Gia Wolff

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Gia Wolff Transforms the Tate Modern with Canopy of Ropes

Text description provided by the architects. What happens when a designer decides to turn a classic Herzog & de Meuron masterpiece into a carnival space? That's precisely what happened when architect Gia Wolff was asked to create an installation - part of which doubled as a performance piece - for the show Up Hill Down Hall: An Indoor Carnival in the Tate Modern's Turbine Hall. How did she approach transforming such a cultural icon? Three words: red-pink rope.

Gia Wolff Transforms the Tate Modern with Canopy of Ropes - Temporary Installations, Handrail, StairsGia Wolff Transforms the Tate Modern with Canopy of Ropes - Temporary Installations, Arcade, Facade, Column, BeamGia Wolff Transforms the Tate Modern with Canopy of Ropes - Temporary InstallationsGia Wolff Transforms the Tate Modern with Canopy of Ropes - Temporary InstallationsGia Wolff Transforms the Tate Modern with Canopy of Ropes - More Images+ 11

Architect Gia Wolff Wins Inaugural Wheelwright Prize

Brooklyn-based architect and Harvard GSD alumni Gia Wolff has been awarded the $100,000 Wheelwright Prize for her proposal Floating City: The Community-Based Architecture of Parade Floats. Now in its first edition, the Wheelwright Prize is a travel grant issued by Harvard University in an effort to foster new forms of architectural research led by cross-cultural engagement.

Mohsen Mostafavi: “The positive response to the Wheelwright Prize has been extraordinary. It is inspiring to see so many talented architects with clear agendas and visions. I am delighted for Gia Wolff, the winner of the prize. Her proposed investigations at the intersection of design, performance, and temporality will surely provide us with new insights and new directions for the future of architecture.”