SCI-Arc Gallery

1 MIN READ

“SCI-Arc is still a raucous place in a pedagogical way,” says director Eric Owen Moss, FAIA, “but administratively it is more institutional than it used to be.” The Los Angeles school’s gallery encourages that active discourse and provides the framework, sweat equity, and funding for experimental installation work. This spring, local architect Barbara Bestor, AIA, 44, worked with students to construct “Silent Disco,” an unfolded plywood polyhedron that doubles as a dance club. The piece, a perceptual play on surfaces, is covered in Dazzle camouflage graphics and glittery mirrors.

By engaging the whole school in the process, SCI-Arc continues its hands-on legacy, even as it embraces digital tools. “Built work—whether in installations or ‘bricks and mortar’—is both a crucial form of engagement and ever more difficult to achieve due to the institutionalization of so many building practices,” Bestor says. “There are fewer design-centric architecture projects to do out there. It is not a new problem, but it is hard to get new interesting or challenging work built in the U.S. in this climate. The schools have become crucial to supporting the next generation.”

About the Author

Mimi Zeiger

Mimi Zeiger is a Los Angeles-based journalist and critic. The author of New Museums, Tiny Houses and Micro Green: Tiny Houses in Nature, she teaches in Art Center’s Media Design Practices MFA program and is co-president of the Los Angeles Forum for Architecture and Urban Design.   

No recommended contents to display.

Upcoming Events

  • Future Place

    Irving, TX

    Register Now
  • Archtober Festival: Shared Spaces

    New York City, NY

    Register Now
  • Snag early-bird pricing to Multifamily Executive Conference

    Newport Beach, CA

    Register Now
All Events