This
project aims to recover the cultural role of the legendary site, the live-work
space during the late 1960s and early 1970s of the late Mexican muralist and
political activist David Alfaro Siqueiros, by turning it into an
active museum, workshop, artist residency and meeting point for the production
and criticism of art.
The
new Tallera showcases a masterful sociopolitical and architectural juggle; a
well-played act that carefully exhibits a need to look inward, only to provide
a genuinely autonomous space for reinvention from within.
It
masks itself as modern to become contemporary. Within its shell, La Tallera's building
programme incorporates an artistic and research residency space in Siqueiros's
former house, as well as a small archive space where his work will be preserved
and made available for research.
The
most "outspoken" element in the "subtle" proposal is the
astute decision to reconfigure the two gigantic Siqueiros murals — which were
originally displayed and viewed in full from the building's indoor patio,
giving only glimpses of its colourful angular strokes from the street — and
position them to face outwards towards a neighbouring public square.
To
do so, Escobedo took down a perimetral wall, making the private patio public
and extending the square's dimensions. The angular direction they now have is a
public invitation to access La Tallera.
Rather than having private outdoor events, the new design
allows for the possibility of public outdoor activities with a much wider area
for public gathering.
Through
its use of rudimentary materials, Escobedo's Tallera appears contextual and
inviting to the modernist-trained local audience. By leaving the skeleton of
the existing building — which encompasses the main exhibition venue — in white,
and using only exposed concrete for the new part, the project shows the
remnants of the old workshop, which serve as a visual reference to the added
space.
Moreover,
the project recuperates Siqueiros's innovative mural-making technology —
comprised of a pit and pulley system — not to celebrate it as a museum piece,
but to offer it for use today.
In
a country that is haunted by the unrealised ideals of its modernist past, where
revolutionary messages tend to be co-opted by political parties, the new
cultural producers must be able to disguise themselves and cope with this
condition to a point that seems almost conservative.
As
Octavio Paz says in his incisive essay "Mexican Masks":
"Dissimulation requires greater subtlety: the person who dissimulates is
not counterfeiting but attempting to become invisible, to pass unnoticed without
renouncing his individuality".
This
is not an easy task, but Frida Escobedo's new, masked Tallera Siqueiros
provides a framework for an autonomous laboratory where experiments to
articulate the voice of a new generation of cultural producers can take place.
Location: Cuernavaca, Mexico
Architect:
Frida Escobedo
Proyect
Team: Rodolfo
Díaz Cervantes, Adiranne Montemayor, Adrián
Moreau, Daniela Barrera
Year:
2010
Photography: Rafael Gamo












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