rudy ricciotti architecte: musée jean cocteau

'musée jean cocteau' by rudy ricciotti architecte, menton, france
image © eric duliere
all images courtesy rudy ricciotti architecte
french practice rudy ricciotti architecte has completed the 'musée jean cocteau', a museum dedicated to the career
of jean cocteau, a french artist, poet, and playwriter positioned within his hometown in menton, france. the featured exhibits
were contributed by philanthropist severin wunderman, who donated his entire personal collection to the initiative,
including 990 original works within a total amalgamation of 1800 pieces from other artists within his circle. recently inaugurated,
the 2,700 square meter building contains drawings, paintings, ceramics, tapestries, manuscripts and projections of his films
within galleries which overlook the adjacent ligurian sea.

entrance to veranda
image © olivier amsellem
placed upon a triangular site, a transparent box is concealed within a fragmented shell, evoking the nature of
the elusive artwork inside. reading as a monolithic form, the concrete exterior is comprised of a structural roof
which extends beyond the building and begins to merge with lines of columns placed outside the glass facade,
creating a veranda which wraps around the entire perimeter. undulating cuts have been incised into the thick roof plane,
yielding skylights which venture into the ceiling of the gallery spaces. a library will catalogue additional resources
while a coffee shop will be accessible to both visitors and residents of the city with a pergola for outdoor seating.

voids between columns and roof beams introduce striated natural daylight into the interior
image © olivier amsellem

columns and beams create a rhythmic facade expression
image © olivier amsellem

glass windows mirrors concrete structure
image © olivier amsellem

columns meet roof beams at 90 degree angle
image © olivier amsellem

corner detail
image © olivier amsellem

concrete structure is reflected within the facade
image © olivier amsellem

glass meeting the roof plane
image © olivier amsellem

glass facade encloses the interior
image © olivier amsellem

curves of structure reflected within glass facade
image © olivier amsellem

upward view within the wrap around veranda
image © olivier amsellem

(left) lighting quality within veranda
(right) void between structure and glass facade
images © olivier amsellem

glass skylights created by the concrete superstructure
image © olivier amsellem

(left) striated shadows within the space
(right) view to the sea
images © olivier amsellem

(left) interior gallery spaces
(right) outward views framed by concrete columns
images © olivier amsellem

aerial view
image © olivier amsellem

entrance under construction

roofline detail

roof with skylights

aerial of building while under construction
2 may be 3 seconds....
building doesn't mean packaging.
It also is a bit odd to be in the space as the sunset arrives - which it has a stunning location to view, then to walk out and realise the tinted glass has made it appear much darker/later than it was.
Its a shame the building wasn't in a pedestrian plaza, as the close proximity of trafiic on two sides means screening is required to refocus on the art work.
Nevertheless a bold concept
Now, you see how sick architecture is in France.
resulting in flimsy, trite imagery, and little else.
zündel cristea: mixed-use buil
j.meier: complex structure
BREIL new times
nils kajander: BREIL paparazzo
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