Museo Experimental El Eco Explained

Museo Experimental el Eco
Pushpin Map:Mexico Mexico City#Mexico
Coordinates:19.4334°N -99.1613°W
Location:Sullivan 43
Colonia San Rafael
Cuauhtémoc
Mexico, 06470
Director:Paola Santoscoy
Publictransit:Mexico City Metrobús, lines A1, A2, A3 and A5

The Museo Experimental El Eco is a contemporary art gallery in the centre of Mexico City, Mexico.[1] It was designed by sculptor Mathias Goeritz, a Mexican artist of German origin[2] who worked closely with the Mexican architect Luis Barragán.[3] Originally built in 1952–53, the gallery was extended by FR-EE/Fernando Romero Enterprise in 2007 "to expand its offices and special services to improve daily operations".

History of the building

In 1952, businessman Daniel Mont commissioned artist Mathias Goeritz to build a place that would articulate a new relationship between his commercial interests of a restaurant-bar and the avant-garde spirit of some cultural actors of the time, with the intention of finding something different from what was established. Under the premise "do whatever you want", Goeritz conceived the space on Sullivan Street in Mexico City. It was designed as a poetic structure whose layout of corridors, ceilings, walls, rooms and openings led its visitors to reflect their experience of space in an emotional act; This concept challenged the dominant interests of functionalism in architecture at that time. Based on his "Manifesto of emotional architecture", his writings also refer to inspiration of religious experiences and Gothic and Baroque architecture.

Goeritz conceived the building as a penetrable sculpture. This space was the creation of an unprecedented platform for the arts in the context of Mexican and international art of the 1950s.

In 2004, the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México bought the building which re-opened its doors on 7 September 2005 after many months of restoration work to bring the building back to its original state.[4] The project was intended to revive Goeritz's architectural legacy.[5]

Pabellón Eco

In 2008, the museum initiated a national architecture competition to continue the legacy of spatial experimentation that hosts an interdisciplinary art program. The project offers a platform for young Mexican architects and is co-produced with Buró—Buró,[6] an independent non-profit cultural office. The museum also organizes a conference around experimental architecture called Pabellón Eco: Panorama.[7]

Pavilion winners:

Publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Museo Experimental el Eco. 19 February 2018.
  2. http://en.mxcity.mx/2016/03/museo-experimental-el-eco/ "MUSEO EXPERIMENTAL EL ECO: THE SCULPTURE OF MATHIAS GOERITZ"
  3. https://architizer.com/projects/el-eco-museum-extension-1/ "El Eco Museum Extension, Mexico City, Mexico"
  4. Web site: Buscador de Arquitectura . 2018-02-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091001045314/http://noticias.arq.com.mx/Detalles/8989.html . 2009-10-01 . dead .
  5. https://archive.today/20120630065255/http://www2.eluniversal.com.mx/pls/impreso/noticia.html?id_nota=44547&tabla=cultura Periódico El Universal
  6. http://buroburo.org Buró—Buró
  7. Web site: Pabellón Eco: Panorama. 22 February 2017.
  8. https://www.arquine.com/pabellon-eco-2015/ Arquine: Pabellón Eco 2015
  9. Web site: APRDELESP: ganador del Pabellón Eco 2016 . ArchDaily México . 15 March 2022 . es-MX . 15 March 2016.
  10. https://www.arquine.com/campanario-pabellon-eco/ Arquine: Pabellón Eco 2018
  11. Web site: Pabellón Eco 2020: Cronoboros. 2020-07-23. Museo Experimental el Eco. en.