Architecture Building Materials Exhibition

Exhibition at UQAM Centre de Design highlights pioneering work of legendary architect and innovator Pier Luigi Nervi

December 10, 2021

An ongoing exhibition at the UQAM Centre de Design in Montreal presents the work of Italian architect and engineer Pier Luigi Nervi, an acclaimed protagonist of 20th-century engineering and architecture.

Working toward the synthesis of art and construction science, art historian Nikolaus Pevsner described Nervi as “the most brilliant artist in reinforced concrete of our time.” Constructed around the globe, Nervi’s buildings belong to a spectacular period of structural and architectural innovation and symbolise the achievements of Italian engineering in the aftermath of World War II. Nervi designed and built iconic structures such as the Small Sport Palace (1958) for the Olympic Games in Rome, the Labour Palace in Turin (1960), and the Pirelli Tower in Milan (1960) with the architect Gio Ponti. Another of Nervi’s major projects, one that directly connects the engineer to Montreal, is the Place Victoria Tower (1964), designed in collaboration with the architect Luigi Moretti.

An exhibition in two parts

Titled Pier Luigi Nervi: Master Designer / Builder, the exhibition is being presented in two parts. The first is an adapted version of the travelling exhibition Pier Luigi Nervi – Architecture as Challenge, curated by Cristiana Chiorino, and presented for the first time in Brussels in 2010. The exhibition examines the long career of the engineer, from the 1920s through to the 1970s. It is the product of a multidimensional research project that brought together a large team of researchers with the goal of retracing the various contributions of Nervi’s work. The result is a complex historical fresco in which Nervi’s revolutionary building techniques are closely linked to post-war Italy and international social and political developments, coupled with an exploration of the rich cultural and scientific relationships in which Nervi evolved.

The second part of the exhibition is a presentation conceived and curated by Carlo Carbone and Réjean Legault, professors at UQAM École de design. Sistema Nervi focuses on five little-known experimental projects that were carried out using three central elements of Nervi’s production system: the material, the mould, and repetition. The combination of these elements led to the invention of a composite material: ferrocement.

The use of ferrocement opened the way for the development of the tavellone — the formwork that was at the basis of Nervi’s brilliant shells and domes — which remains without a doubt the engineer’s most significant contribution to the constructive culture of reinforced concrete. Bringing together historic photographs, models by UQAM students, and analysis of the five Nervi projects, this presentation underscores the engineer’s atypical approach to design in the production of the built environment.

About the curators 

Carlo Carbone has been professor of environmental design at UQAM École de design since 2012. He is also the director of the Pre[FABRICA]tions design-research lab. His research focuses on the history of prefabrication, the generative links between industrialisation and modern building culture, the prefabrication of houses, and the current state of industrialised building systems, specifically their potential customisation by users, builders, and architects. His work on Canadian modern architecture includes contributions to two exhibitions as co-curator and associate curator: Papineau Gérin-Lajoie Le Blanc. Une architecture du Québec moderne (2015), and Montreal’s Geodesic Dreams (2017), both presented at the Centre de design. His current work includes a comparative analysis of industrialised building systems from 1851 to today, entitled 100 prefab experiments.

Since 2001, Réjean Legault has been a professor at UQAM École de design, where he currently is director of the master’s program in Environmental Design. His research, conferences, exhibitions, and publications focus on the history and historiography of North American and European post-war architecture. His most recent publications include the monograph The Canada Pavilion at the Venice Biennale (National Gallery of Canada/5 Continents, 2020), and essays on subjects including the materiality of Louis Kahn’s Salk Institute, the afterlife of the US Pavilion at Expo 67, and the contested notion of Brutalism in architecture. He has been the curator or co-curator of three exhibitions at the Centre de design: Norman Slater: Design Lessons (2011); Papineau Gérin-Lajoie Le Blanc. Une architecture du Québec moderne (2015); and Montreal’s Geodesic Dreams (2017).

Trained as an architect, Cristiana Chiorino holds a master’s degree in the preservation of modern architecture (Université de Genève, 2003), and a doctorate in the History of Architecture and Urbanism (Politecnico di Torino, 2005). In 2010, she founded Studio Associato Comunicarch, a firm specialising in the communication, distribution, and democratisation of architecture. She is a scientific consultant in heritage conservation at the Pier Luigi Nervi Foundation for which she co-curated the first edition of the international exhibition, Pier Luigi Nervi – Architecture as Challenge, and co-edited the accompanying catalogue. She also curated the traveling version of the Pier Luigi Nervi – Art and Science of Building exhibition. Chiorino is a member of the Historical Space Structures Working Group of the International Association for Shell and Spatial Structures (IASS) of the Italian chapter of Docomomo.

Partners

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) 

École de design de l’UQAM 

Institut Italien de Culture de Montréal 

Comunicarch

Faculté des arts de l’UQAM

Groupe Petra

Canadian Precast/Prestressed Concrete Institute

Ordre des architectes du Québec

Pier Luigi Nervi Project Association

SDK et associés ingénieurs

Mp

v2com newswire

Address and opening hours

Centre de design de l’UQAM
1440, rue Sanguinet
Montréal
Métro Berri-UQAM

Wednesday – Sunday, Noon to 6PM
Free entry


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