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Min at the Soane

London


Series of seven sculptures which relate the arch to the phallus part of the LDF exhibition Space and Light at Sir John Soane’s Museum




Min at the Soane


Representation



Since the Etruscan tombs, even before appearing as a structural element in the history of architecture, the arch derived its figure from the phallus. Inspired by the Egyptian God of fertility Min, a series of seven sculptures at Sir John Soane’s Museum investigates the origin of the sacred. The transition from the square to the circle has been a fundamental theme of architecture. Min resolves the passage from the parallelepiped to the sphere through an intersection of the two solids, identifying a monolith shaped by arched sides and hemispherical dome. The form of Min is also reminiscent of John Soane’s canopies and the London Red Telephone Box designed by Giles Gilbert Scott who, in turn, took inspiration from the Soane family tomb in Old St Pancras churchyard.

‘Space and Light’, Sir John Soane’s Museum, London, 13 Sept.–11 Oct. 2014.


Min at the Soane




Topic


, 8 Nov. 2013


Dionysian Mysteries were a ritual of ancient Greece and Rome. These rites were often associated with women. They involved liberation from civilization’s rules and constraints. They celebrated a return to the source of being. They also involved escape from the socialized personality and ego into an ecstatic, deified state or the primal herd. Such activity has been interpreted as fertilizing, invigorating, cathartic, liberating and transformative. Many devotees of Dionysus were those on the margins of society: women, slaves, outlaws and foreigners. All were equal in a cult that inverted their roles. Festivals were orgies of wine and sex: over all reigned the Phallus.



Min at the Soane




Data
  • Time: Aug. 2013 (design), Aug. 2014 (production), sett. 2014 (photography), 13 Sept.–11 Oct. 2014 (exhibition)
  • Venue: Sir John Soane’s Museum, 12 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, Holborn, London, UK
  • Material: limestone (VII), marbles (I–III, V), onyx (IV, VI)
  • Typology: talisman




Credits
  • Architecture design: Antonino Cardillo
  • Client: Sir John Soane’s Museum (director: Abraham Thomas; MD of Soane Museum Enterprises: Xanthe Arvanitakis; communications assistant: Maxwell Blowfield; retail manager: Olly Perry)
  • Producer, sponsor: Daniele Ghirardi (Ghirardi Stone Contractor)
  • Buyers: Ana Araujo (II), Banca d’Italia a Londra (IV, VI), Massimiliano Beffa (III), Antonino Cardillo (V), Daniele Ghirardi (VII), Anna Marra (I)
  • Photography, text: Antonino Cardillo
  • Translation: Antonino Cardillo, Paolo Bedetti
  • Thanks to Ana Araujo, Anna Marra, Siobhan Henderson




Publications
  • Antonino Cardillo, ‘A synchronicity of cultures and civilisations’, lecture presented to the Dessauer Gespräche, ed. Johannes Kister, Hochschule Anhalt, Dessau Institute of Architecture, 13 Nov. 2019.
  • Ana Araujo, ‘Da nobis hodie incantum quotidianum’ (pdf), Design Exchange, vol. 1, no. 12, London, Aug. 2015, pp. 108‑109.
  • Antonino Cardillo, ‘Falsche Freunde’↗, Baunetzwoche, no. 403, ed. Kristina Herresthal, Lisa Kadel, BauNetz, Berlin, March 2015, p. 25.
  • Maxwell Blowfield, Space and light (pdf) [media release], Sir John Soane’s Museum, London, 7 Aug. 2014.