Asaase
David Adjaye's Asaase, billed as the architect's first "large scale autonomous sculpture," is on display at Gagosian Gallery in New York as part of Social Works, a group exhibition curated by Antwaun Sargent that "considers the relationship between space — personal, public, institutional, and psychic — and Black social practice."
Asaase is a maze-like sculpture of walls made from rammed earth, the stacked blocks increasing in height toward a "conical vertex" in the center. Adjaye notes a couple West African references for the installation on his website: the Tiébélé royal complex in Burkina Faso, which is confined by earthen walls painted with patterns, and the walled city of Agadez in Niger, with its famous 27-meter-high mud-brick minaret. With these references, Asaase captures the architect's "ongoing reflections on the origins of black architecture and its relationship to the earth."
Below is a quick tour of Asaase, which is on display at Gagosian Gallery (555 West 24th Street) as part of Social Works from June 24 to August 13, 2021.
"David Adjaye and Rick Lowe, moderated by Thelma Golden | In Conversation | Gagosian"
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