Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • MillerKnoll unifies its brands under one roof for Chicago Design Week
    • "Opera House of Insects" among students projects from University of Westminster
    • Brandon Haw Architecture completes two metallic skyscrapers on Brooklyn waterfront
    • Forgeworks uses cedar shingles to update 1960s bungalow in Bath
    • 30 Best Architecture and Design Firms in New Zealand
    • My Closet Island And A Battle Of Wills (Mom vs. Daughter)
    • Ateliers O-S Architectes draws on agricultural architecture for French gymnasium
    • The Case For The Unassuming Backyard Picnic Table
    Home Decor DesignerHome Decor Designer
    • Home
    • DIY Home Decor
    • Garden Design
    • Decorating
    • Home Improvement
    • Interior Design
    • More
      • Plants & Yards
      • Architecture
      • Design
    Home Decor DesignerHome Decor Designer
    Home»Architecture»Casa Gesso is a “habitable blank canvas” for reflecting on feminist art
    Architecture

    Casa Gesso is a “habitable blank canvas” for reflecting on feminist art

    Team_HomeDecorDesignerBy Team_HomeDecorDesignerDecember 27, 2024No Comments5 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Living spaces are arranged around a central courtyard at this house in Valencia, Spain, which local studio Viruta Lab has designed to celebrate the legacy of influential feminist artist Ángela García Codoñer.


    Casa Gesso aims to establish a dialogue between contemporary architecture and some of the pioneering work created by the artist in the 1970s, deconstructing how women were traditionally portrayed in Spanish society.

    Viruta Lab has completed Casa Gesso in Valencia

    Viruta Lab founders David Puerta and María Daroz are fans of García Codoñer, who is best known for her collages, screen prints and acrylic paintings featuring stylised depictions of the female form.

    García Codoñer was also Puerta’s professor at the Valencia School of Architecture and later his mentor at the university’s Artistic Heritage Fund.

    Facade of Casa Gesso by Viruta Lab
    The home consists of two volumes with different heights

    He explained that the artist’s approach to colour and form informed the material palette and minimalist aesthetic of the house, which he described as a “habitable blank canvas” for reflecting on her work.

    “In essence, it is a home that allows one to inhabit the ideas of Ángela García Codoñer and demonstrates that residential spaces can also be conceived for reflection and questioning established norms,” the duo said.

    The 145-square-metre property in the suburb of Picanya is composed of two volumes that reflect the different heights of the neighbouring buildings.

    Courtyard of Valencia home by Viruta Lab
    The living spaces are arranged around a central courtyard

    The main living spaces are contained within a one-and-a-half-storey high structure that adjoins a two-storey high block housing the bedrooms and bathrooms.

    The building’s facades are clad with vertical bone-white porcelain tiles chosen to evoke the traditional washhouses that once housed local artists’ studios.

    Dining area and storage wall in Casa Gesso
    Timber joinery lines the wall connecting the two volumes

    A courtyard at the centre of the house provides natural light and ventilation to the living room and kitchen-dining room located on either side.

    This space is clad with the same porcelain tiles as the facades to create a sense of continuity between interior and exterior, while a section of the adjacent hallway floor is finished with slimline tiles to match the courtyard’s surface.

    Kitchen of Casa Gesso
    A painting from García Codoñer’s Morfologías series dominates the kitchen

    “The day area sequence is composed of three completely pure architectural prisms, geometrically and visually uninterrupted, with the second being a void positioned between two solids, emphasising views through transparency,” Puerta told Dezeen.

    “These volumes are designed as perfect spaces of calm and contemplation, suitable for working or exhibiting artworks like an exhibition hall, thus projected with half-height ceilings.”


    Colien House in Barcelona by Alvaro Siza

    Álvaro Siza steps orange-hued concrete home into sloped site in Barcelona


    Each of the living spaces in Casa Gesso was inspired by a particular series in García Codoñer’s oeuvre, with furniture, fabrics and artificial lighting chosen to reinforce their different themes.

    “Within the design’s rich details, the effect of calm and unity allows Ángela García Codoñer’s work to dominate the space, becoming the architectural protagonist, supported by changing elements like light that make their nuances vibrate in diverse ways,” said Daroz.

    Living room of Valencia home by Viruta Lab
    Each living space is inspired by a series from García Codoñer’s work

    The living room at the home’s entrance houses a 1979 work from her Labores series exploring traditionally female handicrafts, which Viruta Lab referenced through the inclusion of rugs, upholstery elements and decorative details that evoke cross-stitch.

