Pedro Gadanho is an architect, curator, and writer. PhD in architecture and mass media, Gadanho led a recognized architecture renovation practice until 2012, when he became the curator of contemporary architecture at the Museum of Modern Art, MoMA, New York. In 2015, Pedro Gadanho became the founding director of MAAT, the new Museum of Art Architecture and Technology, in Lisbon, working on projects with major multi-media artists such as Apichapong Weerasethakul, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Gary Hill, and others.

 

Gadanho has kept a high profile in the architectural field at large, with a regular presence in international conferences, juries and other consulting bodies. He was a consultant for the Rolex  Mentor-Protegé Arts Initiative 2013, the MacArthurs Fellows Program, and the Pew Fellowship Programs for 2014, among others. Profiles on his work and curatorial projects have been published in magazines and online sites such as  New York Times, New York; Architecture d’Aujourd’Hui, Paris; ICON, London; DAMNo, Brussels; IndabaDesign, Cape Town, etc. He is a Loeb Fellow from Harvard University. Currently, Gadanho is leading the Candidacy to European Capital of Culture 2027, for 19 towns in Portugal and Spain, at the border territory of Raia Central.

 

Pedro Gadanho Interview Topics

 

1. Education background -  From Portugal to the world, Education 

2. As a Writer 

3. Science Fiction and its impact on our reality 

4. Architecture background - How do you see architecture now? 

5. Present state of architecture: evolution over digital platforms 

6. We are creating our own illusion of reality. How do you defend the blend? 

7. Challenges of the art world 

8. As a curator of MoMA and MAAT 

9. Major achievements

 


 

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Pedro Gadanho Biography

 

