Gian Piero Frassinelli
Pensare e vivere la radicalità dell'architettura
A podcast by Villa Romana and Radio Papesse in collaboration with Senzacornice.
Conceived by Angelika Stepken, Alessandra Acocella, and Ilaria Gadenz, in dialogue with Gian Piero Frassinelli.
Three episodes [30' - 33' - 29'].
Language: ITA
Year: 2021-2022
In spring 2021, the archive of the radical Florentine architecture group Superstudio was handed over to MAXXI Museum in Rome.
What happens when documents and works that are central to the history of art and architecture are no longer in the hands of their producers, but become part of institutional archives?
In the 1960s - during the student movement and after the Great Flood - Florence was a dynamic centre of so-called Architettura radicale - Radical Architecture, in Italy. Architects and collectives such as Superstudio, Archizoom, UFO, Zziggurat, 9999 and Gianni Pettena questioned architecture as a discipline, and urged radical reforms for the present and future. In 1972, the radical Florentine architects took the Museum of Modern Art in New York by storm with the exhibition Italy: the New Domestic Landscape.
In the 1980s and 1990s, Superstudio's conceptual and innovative work was temporarily forgotten. But around 2000, the Centre Pompidou in Paris showed interest in their archive and acquired a large number of works for its collection. Since then, researchers and international institutions have paid tribute to Superstudio's critical and theoretical projects, most recently the CIVA Museum and Research Centre in Brussels with its major exhibition Migrazioni.
Meanwhile, Florence has forgotten about its contemporary architects for years.
Many important archives of 20th century art and architecture have now left the city forever.
In the end, Superstudio's archive was handed over to MAXXI Museum in Rome in spring 2021.
In this three-part series, Gian Piero Frassinelli - a member of Superstudio since 1968 - talks about architecture as a conflicting space, Superstudio’s extraordinary work, and its archive, which he curated for many years.
Episode 1
Architecture as conflicting space
Length: 30'
Gian Piero Frassinelli talks about his first encounters with architecture as a child during World War II, about his interest in "custom" architecture, and the many conflicts both with clients and the current residents of buildings designed under more progressive ideas of living, such as the Vierwindenhuis, the House of 4 Winds in Amsterdam.
Credits: Ela Bialkowska / OKNO Studio, installation view @ MAI Museo Antropologico Immaginario, Villa Romana 2020.
Episode 2
Superstudio. “The only architecture will be our life”
Length: 33'
Founded in 1966 by Adolfo Natalini and Cristiano Toraldo di Francia, Superstudio is considered one of the most influential groups of so-called Radical Architecture. Gian Piero Frassinelli joined the group two years later, contributing to their vision both conceptually and practically, through important works including Le dodici città ideali – The Twelve Ideal Cities (1971).
Superstudio, 1969. Ph: Cristiano Toraldo di Francia
Episode 3
Superstudio Archive, living body and relational space
Length: 29'
In the spring of 2021, the archive of Superstudio was donated to MAXXI Museum in Rome. Gian Piero Frassinelli had been curating it since the beginning of the 2000s, when the Centre Pompidou, with a series of important acquisitions, redeemed it in the eyes of critics, after years of oblivion. Today, with its transfer to MAXXI, a new chapter in its history begins. Frassinelli is not worried about this detachment, on the contrary....