Die Braak Pavilion
Pieter J. Mathews
2020
South Africa
Recycled materials and wood
Architectural Structure
Die Braak
Die Braak Pavilion
Die Braak Pavilion
Our life-giving armature
The inaugural Die Braak Pavilion is situated on the Braak, Stellenbosch’s town square. Ironically, the name means fallow land, a description often used in post-apocalyptic art and movies. If we do not care for our planet it eventually will become "Braak." Echoing the triennial theme "Tomorrow there will be more of us", the intervention invited participants to ultimately determine the aesthetic of the pavilion, just as our choices will determine the "tomorrow" of our planet.
The pavilion is a fusion between the disciplines of public art, sculpture and architecture. The pavilion can be considered the 'armature' or skeleton which keeps the conceptual notions upright and 'grows' throughout the triennial as people participate in its making. An afterlife for the pavilion is envisaged: as a playground for a crèche or perhaps a shading device for local crafters. Conversations around everyday materials and their afterlives are integral to the message the pavilion portrays.
The notion of 'embodied experience', explained by architectural theorist Juhaani Pallasma as a full sensory experience in time and place, is the foundation of the pavilion. It is intended as a space to be experienced, to be interacted with and contributed to.
By providing only the armature as a defined structure, the pavilion encourages local artists and the community to participate in the filling of the pavilion. Waste materials such as discarded fishing nets, ropes, plastic bags and nylon packaging will be woven and knotted as infill material. The reuse of waste material will communicate the value of waste and the future of a waste economy. The pavilion stands as a metaphor for the future of our planet's depleting resources and the value of what we today refer to as "waste".
By assuming the role of facilitator, rather than that of the author, the architects allow the edifice to become a catalyst for a larger message belonging to the greater community.
The participatory process of the inaugural architectural pavilion will be documented as testimony to the potential for symbiosis between creatives and observers, the planet and the people.
Curator: Pieter Matthews
Braak Pavillion made possible by CS Property.
ST2025 is brought to you by Outset Contemporary Art Fund and many more