Architecture

project

project
ARCHITECTURE
+
ART
2011–2024
Back to Gallery

We value the opportunity to work collaboratively with fellow creatives, and many of our most rewarding projects are those in which art and architecture co-exist in a synergistic relationship.

ARCHITECTURE + ART

Project Gallery

ARCHITECTURE + ART
Back to Gallery
ARCHITECTURE + ART
From site-built art installations at highly-visited wineries to private collections housed within homes designed as highly-evolved envelopes for art, we have worked hand-in-hand with artists from around the world to design spaces that complement and enhance the impact of the art.

At the Donum Estate in Carneros, we worked with Studio Other Spaces, the art and architecture studio founded by Olafur Eliasson and Sebastian Behmann, to marry the studio’s Vertical Panorama Pavilian to its vineyard site. Equal parts art and architecture – it is a work of art that interacts with both visitors to the estate and the land itself.

For a private cave on the floor of the Napa Valley, we designed a dynamic muli-faceted entertaining space that incorporates monumental works of sculptural art into the design of the cave walls. In the journey through the space, numerous venues are unveiled, including a dynamic bar lit by a lighting installation that pulsates with color.

At Hall Wines, we designed a new winery that is at once a working production facility, an entertaining space on a grand scale and a museum-quality backdrop for our clients’ world-class collection of indoor and outdoor art. Each of the dozens of pieces was commissioned specifically for this site, just as the architecture was designed specifically to house the artwork – a highly collaborative process that was both artistically and technically challenging.

The journey through the winery is carefully choreographed to highlight the experience of both the wines, the winemaking process, and the art. Beginning with the walkway to the main entry, lit in signature Hall red, the journey through the architecture is composed of a series of points of tension and release, with multiple contemplative spaces that become the architectural equivalent of breathing room to take in the artwork.

Back to Gallery