Succah by the Sea, an installation at Sculpture by the Sea, Bondi 2019 is an exciting collaboration with Shalom. Succah by the Sea reimagines a 3000 year old Jewish ritual and structure through a 21st century lens. For over 3000 years, Jews around the world have left the comforts of their homes to eat and sleep in a temporary structure, during a week-long festival called Succot. The structure, called a succah, has a roof made from leaves or sticks, and impermanent walls. The philosophical ideas of the festival are ideas that modern Australian society are currently discussing - environmentalism, displacement, home and community. In collaboration with Sculpture by the Sea, the idea for Succah by the Sea was developed by Shalom, a Sydney Jewish cultural organisation and inspired by Reboot’s New York project SukkahCity. Artistic Directors Office Feuerman, a Sydney-based design and research studio, selected six emerging architectural practices to reimagine the succah with a 21st century lens. Together they will form a succah village - a space for people to gather, congregate and contemplate the themes of this ancient ritual and its relevance to our world today.
In this episode, we sat down with Matt Chan and Georgia Forbes-Smith from Scale Architecture to discuss their Succah, Monolitus Domum. The Succah expl...
In this episode we sat down with Grace Mortlock, David Neustein and Jack Gillbanks from Other Architects, and artist Izabela Pluta to discuss their In...
Urtzi Grau and Guillermo Fernandez Abascal have worked with a series of collaborators, including Australian artist Charlotte Haywood, on their Succah ...
Practicing across art and architecture, and a Bondi local, Lucy Humphrey has a particularly sensitive approach to site. For this episode, we visited L...
Succah by the Sea is an installation in collaboration with Shalom at the 2019 Sculpture by the Sea in Bondi. It reimagines a 3000 year old Jewish ritu...