Charles Correa: India's Greatest Architect

Charles Correa: India's Greatest Architect

Charles Correa: India's Greatest Architect

Exhibition: 14 May – 4 September 2013, RIBA, 66 Portland Place, W1. Free admission
Accompanied by an ‘Out of India’ series of talks and events including a special Mumbai ‘Last Tuesday’ evening on 25 June
 
Curated by Dr Irena Murray with exhibition design by David Adjaye
 
Celebrating the gift of Charles Correa’s archive to the RIBA Library
The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) presents the first major UK exhibition showcasing the work of renowned Indian architect Charles Correa (born in 1930). Rooted both in modernism and the rich traditions of people, place and climate, Correa has played a pivotal role in the creation of an architecture and urbanism for modern, post-colonial India. He has designed some of the most outstanding buildings in India (over 100 built projects) and has received many of the world’s most important architecture awards including the RIBA Royal Gold Medal (1984), Aga Khan Award for Architecture (1988) and Japan’s Praemium Imperiale (1994), and is still working today. From major international centres to low-income housing, Correa’s thoughtful and inventive approach to each project has created some of the most exciting and forward-looking buildings of our time.
 
The exhibition, designed by architect David Adjaye, celebrates Correa’s gift of his archive of over 6000 drawings to the RIBA British Architectural Library. This has offered a unique opportunity to access and display the drawings, plans, photographs, models and films behind his projects. International buildings showcased in the exhibition include the Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Museum, India; the Arts and Crafts Museum in Delhi; theMIT Brain and Cognitive Science Centre, USA; the InterUniversity Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics in Pune, India and the Champalimaud Centre for the Study of the Unknown in Lisbon, Portugal. The exhibition also features Correa’s designs for housing and cities, looking closely at climate change, affordable housing and his projects to improve cityscapes, including his urban masterplan for Navi Mumbai (New Bombay).
 
David Adjaye, architect and designer of the exhibition says:
 
“Charles Correa is a highly significant architect, globally and for India. His work is the physical manifestation of the idea of Indian nationhood, modernity and progress. His vision sits at the nexus defining the contemporary Indian sensibility and it articulates a new Indian identity with a language that has a global resonance. He is someone who has that rare capacity to give physical form to something as intangible as ‘culture’ or ‘society’ – and his work is therefore critical: aesthetically; sociologically; and culturally. This exhibition has presented us with an exciting opportunity to engage absolutely with his work and to think how the exhibition design can communicate the key messages. It has been an enriching experience that will feed into my own practice on many levels.”
 
Curator Dr Irena Murray says:
 
“Correa is brilliantly inventive in his deployment of certain timeless themes in Indian culture and philosophy - journey, passage, void and the representation of the cosmos. He uses them as a means to creating ambitious new spaces and structures. His deep understanding of the implications of climate, demographics, transport and community life has a universal quality and has helped structure the thematic arrangement of the exhibition.”
 
Highlights from the Out of India season of talks and events include a public lecture by Charles Correa on 15 May, an in conversation event on art, architecture and metaphor with David Adjaye and Dr Irena Murray on 11 June and a special ‘Last Tuesday’ on Mumbai on 25 June. Information and booking will be available soon at www.architecture.com/programmes