Carnegie International, Pittsburgh

„The Playground Project“, part of 2013 Carnegie International, Carnegie Museum of Art Pittsburgh, October 5, 2013 – March 16, 2014.

Lozziwurm (1972), in front of Carnegie Museum of Art, 2013
The Playground Project, Heinz Architectural Center HAC, Carnegie Museum of Art, 2013
Foto: Christianna Kreiss

Mounted on plywood panels that suggest the walls of an impromptu recreation room, this jam-packed show uses photographs, film, books, architectural plans and models to illuminate the golden decades after World War II, when cities around the world felt the need to build new play areas in parks and on streets„.
Carol Kino, New York Times

The Work Behind Child’s Play. Carnegie Museum’s ‘Playground Project’ Traces an Evolution. By CAROL KINO, New York Times online, July 3, 2013  

The Work Behind Child’s Play. An exhibition outlines the evolution of playgrounds. By Carol Kino, New York Times, Sunday, July 7, 2013

Play Time. The Carnegie International By Peter Schjeldahl, New Yorker, October 2013

Playing in (and on) The Playground Project. Pure enjoyment from the HAC and 2013 Carnegie International by Sean Sheffler, AIA Pittsburgh, November 21, 2013

The Playground Project Carnegie Museum of Art October 5, 2013–March 16, 2014 by Susan G. Solomon, Journal of Architectural Education, February 1, 2014

Foto: Christianna Kreiss

… the plywood- and poster-lined space offers a fascinating overview of mid-to-late 20th century playground design in Europe, Japan and the US through archival photos, videos and models. From the pioneering ingenuity of Scandinavian “junk playgrounds” in the 1940s (micro-societies which often involved up to 100 children and included animal husbandry and an adolescent version of consensus government) to the modular sci-fi play sculptures of the late 1960s and 1970s (including a subterranean playground designed by the French collective Group Ludic), these were sites of high-concept design and spontaneous social dynamism embedded in the everyday.
Bryne McLaughlin, www.canadianart.ca

Foto: Josh Franzos
Foto: Josh Franzos
Foto: Christianna Kreiss
Tezuka Architects, Tokyo: Immersive play sculpture, HAC, Carnegie Museum or Art