Features

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Atelier Bow-Wow
Four Boxes Gallery

Krabbesholm College
Skive, Denmark

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Photo: Anders Sune Berg

The Four Boxes Gallery is located on the green lawn of Krabbesholm, between the white-washed facades of the Craftsmen’s School and the red brick Idé-Pro factory. It is a building that is quintessentially Japanese, yet also strangely oversized and villa-like, as it extends the built vocabulary of the school with its clear-cut concrete edges.

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Photo: Anders Sune Berg

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Photo: Anders Sune Berg

Like an upwardly striving bento box in which each individual room has grown out of the whole, the building supplements the creative workshops, residential facilities and common rooms of Krabbesholm by adding long-awaited exhibition facilities to the complex.

The building was named the Four Boxes Gallery because of its layout. Outdoor galleries and a large indoor gallery make up the two lower boxes, the third box is a smaller exhibition room in the middle, the fourth box a private workshop area for artists in residency at the top. Both students from the school and invited artists will exhibit their works.

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Photo: Anders Sune Berg

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Photo: Anders Sune Berg

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Photo: Anders Sune Berg

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Photo: Anders Sune Berg

In Japan a dinner of rice and fish/meat is called a bento meal. This is not served on a traditional dish, but in a “bento box” designed specifically for the meal. A bento box with individual compartments for different ingredients is available both as a cheap mass-produced product and as an exclusive example of fine craftsmanship. Characteristically to both low-cost and the expensive bento boxes, are the compartments’ mutual relationship, where smaller and bigger spaces supplements each other and together form a tempting frame for the meal.

Just like an actual bento box, the Four Boxes Gallery endeavors to present its contents as elegantly as possible by providing a simple structure. The objective was not to design a signature building that craves attention, but rather to provide optimal settings for exhibiting art. And like the best bento boxes, the building is a remarkable and beautiful work of art in its own right, despite the focus on content.

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Photo: Anders Sune Berg

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Photo: Anders Sune Berg

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Photo: Anders Sune Berg

“The building was initially referred to as a workshop, which suggests an unfinished space in the sense that ongoing work is constantly transforming the architecture. Our intention with the building was to expose and present the process of creating. We will be pleased if our building is read and used independently by its users, because our aim is for the subject to define the building autonomously. However, that does not in any way make this public building private. It is in fact a building that should be brought to life by its collective use. I truly believe that we created a building that is simple, powerful and suitable in its context.”
Momoyo Kaijima, Atelier Bow-Wow
Excerpted from an interview by Architects Rikke Lequick Larsen and Tanja Jordan in the book “ Four Boxes Gallery” available at Krabbesholm.

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Drawing courtesy Atelier Bow-Wow
Sketch

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Sketch courtesy Atelier Bow-Wow
Sketch

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Sketch courtesy Atelier Bow-Wow
Site Plan

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Drawing courtesy Atelier Bow-Wow
Plan

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Drawing courtesy Atelier Bow-Wow
Section

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Model photo courtesy Atelier Bow-Wow
Model Exterior

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Drawing courtesy Atelier Bow-Wow
Model Interior

Total area: 250 square meters

Completed: 2009

Client: Krabbesholm
Architects: Atelier Bow-Wow
Project Architect: Naho Maki
Engineers: Fritz Nielsen & J. Juul Christensen A/S

October 5, 2009