Architecture is simply a tool for people to connect with their consciousness, and any created space without a user inside it is a dead zone, said French artist and architect Gabriel Beckinger.
“A building must make you aware of your physical presence there; when people are together in a particular place, they have the realisation of being one collective body,” said Beckinger in a talk at the Kochi-Muziris Biennale on Saturday, detailing his experiments with capturing a designed space and the movement of people within it. Titled ‘The Many Bodies of Architecture’, the lecture was part of the Biennale’s Let’s Talk series.
Beckinger, whose works combine performance, architecture and video, centred his talk on a recent project called ‘(Un)Steady’ created for the 14th Architecture Biennale of Venice. In (Un)Steady, a performance piece, the architectural element was provided by seven different stages built to host theatre and dance performances at the Venice biennale; and the users of the space were the visitors themselves, KMB said in a communication.
The video installation of the project was shot by Beckinger’s collaborator, a steadycam operator who kept the camera lens close to his body and captured, in continuous motion, the architectural design as well as the faces and movements of visitors who became both ‘a collective body of spectators’ while watching him move and tensed up ‘performers’ when the camera approached them individually. “People ended up asking me if he was a dancer,” said Beckinger. “That, to me, was the success of the programme.”
Beckinger has had works exhibited in Paris, Brussels, Reykjavik and Venice. Currently, he is working on a new project in India.