Gallery 12, Level 2
Macquarie Bank Contemporary Projects Gallery
31 May to 17 August 2003
Admission free
Habitat: Callum Morton
Callum Morton was born in Canada while his father was working as an
architect on a building complex called 'Habitat', a mass housing project
that was built in Montreal for Expo 1967 by Israeli architect Moshe Safdie.
The basic structure of 'Habitat' was a series of interchangeable modular
apartment units, prefabricated from reinforced concrete and fibreglass then
configured on site to form a complex system of varied housing styles.
Safdie's interest lay in generating a system of affordable housing that was
efficient in production and construction but had aesthetic merit. The
concept was well received and Safdie built other structures with similar
principles in Israel, the United States of America and Singapore.
Callum Morton's Habitat is a 1:50 scale architectural model of Safdie's
'Habitat', to which lights and sound have been added to suggest a day in the
life of the housing complex. Through his work, Morton presents for our contemplation a wry and
humorous look at the intersection of public and private space, referencing
both the extraordinary and the mundane qualities of our lives.
The Contemporary Projects Gallery is generously supported by Macquarie Bank.