Pedro Gadanho is a 2020 Loeb Fellow from the Harvard Graduate School of Design, where he developed multidisciplinary research on the environmental crisis and its impacts on architectural practice, leading to the upcoming publication of Climax Change! (Actar Publishers, 2021). Gadanho holds an MA in art and architecture and is a PhD in architecture and mass media.  Until 2012, he was an Auxiliary Professor at the Faculty of Architecture of the University of Porto, in  Porto. Currently is a Guest Professor at the Beira Interior University. From 2012 to 2016, he was the Curator of Contemporary Architecture in the Department of Architecture and Design at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. From 2015 to 2019, he was also the founding director of MAAT, the new Museum of Art Architecture and Technology, in Lisbon. As a founding director of MAAT, he completed projects with major multi-media artists such as Apichapong Weerasethakul, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Gary Hill, Tomás Saraceno, Bill Fontana, Tadashi  Kawamata, or Jesper Just. In between more than 50 exhibitions programmed over four years, he curated group shows such as Utopia/Dystopia, the multi-venue Eco-Visionaries, Art and Architecture  After the Anthropocene, and the film and video exhibition Tension & Conflict, Video Art after 2008. Under his leadership, the museum reached an audience of half a million visitors in its first year of activity. While he joined MoMA, he curated a number of breakthrough exhibitions based on the Museum’s collections, including 9+1 Ways of Being Political, Cut’n’Paste, Conceptions of Space, and Endless  House. He curated two new major initiatives: Uneven Growth, Tactical Urbanisms for Expanding  Megacities, in collaboration with the Vienna Biennale, 2014, and A Japanese Constellation: Toyo Ito, SANAA and Beyond, 2016. At over 350.000 visitors, this group show was the most viewed architecture exhibition in the world during that year. He was also responsible for MoMA’s Young Architects Program, a  multi-partner initiative that continues to grow in relevance and scope, with two new international venues – in Istanbul, Turkey, and Seoul, Korea – added in 2013. While at MoMA, Gadanho has kept a high profile in the architectural field at large, with a regular presence in international conferences, juries and other consulting bodies. He was a consultant for the Rolex  Mentor-Protegé Arts Initiative 2013, the MacArthurs Fellows Program, and the Pew Fellowship Programs for 2014. He was a jury member for the Bienal Colombiana de Arquitectura 2012, the European Union  Prize for Contemporary Architecture – Mies van der Rohe Award 2013, and the Harvard GSD Wheelright  Prize 2014. Previously to joining MoMA, Pedro Gadanho was based in Lisbon and divided highly successful activities between architecture, teaching, writing and curating. He used all media available at any given moment to provoke critical thinking on the connections between architecture, city and contemporary culture. Since 2012, he has given lectures at the ETH Zurich, Columbia University, Rice University and Penn State  University, as well as in cultural venues in Brazil, Italy, India, Kuwait, Poland, Taiwan and Japan. He participated in conferences such as The Future of the City salon, organized by the New Yorker; Think  Space conference, in Zagreb; Performing Architecture symposium, at Princeton University; and Exhibiting  Architecture symposium, at Yale University. Besides contributing regularly to international magazines and books, he was the editor of the BEYOND,  Short Stories on the Post-Contemporary book series, in Amsterdam, and kept the Shrapnel  Contemporary blog. He published the monograph [Interiors 01/010] (Caleidoscópio) and the book  Architecture in Public (Dafne), which was a recipient of the FAD Prize for Thought and Criticism in 2012. Between 2000 and 2003, he was a director and curator of ExperimentaDesign, the Lisbon Biennial. Since  1999, he is also the founding director of CUC, Centre for Contemporary Urban Culture, an organisation with which he co-organised the 1st International Conference on Architecture and Fiction, at the Calouste  Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon, in 2010. Previous participation in international conferences included Alternate Currents, at Sheffield University,  and Tickle Your Catastrophe, at Ghent University. Beyond presentations included Harvard GSD, the  Architectural Association, the Rotterdam Biennale, and the Beyond Media Festival in Florence. He also participated in international panels on architectural curating and writing, including Archilife, Orleans, the  CCA or the Venice Architecture Biennale 2008. As a free-lance curator, he led Metaflux, the Portuguese representation at the 2004 Architecture Venice  Biennale; Post.Rotterdam, for the European Culture Capital Porto 2001; Space Invaders, for the British  Council London; the 1000 Plateaux talk series for ExperimentaDesign, Lisbon; Influx, for Serralves  Contemporary Art Museum, Porto; Pancho Guedes, An Alternative Modernist, for the Swiss Architecture  Museum, Basel. He was also the chief-curator of the National Architecture Exhibition Habitar Portugal 06- 08 for the Portuguese Architects Guild, and Performance Architecture, a public space program for the  European Capital of Culture 2012, in Guimarães. He has published articles on architectural curating internationally, including contributions for academic publications and for magazines such as Domus, Milano, or Abitare, Milano. His articles on curating as a  critical practice appeared in Oase, Rotterdam, ICAM Print, Vienna, or the Routledge publication  Architecture Beyond Criticism. He has co-authored two TV series and has directed a film documentary on African architect Pancho Guedes. His architectural practice has been specifically dedicated to spatial recycling and has included exhibition designs such as Flexibility, for the Torino 2008 World Design Capital, gallery spaces such as the Ellipse  Foundation Art Centre, in Lisbon, Galeria Presença, in Porto, Transforma Headquarters, in Torres  Vedras, and experimental domestic architectures such as Baltasar House, the Orange House and the GMG House, all of them highly acclaimed and published worldwide. Profiles on his work and curatorial projects have been published in magazines and online sites such as  New York Times, New York; Architecture d’Aujourd’Hui, Paris; ICON, London; DAMNo, Brussels;  IndabaDesign, Cape Town; Archiworld, Seoul; Coolhunter, New York; Architect’s Newspaper, New York;  Domus, Milano; Monocle, London.

 

Vision

 

Present state of architecture: evolution over digital platforms

 

“Architects are seen as powerful because they build structures that are powerful. But, they feel powerful because most of the things have been laid down upon. You have to lead very big team-engineers, and builders. Economic pressure to just respond in an effective way.

 

You might become a corporate architect, plainly using formula and responding in a mechanical way. In the art field, we split in two different ways: a smaller world by adding expanse by exhibitions, and the other expanded boundaries. But both are not talking to each other. So they are just split.”

 

As a curator at MoMA

 

“For me, it was my first 9-5 job, exciting to enter a high level organization: presenting arts in the best way possible. It was also an opportunity for a wider platform to reach many people. As a curator in the architecture and designs department I was in charge of initiating new projects. After 9 months, I did these exhibitions from political aspects. People do tend to look at architecture as a commercial production. It gave me a lot of feedback, but a cruel conception that political positions can never be threatened by architecture exhibitions.”

 

Pedro Gadanho Links And Sources

 

https://www.archdaily.com/tag/pedro-gadanho

 

https://loebfellowship.gsd.harvard.edu/fellows-alumni/fellows-search/pedrogadanho/

 

https://www.instagram.com/pedrogadanho/?hl=en

 

https://shrapnelcontemporary.wordpress.com/

 

https://www.resite.org/speakers/pedro-gadanho

 

https://pt.linkedin.com/in/pedrogadanho

 

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