Constructing Worlds: a new exhibition at the Barbican gives architectural photography the exposure it deserves

The Barbican Centre in London
Installation view of 'Constructing Worlds: Photography and Architecture in the Modern Age', currently on show at the Barbican Centre in London.
(Image credit: Chris Jackson)

Considering that the world’s very first photograph – or rather, the earliest known photograph made with a camera, the View from the Window at Le Gras by French scientist and inventor Joseph Nicéphore Niéce – was famously an architectural one (taken in 1826 or 1827), it’s surprising that this is the first major London exhibition to focus specifically on the extraordinary, ongoing relationship between photography and architecture. ‘Constructing Worlds: Photography and Architecture in the Modern Age’ opened this week at the Barbican Art Gallery in London, as an ode to architectural photography and its power to change the way we see buildings, urban environments, and even, consequently, the world.

It’s a relationship born, though, of more pragmatic impulses. ‘At first it was for purely practical reasons,’ says the Barbican Art Gallery’s associate curator Alona Pardo. ‘Buildings provided a static object necessary for long exposures. Photographers then sought to record and interpret architecture.’ Architects themselves have also understood the power of the right photographic image to communicate their ideas and concepts, with the International Style being a prime example of an architectural movement that travelled the world via the lens of a camera. Good photography can vastly influence a building’s public standing.

Co-curated by Pardo and author and curator Elias Redstone, ‘Constructing Worlds’ was born out of the latter’s research for his book, Shooting Space: Architecture in Contemporary Photography. The exhibition touches on the work of a carefully chosen group of 18 leading photographers and artists, whose work examines architecture in different ways and across the globe. Having looked through countless images, the team is presenting 250 works that show the photographers’ aesthetically striking and visually distinct portrayals of architecture, and also hint at its symbolic qualities.

‘The artists and works in the show tell a global story and look at the world with a modern gaze,' says Redstone. ‘The exhibition presents a broad spectrum of photographic approaches. We’ve also brought together our own curatorial interests.' The architectural subjects are equally diverse, ranging from Le Corbusier and Frank Lloyd Wright classics to humble vernacular buildings. Still, themes do emerge. Urban and suburban landscapes, the city and street life, the iconic and the mundane, military architecture and the architecture of authority, mass urbanisation and globalisation all figure as topics in the show. Similarly, the impact of the car is addressed in several artists' works, such as Ed Ruscha’s Thirtyfour Parking Lots in Los Angeles.

Redstone explains that the exhibition – designed by Brussels architect from Office KGDVS, with graphics by Atelier Dyakova and Stef Orazi, the latter also designing an accompanying book – has three distinct chapters: the fascination with vernacular architecture in the 1960s and 1970s; responses to and collaborations with individual architects and buildings; and photographers’ takes on globalisation and urban growth in China, Africa, Latin America and the Middle East. The works are shown in chronological order, starting with Berenice Abbott’s seminal Changing New York project, Walker Evans’ documentation of local building typologies in the deep south, Julius Shulman’s iconic images of the Case Study Houses and Lucien Hervé’s images of Le Corbusier’s Chandigarh.

This exhibition aims to inspire, inform but also to pose questions. ‘Why do streets look and feel the way they do?’ asks Pardo. 'What does a soaring skyscraper reveal about our society?’ So many of our encounters with great architecture happen through the printed pages of a book, magazine or the vast visual resources of the digital world, and the command photography has in shaping our perception of the built world is undeniable. A visit to ‘Constructing Worlds’ will help explore this fascinating bond.

The Barbican Art Gallery

Co-curated by the Barbican Art Gallery’s associate curator Alona Pardo and author and curator Elias Redstone, the vast exhibition touches on the work of a carefully chosen group of 18 leading photographers and artists, whose work examines architecture in different ways and across the globe.

(Image credit: Chris Jackson)

The works are shown in chronological order

The works are shown in chronological order, starting with Berenice Abbott’s seminal Changing New York project (pictured)

(Image credit: Berenice Abbott)

The architectural subjects are diverse

The architectural subjects are diverse, ranging from Le Corbusier and Frank Lloyd Wright classics to humble vernacular buildings. Pictured is 'High Court of Justice, Chandigarh', by Lucien Hervé, 1955. Los Angeles. With permission from Fondation Le Corbusier, Paris and Judith Elkan Hervé. 2014 DACS and J Paul Getty Trust

(Image credit: TBC)

Jewish Museum Berlin

'Jewish Museum Berlin, Daniel Libeskind, Untitled 9', by Hélène Binet, 1997.

(Image credit: Hélène Binet)

The exhibition includes 250 works

The exhibition includes 250 works that show the photographers’ aesthetically striking and visually distinct portrayals of architecture, and also hint at its symbolic qualities.

(Image credit: Chris Jackson)

Torre David #2

'Torre David #2', by Iwan Baan, 2011. Los Angeles

(Image credit: TBC)

Dodgers Stadium, 1000 Elysian Park Ave

'Dodgers Stadium, 1000 Elysian Park Ave.', by Ed Ruscha, 1967/1999. The impact of the car is addressed in several artists’ works, such as Ed Ruscha’s Thirtyfour Parking Lots in Los Angeles. Ed Ruscha.

(Image credit: The artist and Gagosian Gallery)

Urban and suburban landscapes

Urban and suburban landscapes, the city and street life, the iconic and the mundane, military architecture and the architecture of authority, mass urbanisation and globalisation all figure as topics in the show.

(Image credit: Chris Jackson)

Cooling Plant

'Cooling Plant, Dubai', by Bas Princen, 2009.

(Image credit: The artist)

Chongqing IV

'Chongqing IV (Sunday Picnic), Chongqing Municipality', by Nadav Kander, 2006.

(Image credit: Flowers Gallery)

World Trade Centre

'World Trade Centre (Minoru Yamasaki)', by Hiroshi Sugimoto, 1997.

(Image credit: The artist)

The artists and works in the show

The artists and works in the show tell a global story and look at the world with a modern gaze,' says co-curator Elias Redstone. ‘The exhibition presents a broad spectrum of photographic approaches.

(Image credit: Chris Jackson)

Redstone explains that the show

Redstone explains that the show – designed by Brussels architect from Office KGDVS, with graphics by Atelier Dyakova and Stef Orazi – has three distinct chapters.

(Image credit: Chris Jackson)

The newly restored Ikhtiaruddin citadel

'A security guard's booth at the newly restored Ikhtiaruddin citadel, Herat', by Simon Norfolk, 2010-2011.

(Image credit: The artist)

Case Study House #22

'Case Study House #22', by Julius Shulman, 1960. J Paul Getty Trust. Research Library at the Getty Research Institute

(Image credit: The Julius Shulman Photography Archive)

The first major London exhibition

This is the first major London exhibition to focus specifically on the extraordinary, ongoing relationship between photography and architecture.

(Image credit: Chris Jackson)

ADDRESS

Barbican Centre
Art Gallery, Level 3
Silk Street
London EC2

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Ellie Stathaki is the Architecture & Environment Director at Wallpaper*. She trained as an architect at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in Greece and studied architectural history at the Bartlett in London. Now an established journalist, she has been a member of the Wallpaper* team since 2006, visiting buildings across the globe and interviewing leading architects such as Tadao Ando and Rem Koolhaas. Ellie has also taken part in judging panels, moderated events, curated shows and contributed in books, such as The Contemporary House (Thames & Hudson, 2018), Glenn Sestig Architecture Diary (2020) and House London (2022).