Mario Botta: Architecture and Memory

Address
420 South Tryon Street, Charlotte NC 28202
Hours
Mon, Wed–Sat 10 am–5 pm, Sun 12 am–5 pm

Mario Botta: Architecture and Memory is an exhibition spanning the 50-year career of internationally acclaimed architect Mario Botta, the designer of the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art building and one of the century's most fundamental contributors to postmodern architecture. Featured are sketches, original wood models and photographs exemplifying Botta’s use of geometric shapes that juxtapose lightness and weight. The exhibition runs January 31, 2014 through July 25, 2014.
Botta is among the most noted architects on an international scale. His body of work ranges from private residences in the Swiss Alps to urban projects in Europe and Asia. At this time he has accepted only one other commission in the United States – the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Museums are an important part of Botta's oeuvre, some of which are highlighted in the exhibition. Botta views museums as more than structures to display artwork. "They have become new meeting places, sometimes for entertainment, that satisfy a more widespread free time," he says. "The architect has to interpret these new hybrid institutions considering these contradictions."
Over the past decade, Botta has focused on creating major public buildings worldwide. The exhibition Mario Botta: Architecture and Memory features 30 of his museums, theaters, libraries and religious spaces.