… and the winner is
Turner prize winners Assemble: 'Art? We're more
interested in plumbing'
It’s been declared the death of the Turner
prize: a bunch of radical young architects winning instead of an artist. Are
Assemble bothered? No – they’re too busy working out how to change the world
over a few pints
Assemble were given the award for their project
in Liverpool’s Granby Four Streets. It revolved around the refurbishment of a
group of houses in a community in Toxteth that had been ground down, ignored and
disenfranchised over the years, with houses demolished or left to rot. The
stalwart residents who remained refused to let others dictate how they should
live, and began to clean up, planting gardens and painting murals on the wasted
buildings around them. Assemble were brought in to help by the community land
trust that now runs the neighbourhood. Aside from the refurbishment of 10
houses, Assemble worked with the community to establish – using the prize
nomination as a launchpad – Granby Workshop, a social enterprise selling items
for the home, some of them made from the rubble of demolished buildings - reconstituted into bookends, or fireplaces. (The Guardian)
“Assemble are a collective based in London who
work across the fields of art, architecture and design. They began working
together in 2010 and are comprised of 18 members. Assemble’s working practice
seeks to address the typical disconnection between the public and the process
by which places are made. Assemble champion a working practice that is
interdependent and collaborative, seeking to actively involve the public as
both participant and collaborator in the on-going realization of the
work. For more information please use the contact details at: http://assemblestudio.co.uk”
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