Koolhaas. Countryside A Report
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The rural, remote, and wild territories we call “countryside”, or
the 98% of the earth’s surface not occupied by cities, make up the
front line where today’s most powerful forces—climate and
ecological devastation, migration, tech, demographic lurches—are
playing out. Increasingly under a ‘Cartesian’ regime—gridded,
mechanized, and optimized for maximal production—these sites are
changing beyond recognition. In his latest publication, Rem
Koolhaas explores the rapid and often hidden transformations
underway across the Earth’s vast non-urban areas.Countryside, A
Report gathers travelogue essays exploring territories marked by
global forces and experimentation at the edge of our consciousness:
a test site near Fukushima, where the robots that will maintain
Japan’s infrastructure and agriculture are tested, a greenhouse
city in the Netherlands that may be the origin for the cosmology of
today’s countryside, the rapidly thawing permafrost of Central
Siberia, a region wrestling with the possibility of relocation,
refugees populating dying villages in the German countryside and
intersecting with climate change activists, habituated mountain
gorillas confronting humans on ‘their’ territory in Uganda, the
American Midwest, where industrial-scale farming operations are
coming to grips with regenerative agriculture, and Chinese villages
transformed into all-in-one factory, e-commerce stores, and
fulfillment centers.This book is the official companion to the
Guggenheim Museum exhibition Countryside, The Future. The
exhibition and book mark a new area of investigation for architect
and urbanist Rem Koolhaas, who launched his career with two
city-centric entities: The Office for Metropolitan Architecture
(1975) and Delirious New York (1978). It’s designed by Irma Boom,
who drew inspiration for the book’s pocket-sized concept, as well
as its innovative typography and layout, from her research in the
Vatican library.The book brings together collaborative research by
AMO, Koolhaas, and students at the Harvard Graduate School of
Design, the Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing, Wageningen
University in the Netherlands, and the University of Nairobi.
Contributors also include Samir Bantal, Janna Bystrykh, Troy Conrad
Therrien, Lenora Ditzler, Clemens Driessen, Alexandra Kharitonova,
Keigo Kobayashi, Niklas Maak, Etta Madete, Federico Martelli, Ingo
Niermann, Dr. Linda Nkatha Gichuyia, Kayoko Ota, Stephan Petermann,
and Anne M. Schneider.The authors AMO is the think tank of the
Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA), co-founded by Rem
Koolhaas in 1999. Applying architectural thinking to domains beyond
building, AMO has worked with Prada, the European Union, Universal
Studios, Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport, Condé Nast, Harvard
University, and the Hermitage. It has produced exhibitions,
including Expansion and Neglect (2005) and When Attitudes Become
Form: Bern 1969/Venice 2013 (2013) at the Venice Biennale, The Gulf
(2006), Cronocaos (2010), Public Works (2012), and Elements of
Architecture (2014) at the Venice Architecture Biennale, and Serial
Classics and Portable Classics (both 2015) at Fondazione Prada,
Milan and Venice, respectively. Rem Koolhaas is a co-founder of the
Office for Metropolitan Architecture. Having worked as a journalist
and scriptwriter before becoming an architect, in 1978 he published
Delirious New York. His 1996 book S,M,L,XL summarized the work of
OMA and established connections between contemporary society and
architecture. Among many international awards, he has received the
Pritzker Prize (2000) and the Praemium Imperiale (2003). He
directed the 2014 Venice Architecture Biennale, coinciding with the
first publication of Elements of Architecture.The designer Irma
Boom is a graphic designer specialized in making books. Since
founding Irma Boom Office in 1990, she has worked with the likes of
Chanel, the United Nations, OMA/Rem Koolhaas, Fondazione Prada,
Pirelli, and Rijksmuseum Amsterdam. She received the Gutenberg
Prize and the Johannes Vermeer Prize, the Dutch state prize for the
arts, among others. Her work is in a permanent collection of the
Design and Architecture Department of the Museum of Modern Art in
New York. Since 1992, Boom is a Senior Critic at Yale University in
the USA.