MADRID.- After its showing at various international venues, from 4 April to 11 June this year the
Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza is presenting Rafael Moneo. Theory through practice. Archive materials (1961-2016), the first major retrospective on this Spanish architect. Curated by Francisco González de Canales, professor at the Universidad de Sevilla and at the AA in London, the exhibition, co-produced by the Fundación Barrié, Estudio Rafael Moneo and the Museo Thyssen, brings together a selection of 121 drawings, 19 architectural models and 152 photographs associated with a total of 52 celebrated projects by Rafael Moneo. In addition, to coincide with the Museo Thyssens 25th Anniversary, the exhibition is accompanied by another smaller one curated by the architect José Manuel Barbeito on the history of the Palacio Villahermosa from the mid-18th century to its remodelling in 1992 to house the Museum.
Rafael Moneo. Theory through practice. Archive materials (1961-2016) narrates the professional career of an architect who has sought to define an approach to architectural projects founded on a stable disciplinary base during a period of changing conditions, adopting the difficult position of defending architecture as culture and as a specific form of knowledge. This narrative not only offers visitors a presentation of Moneos own work but also reflects on an important part of the history of recent architecture through his gaze. Ranging from organic and structuralist tendencies (1950-1960) to Italian discourses on the city (1960-1970), the theoretical focus of East Coast American architects (1970-1980) and the creation of the global star system in the 1990s, the exhibitions six biographical sections show how Moneo has resisted, reflected on and assimilated these different approaches of his time to construct his own cultural reflection.
The exhibition presents a series of important projects that span Rafael Moneos entire career and focus on issues such as what an architects work can offer the society of his/her day and what type of knowledge is involved. The selection of materials places particular emphasis on the importance of drawing as a tool to develop his work and a means to define his thinking. The drawings on display are accompanied by architectural models and photographs that help to illustrate the chosen works.
THE FORMATIVE YEARS: The School of Madrid (to 1968)
As a young architect, Rafael Moneo employed the organic approach characteristic of the School of Madrid, a type of functionalist architecture that looked for new expressive forms. This trend is evident in his competition proposal for the Madrid Opera House (1964), the Diestre Transformers Factory (1964-1967), the Gómez-Acebo residence (1966-1968) and the Escuelas in Tudela (19661971). Particularly notable from this period is the project for the redesign of the Plaza del Obradoiro (1962) in which the delicate articulation of the elements in relation to the setting reveal Moneos precocious sensitivity to the urban context.
INDIVIDUAL EXPRESSION: The early mature period (to 1976)
In Moneos project that earned him the chair of Compositional Elements at the School of Architecture in Barcelona (1970), he located history at the centre of his approach to architecture, considering it a body of knowledge that provides architects with a series of solutions already tried out by others. This new manner of working also implied a questioning of the formal coherence of the School of Madrid and a rethinking of composition as a tool for articulating an architecture constructed from different elements. In his projects for Bankinter (1972-1976) and Logroño Town Hall (19731981) the compositional freedom of each of the parts of the building allows for the inclusion of fragments of already designed buildings alongside the requirements of the specific project and the particular characteristics of the context, all without diminishing the integrity of the whole as another element within the fabric of the city.
THE INTERNATIONAL SCENE: Between Madrid and New York (to 1984)
In 1976 Moneo accepted an invitation to teach at the Cooper Union and a year later at Princeton. In late 1970 architectural debate on the American East Coast was defined by its emphasis on theory and graphic experimentation, with built work considered of lesser interest. While Moneo always rejected the separation of theory from construction, these early contacts and his access to a broader debate allowed him to shed some of the prejudices of the less open community from which he originated. Dating from this period is his project for the extension of the Banco de España in Madrid (1978-1980), for which he opted to retain and continue the academicist idiom of the pre-existing building, and the Museo Nacional de Arte Romano in Mérida (1980-1986), where Moneos style reaches its highest degree of formal complexity.
THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE: Harvard (to 1990)
In 1985 Rafael Moneo was appointed director of the department of architecture at Harvard and moved to live in Cambridge, Massachusetts, for five years. This experience not only implied a renewed awareness of the necessary relationship between architectural thought and construction, inherited from his training within the context of the School of Madrid, but also a new way of seeing the city and its scale. From the mid1980s onwards his buildings liberated themselves from the dictates of urban morphology and opted for more robust scales, evident in his designs for Atocha (1984-1992) and LIlla Diagonal in Barcelona (19871994). As a result, they became geographical features, such as the Kursaal in San Sebastián (19901999) or even negations of the surrounding urban context, such as the Fundación Joan y Pilar Miró in Palma de Mallorca (1987-1992) and lAuditori in Barcelona (1987-1999).
A GLOBAL PROFESSIONAL PRACTICE: Return to Madrid and international recognition (to 1999)
Due to the requirements of his commissions in Spain, in 1990 Moneo terminated his period at Harvard. These years marked the start of his international recognition and he was the subject of numerous awards and honours, including the Pritzker Prize in 1996. However, the more he moved within this global context, the more his discourse shifted towards the importance of the specific place. For Moneo, the location does not dictate a direct response towards the building but has to be interpreted, reciprocally constructed or on occasions even confronted. Projects such as the Museum of Modern Art and Architecture in Stockholm (1991-1998), the Audrey Jones Beck Building of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (1992-2000), the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles (1996-2002), and the extension to the Museo del Prado (1998-2007) are profoundly imbued with that spirit, which emerges from the particular characteristics of the place.
THE STUDIO AT THE TURN OF THE CENTURY: A reflexive, professional practice (ongoing)
The 21st century began with further recognition of Rafael Moneos career, including the award of the RIBA gold medal (2003) and the Prince of Asturias Prize for the Arts (2012). During this period the architect was responsible for buildings such as the LISE for Harvard University (2000-2007) and the laboratory building at Columbia University (2005-2010), in which he aimed to show how the contradictions between a commission and the reality of its construction are not an impediment to the project but rather provide the principal opportunities for the development of the architecture.