in a clockwise turning sequence and culminates at “in-position” viewing of the city of Nanjing in the distance. The meaning of this rural site becomes urban through this visual axis to the great Ming Dynasty capital city, Nanjing.

Nanjing Sifang Art Museum / Steven Holl Architects - Windows, Glass
© Li Hu

The courtyard is paved in recycled Old Hutong bricks from the destroyed courtyards in the center of Nanjing. Limiting the colors of the museum to black and white connects it to the ancient paintings, but also gives a background to feature the colors and textures of the artwork and architecture to be exhibited within. Bamboo, previously growing on the site, has been used in bamboo- formed concrete, with a black penetrating stain. The Museum has geothermal cooling and heating, and recycled storm water.

Nanjing Sifang Art Museum / Steven Holl Architects - Image 22 of 76
© Li Hu

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Address:Nanjing, China

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About this office
Cite: "Nanjing Sifang Art Museum / Steven Holl Architects" 20 May 2011. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/136551/nanjing-sifang-art-museum-steven-holl-architects> ISSN 0719-8884

© Li Hu

南京四方美术馆 / 史蒂芬·霍尔工作室

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