Franco Purini
This exhibition celebrates the work of the Italian architect Franco Purini and his generous gift of drawings to The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture Archive.
In 2017, The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture first exhibited Purini's drawings in conjunction with the exhibition Geostories: Another Architecture for the Environment, which highlighted the work of Rania Ghosn and El Hadi Jazairy. These concurrent presentations were united by Architectural Tropes Across Scales and Geographies, a dialogue between Purini, Ghosn, and Jazairy. A year later, as a gesture of thanks to the School of Architecture, Purini created a suite of fifteen drawings titled Exercises of Claustrophobia. These works, which Purini refers to as a small visual poem, address the tension between freedom and constraint, which from Purini’s perspective has always existed within the discipline of architecture:
Preceded by a table-frontispiece, the fourteen drawings of the series Exercises of Claustrophobia revolve around a theme that has always fascinated me. It is the architectural relationship between construction and freedom. Although in Latin etymology the word ‘space’ is associated with openness, what it identifies is configured according to me, on the contrary, by means of fences, real or virtual. In a word, space is not an unlimited extension, but it is made of perimeter regions that give life, for those who can see it, to a system of cells in contact with each other, that is to say a fabric, often very dense, of elementary units. Using space, painting is like a cretto by Alberto Burri or a painting by Jackson Pollock. It is in fact a sort of mosaic of parts of different shapes and variable widths. This applies to the landscape, to the city, and to any building. Thinking about architecture therefore means finding a balance that, by its nature, can only be unstable, between closure and openness, between a strongly partitioned structuring of the space and the partial destruction of the space itself. In short, architecture is the search for freedom within a universe severely divided into separate sections, it is a living dialectic between a Piranesian reclusion and continually interrupted logical-poetic evasions.
Following the exhibition, which is located in the Third Floor Hallway Gallery of the Foundation Building, these drawings will be available for further study in the Architecture Archive as part of its growing collection of original works by architects.