    A painting from the 1973 Morfologías series, in which García Codoñer deconstructed the way women are portrayed in Spanish society, features in the kitchen. Here, rounded forms recall the sinuous shapes found in the paintings, while a female bust provides a focal point in the courtyard.

    A wall that extends the full length of the house and separates its two programmatic volumes is lined with storage that incorporates a door leading to a concealed staircase connecting the two floors.

    Painting in living room of Casa Gesso
    The living room houses a 1979 work from her Labores series

    The main bedroom houses a 1974 collage from the Misses series, which denounced the objectification of women in beauty pageants. The work is paired with a tweed headboard alluding to the meticulous “construction” of the female image, as well as the artist’s collage work.

    A pared-back material palette creates a sense of warmth and neutrality throughout the interior. Large-format porcelain tiles used for the floors are complemented by the natural tone of the stained-oak cabinetry, while upholstery introduces a softer element to the scheme.

    Bedroom of Valencia home by Viruta Lab
    The Misses series informed the interior of the primary bedroom

    The architects told Dezeen that the way Casa Gesso is organised and decorated results in spaces that are suitable for observing and experiencing García Codoñer’s work, without explicitly feeling like an exhibition.

    “Architecture, with its constraints, was designed to perfectly respond to the initial concept, and together with materiality, they cohesively created this universe of reflection,” Daroz said.

    “Spaces possess specific functions and are created for activities but we attempted to blur the rigid lines limiting them, enabling them to serve purposes beyond their initial design.”

    Bathroom of Casa Gesso
    The same tiles found in Cassa Gesso’s courtyard also feature in the bathroom

    Daroz and Puerta founded Viruta Lab in 2020 as a reflection of their shared artistic and architectural passions. The studio aims to deliver organic, warm and timeless spaces that balance function with emotion.

    Previous projects by Viruta Lab include the renovation of a former fisherman’s house in Valencia’s El Cabanyal neighbourhood, featuring chequerboard tiles that reference the building’s nautical heritage.

    The photography is by David Zarzoso.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleGPOD on the Road: Cherry in Nancy Heckler’s Garden, Part 2
    Next Article The Top 15 Reels of 2024 (+ How Many Views Each Of Them Got!)
    Team_HomeDecorDesigner
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Architecture

    MillerKnoll unifies its brands under one roof for Chicago Design Week

    June 14, 2025
    Architecture

    "Opera House of Insects" among students projects from University of Westminster

    June 13, 2025
    Architecture

    Brandon Haw Architecture completes two metallic skyscrapers on Brooklyn waterfront

    June 13, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    SOM’s Burj Khalifa was the most significant building of 2010

    January 16, 2025

    Marc-Antoine Barrois and Antoine Bouillot surround orb with "forest" of ropes in Milan

    April 9, 2025

    This All-White Kitchen Gets the Most Colorful $400 Makeover

    February 2, 2025

    Sanding The Polyurethaned Floors Before The Final Coat (Plus, A Few More Details Of The Floor Finishing Process)

    March 6, 2025

    Clubroom speakeasy offers "refuge of refined escapism" in Beirut

    March 23, 2025
    Categories
    • Architecture
    • Decorating
    • Design
    • DIY Home Decor
    • Garden Design
    • Home Improvement
    • Interior Design
    • Plants & Yards
    Most Popular

    MillerKnoll unifies its brands under one roof for Chicago Design Week

    June 14, 2025

    2024 Holiday Gift Guides – Ideas for Women, Men, & Kids

    November 24, 2024

    Exploring the Choice Between Interior Design Companies and Self-Employed Designers — AKIVA UK Affordable home Interior Design

    November 24, 2024
    Our Picks

    Choosing the right home for you — AKIVA UK Affordable home Interior Design

    November 24, 2024

    A Simple Poll – Should I Keep This And Widen It, Or Eliminate It Altogether?

    November 27, 2024

    Week 1 Of Building My Walk-In Closet (Plus, Your Questions Answered)

    March 21, 2025
    Categories
    • Architecture
    • Decorating
    • Design
    • DIY Home Decor
    • Garden Design
    • Home Improvement
    • Interior Design
    • Plants & Yards
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Terms and Conditions
    • About us
    • Contact us
    Copyright © 2024 Homedecordesigner.co.uk All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.