Sir David Chipperfield stands in his kitchen in Galicia and alternately stares at the ceiling lamp, crafts and sculpture lately mounting at the wall. A bit to the correct. A bit left. Chipperfield opened his mouth and closes it once more. “Well,” he says – an excessively British excellent – “Don’t do anything.”
Then again, the sculpture of Zigzaga, which is now on its kitchen wall, is made from sound, hand – and simply such shadows that paint it at the wall: comfortable, totally beaten. After some time, Chipperfield raises his shoulder, turning his hands. “I got it as a gift.” A 12 months in the past moved right into a area in Santiago de Compostel, former Hospital from the start of the twentieth century, which is now an rental, public canteen, and its basis of its status quo: Basis Ria, referred to as an ordinary sea galicia that penetrates deep into the bottom. And so go back and forth right here, on the finish of Jakobsweg to take stock: The place is the structure lately?