Lead Pencil Studio

Lead Pencil Studio is the working name of the art and architecture collaborative founded in 1997 by Annie Han and Daniel Mihalyo in order to cooperatively pursue installation art, site-specific art and functional architecture. They are winners of the 2007 Founder's Rome Prize in Architecture from the American Academy in Rome, and were recognized in 2006 as an 'Emerging Voices' by the Architectural League of New York.[1] Their practice is self-described as "architecture in reverse...our projects are everything about architecture with none of its function...spaces with no greater purpose than to be perceived and question the certainty posited by the man-made world."[2]

Personal life

Han and Mihalyo met at the University of Oregon in 1991 while in the architecture program, and their relationship has evolved into a work partnership centered around Lead Pencil Studio. They have also worked in Bellingham, Chicago, Portland, and Seattle, among others. They currently reside in Seattle, Washington.

Annie Han

Annie Han was born in Pusan, South Korea in 1967, and attained an accredited Master's equivalent in Architecture (5-year B. Arch) from the University of Oregon in 1993 before studying sculpture for one year at Portland State University in 1994. She is a naturalized US citizen.

Daniel Mihalyo

Daniel Mihalyo was born in Bellevue, Washington in 1970, and attended Western Washington University for Fine Art before attaining an accredited Master's equivalent in Architecture (5-year B. Arch) from the University of Oregon in 1994.

Notable Installations

Maryhill Double

Built directly across from the Maryhill Museum on the plateaus that overlook the Columbia River Gorge, Maryhill Double was a temporary installation/building that duplicated the exact interior volume of the museum that it mirrored. Standing from July 5, 2006 through October 1, 2006 and constructed solely from scaffolding and blue construction netting, Maryhill Double re-framed not only the unusual history of the Maryhill Museum, but also the significance of constructing architecture within unadulterated landscapes. Critics have noted that "The museum and its ghost-like Double work as a paired form, operating...to emphasize the scale of their plateau site...and to dramatize the role of human effort and desire to engage nature or subdue it..."[3] Ironically enough, during its lifespan the Double was classified as a "billboard" for zoning and legal purposes.[4]

Retail/Commercial

A temporary installation in an aging upscale mall located in Rainier Tower (designed by architect, Minoru Yamasaki) in Seattle, WA,[5] Retail/Commercial occupied a former Italian men's clothing boutique by inserting four distinct retail environments stripped of all merchandise and represented at full-scale by architectural section. In areas where the narrow sections overlapped atop one another, the furniture, finishes and architecture appeared to cross pollinate. Material for the installation was gathered entirely from retail liquidation sales which occurred in early 2009 within a few blocks of the project. Uniting the project linearly was a brightly lit white section complete with empty shelving, dropped ceiling, shopping carts, surveillance cameras, signage, baskets, pedestals and mannequins.

Without Room

Without Room faithfully recreates in exacting detail the entire living room of an apartment dweller in Greensboro, NC. The piece, on display at the Weatherspoon Art Museum at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro from January 17 to April 13, 2008, reconstitutes the entirety of a woman’s possessions rendered homogenous with gray acrylic paint. Paperwork, books, CDs, collectible treasures, furniture and electronic devices lost their biographical specificity and appeared as anonymous shapes. Unpainted items included piles of clothing and shoes, left as an homage reference to the originating inhabitant. The site-specific installation intended to explore the nesting and spatial consequences of human dwelling. The living room was selected from a pool of volunteers through a museum advertisement searching for respondents who occupy small living spaces.[6] Some inspirations for the piece include Margaret Roberts and lidar surveying technology.

After

A two part installation at the Boise Art Museum from November 8, 2008 to May 3, 2009, After is an exploration of the modern forces that create and construct space—architecturally, visually, and conceptually. The project was composed of two large constructions individually titled, After: Billboard, and After: Dwelling. "After: Billboard" features a roped off pile of rubble with a sign surface made entirely of layered paper and real estate advertisements, capped with a window-like opening that exposes the crisscrossing two-by-fours that are the superstructure. Vaguely discernible real estate slogans and window details of this exterior piece were intended to reference the house-sized construction on the interior of the museum. "After: Dwelling" was composed of a landscape of gravel approximately 25 ft x 50 ft with a sharply defined rectilinear impression suggesting a building foundation. Floating above this field were corners of a house made entirely from architectural foam board and skim coated cement. Taken together the individual pieces describe the perimeter of a house in the uncertain state of construction or demolition and featuring several design clichés identified with an anonymous modern architecture. "The Boise Weekly" noted that "...The billboard promises, 'Your Own Piece of Blue Sky!' The wall text tells us the artists are exploring the complex systems involved in the production of space. In other words, advertising dominates the view." [7]

Notable Accomplishments

Awards

Major Grants

Major Exhibitions

Residencies

Publications

Notes and references

  1. Harthorn, Sandy (2008). "After: Effects of Constructed Space", p. 9. Boise Art Museum, Boise. ISBN 978-0-295-98934-1.
  2. Harthorn, Sandy (2008). "After: Effects of Constructed Space", p. 43. Boise Art Museum, Boise. ISBN 978-0-295-98934-1.
  3. Sangster, Gary (2007). "Double or Nothing: A Translucent Reflection Takes Shape", p.1. Creative Capital, New York.
  4. Gragg, Randy (2006). "'Maryhill Double' shimmers, mirage-like, in gorge", The Oregonian, 2006-08-06.
  5. Graves, Jen (2009). "Retail/Commercial", p. 1 SLOG: News & Arts, Seattle
  6. Graves, Jen. (2008) "Gray Area: Why Does Some Work by Lead Pencil Studio Look So Much Like Work by Other Artists?", p. 2. The Stranger, Seattle. 2008-02-14.
  7. Pettinger, E.J. (2008). "Ad Space: Lead Pencil Studio's 'After' Raises Questions", p. 2. The Boise Weekly, Boise. 2008-11-26.
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