Richard J. Goodwin
Richard Goodwin (born 1953 in Sydney) is an Australian artist, architect and professor of Fine Arts and Design at the University of New South Wales School of Art and Design.[1]
Work
[edit]Goodwin is the director of Richard Goodwin Pty Ltd, a Sydney-based practice that has evolved from performance art to sculpture, installations, parasitic architecture and freeway infrastructure. Goodwin's artwork is held in major collections including the Art Gallery of NSW, Sydney and regional galleries across Australia.[2] He regularly consults on major infrastructure projects such as bridges and freeway walls.
Goodwin's core agenda is creating what he calls "porosity". He argues, "Security seeks to close a city down. Porosity seeks to open it up. Somewhere between the two a solution must be found within our capitalist system. If we can't find the balance, they'll close the cities and cities will die".[3] In practicing this agenda, he tests the functional and aesthetic boundaries of public space through both art and architecture. He has opened up new dimensions in the planning of urban spaces and the way architecture interacts with its physical and cultural context.
In 1996, Goodwin established the Porosity Studio at COFA . The studio enquires into the way patterns of inhabiting and moving through the cities weaves a level of political richness into the fabric of architecture.[4] Since 2004 the studios have been supported by a number of cooperations, such as the British Council. They have been run as intensive workshops internationally in cities such as Glasgow, Cardiff, Milan, Beijing and Rotterdam.[5]
The Australian Research Council (ARC)'s prestigious Discovery Grant[6] was awarded to Goodwin in 2002. The research project argued for 'Porosity' as a way of describing an urban experience which turns the building inside out and de-emphasises the obsession with facades. The outcome of the research opened up an entire new chapter in the way the fabric of the city is viewed by civic authorities. The ARC awarded Richard Goodwin again in 2009 with a Linkage Grant to develop the research further through sensors and gaming engine technologies in collaboration with Russell Lowe and the Emergency Information Coordination Unit (EICU) run under the NSW Department of Lands.[7]
Goodwin is the author of Porosity: the Architecture of Invagination[8] and has published many articles on issues of public space,[9] and chapters in collected works.[10] Moreover, a number of articles[11] and books[12] have been published on his work.
Major prizes
[edit]- National Sculpture Award (1985)
- Street Story Award for Glebe Island Arterial (2001)
- Sculpture by the Sea Prize (2003)
- Helen Lempriere Award (2004)
- Blackett Award for Shellharbour Workers Club (2004)
- Commendation Urban Design award for RTA Prototype Toilets (2008)
- AIA Tasmania Chapter, Colorbond Award for Wing House (2009)
- Wynne Prize from the Art Gallery of NSW (2011)
References
[edit]- ^ cofa staff - Prof. Richard Goodwin
- ^ Richard Goodwin Pty Ltd
- "Works by Richard Goodwin". Art Gallery of New South Wales. Retrieved 8 May 2013. - ^ Wilson, G.; Benjamin, A.; Tawa, M.; Helsel, S. (2006). "Introduction to 'Performance to Porosity'". Richard Goodwin: Performance to Porosity. Australia: Craftsman House. pp. 8–11.
- ^ "Porosity". COFA. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ^ "This years British Council Cityscapers studio". Welsh School of Architecture. Archived from the original on 6 July 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ^ "Real-time Porosity: Using computer gaming technology to map and analyse pedestrian movement in public and private space". Research Data Australia. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ^ "Real-Time Porosity". NIEA. Archived from the original on 4 May 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ^ Goodwin, Richard (2011). Porosity: The Architecture of Invagination. Melbourne: Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, RMIT. ISBN 9781921426865.
- ^ Goodwin, Richard (2007). Allpress, Brent (ed.). "Porosity, the revision of public space in the city using public art to test the functional boundaries of built form". Architectural Design Research. 2. RMIT University Press: 37–96. ISSN 1448-9007.
- Goodwin, Richard (2008). "Porosity: mapping the dissolution of the public / private dichotomy". Architectural Review (105).
- Goodwin, Richard; Lowe, R. (2010). "Real-time porosity using computer gaming technology". Automation in Construction. 20 (3): 279–288. doi:10.1016/j.autcon.2010.10.006. - ^ Goodwin, Richard (2010). "Pig-Skin, Wheels and Cement". In Xiangyang, B. (ed.). Fashion Industry & City Civilization. Shanghai: DongHua University Press. pp. 96–143. ISBN 978-7-81111-717-2.
- Goodwin, R.; Benjamin, A.; Reinmuth, G. (2010). "Sydney 2050 : Fraying Ground". Now and When. ACT Australia: The Australian Institute of Architects.
- Goodwin, R. (2011). "Sydney2050: Fraying Ground". In Klein, C. (ed.). Visions Of The Future Living : Futuristic. Cologne, Germany: DAAB Media GMBH. - ^ Jasper, Adam (2011). "Richard Goodwin's Phantom Itch". Art and Australia. 49.
- Thomas, Nicole (December 2011). "Transgressive Transformation". Monument. 106.
- Stead, Naomi (November 2005). "Hybrid Vigour". Architecture Australia. - ^ Allen, C.; Bond, A.; Delaruelle, J. (1991). Richard Goodwin. Sydney: Oliver Freeman Editions.