Christopher Hawthorne nominates BNS for Metropolis Select Ten

Metropolis Magazine: The Select Ten

Design’s leading voices help us identify the next wave of burgeoning talent.

October 2013

“When we began our search for pathbreaking emerging designers, we knew part of the effort would involve reaching out to influential figures in design who have an almost innate ability to spot fresh promise. All ten experts have displayed not just a sharp eye but also a gut instinct for sniffing out the future. And together they’ve helped us assemble an impressive group of new talent.

We think the Select Ten represent a generational portrait. Although their work ranges far and wide, they seem to share a way of working marked by fluidity—between the digital and the hand, between disciplines, between collaborators and colleagues. It feels less about personal expression (although all the work is uniformly expressive) and more about a shared vision. As we move forward, this seems particularly hopeful given the larger challenges ahead. In the meantime, enjoy the creative pyrotechnics on the pages below. This is just the beginning for all of them.” —Martin C. Pedersen

Ball-Nogues
Los Angeles, Established 2004
Installation art
Selected by Christopher Hawthorne
 

From the beginning, Ball-Nogues has occupied an unusual space between art and design-build. The Los Angeles–based studio’s two principals, Benjamin Ball (pictured left) and Gaston Nogues, are both 45-year-old SCI-Arc grads who have done stints at Gehry Partners—one of their first projects together was a giant, golden shade structure constructed of deftly manipulated Mylar that floated over a courtyard on a busy street in the Silver Lake neighborhood of L.A. Their work remains more an examination of materials than it is a creation of forms.

Take Euphony, a recent project inside the atrium of the Music City Center in Nashville. The building was conceived as a giant guitar, and within it, Ball-Nogues’s 110-foot-high draped sculpture seems to quiver in space. This evanescence is extraordinary when you realize that it’s achieved with 28 miles of stainless steel ball chain, and 1,800 pounds of material arranged in catenary curves that form a spiraling, twisted surface. “It’s about finding the vocabulary that’s feasible for chain,” Ball says. “We wouldn’t know the full extent of what it could be if we didn’t know the full extent of the logistics.”

The studio has done earlier projects along these lines, including a 2009 installation for Museum of Contemporary Art that involved 3,604 separate lengths of colored twine. Euphony grew from that, allowing Ball and Nogues to refine certain techniques—including the creation
of a custom software, which enabled them to control and design the proximity between the lines, as well as a machine that colors and cuts the individual lengths of twine or chains. —Jade Chang

“The funny little secret of digitally enabled architecture is how much craft, how much painstaking hands-on work, is required to build the most fluid designs,” says Christopher Hawthorne of the Los Angeles Times. “Ball-Nogues fundamentally understands and embraces that.”

Ben Ball judging the 2013 AIA NEXT LA awards

Ball-Nogues Studio was invited to serve on the judging panel for the AIA Los Angeles NEXT award. The NEXT LA Awards showcase the future of Los Angeles architecture by awarding projects that are not yet built in Los Angeles, or projects by LA-based architects to be built elsewhere. Entrants must be members of any chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Award winners will be announced and celebrated at the AIA/LA Awards Ceremony in October 28, 2013 at the Santa Monica Performing Arts Center.

http://www.aialosangeles.org/content/design-awards-party.html#.Ul8kxSR5HIE

Ball-Nogues Lamps at LA Luz

Ball-Nogues Studio loaned four Music Legs Glob Lamps to the La Luz Art Show and Event scheduled for October 4th at the Well in Los Angeles.

 

A One Night Art Event!

October 4, 2013 6-11 pm

The Well, 1006 S. Olive Street, Los Angeles, CA 90015

Sponsored by Gensler, Knoll and Mata Construction

Please check out http://laluzartshow.com/

Bringing together local artists and designers who curate our everyday environments, we hope to facilitate interaction between industries, people, and space. LA Luz will host various individuals in the real estate, design, and construction industries for a one night art event highlighting some of Los Angeles most talented artists.

Ball-Nogues part of A New Sculpturalism exhibit at MOCA

A New Sculpturalism: Contemporary Architecture in Southern California

The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA, Los Angeles

A New Sculpturalism: Contemporary Architecture in Southern California marks the first exhibition and catalog to examine the role of Los Angeles-based architect Frank Gehry, arguably the most significant and innovative architect of the later part of the twentieth century, and the generation of Los Angeles architects that followed him, including Greg Lynn, Michael Maltzan, Thom Mayne, and Eric Owen Moss, to name a few. A New Sculpturalism focuses on this important era in American architecture and presents the first extensive examination of the built forms that characterize Southern California architecture after 1990, as well as the geographic, political, and socio-economic underpinnings of its development. The exhibition includes both large, full-scale new structures, made specifically for the show, and models, sketches, and digital presentations, which illuminate their significant achievements.

Euphony opens in Nashville

Two years in the making, Euphony opened in Nashville’s Music City Center.

http://qr.nashvillemusiccitycenter.com/art/euphony

stainless steel ball chain, steel tube, baked enamel finish

Catenary stainless steel ball chains descent dramatically from a suspended elliptical ring beam and then return skyward on a new path forming two shells of pattern and color. Artists Benjamin Ball and Gaston Nogues have produced a translucent three-dimensional painting, fabricated with a digital cutting machine developed in their own studio. Depending on the viewer’s vantage point, the 1141 multi-colored chains of Euphony may appear as a hard-edged geometric form or blur to a vapor-like visual composition.


    Total weight of the artwork (2,100 lbs. ) and ring beam (1,400 lbs.) is 3,500 lbs.
    Euphony amplifies aesthetics of light, reflection and color creating a visual spectacle and physical sensation in a public space
    25 miles of stainless steel chain are attached to a 30’ x 8’  steel ring beam that is suspended 3’ from ceiling
    Euphony hangs 117’ and 10’ 11” above first level floor
 

IAAC – workshop and lecture

Ball-Nogues Studio has been invited to lecture and lead a workshop at the Institute for Advanced Architecture of Catalonia. 

Benjamin Ball is planning to make the trip to Barcelona October 25-26th.

http://www.iaac.net/

 

Yucca Crater is a finalist in the Fast Company Innovation by Design Awards

 Yucca Crater was chosen as a finalist for Fast Company’s Innovation by Design Awards. The finalists are published in the October 2012 issue of Fast Company magazine. 

 

From the website: “Earlier this year, we put out a call to the design and business communities: What are the best design-driven innovations of the past year? More than 1,100 companies and organizations responded, offering 1,700 nominees in nine categories. An all-star group of 27 judges–from MoMA curator Paola Antonelli to Nicholas Felton of Facebook–worked with us to identify 56 finalists. Presented on the following pages, these standouts represent the creative explosion under way in our economy. (All of the finalists were introduced or came to market in the year ending June 1, 2012.) The winners will be unveiled on October 16 in New York. As you’ll see as you read ahead, they are all worth cheering.

Here, the finalists for the “Spaces” category.

 

 

The winner will be announced October 16, 2012

World Architecture Day

Benjamin Ball will be travelling to Mumbai, India to participate in the World Architecture Day symposium