Curated Inspiration
image-0b807f2e7d28978b40f9502cad44a43b5a414b0f-2000x1500-jpg
Architecture

Axel Vervoordt & Tatsuro Miki

Meridiano Art Gallery

Curated by Norm Architects
  • ArchitectAxel Vervoordt & Tatsuro Miki
  • PhotographerDiego Flores, Sergio Lopez, Alejandro Ramirez Orozco, Biel Moreno & Alex-Krotkov

NORM ARCHITECTS Meridiano Art inspires in the way it inhabits its place with humility, yet resonates with the clarity and monumentality of sacred architecture...

image-d9604f22a6d9543aac1c53fb2806e0f539a15aa2-2000x1500-jpg

Norm Architects´perspective on Meridiano

Meridiano Art inspires in the way it inhabits its place with humility, yet resonates with the clarity and monumentality of sacred architecture. Situated on the remote Oaxacan coast, the gallery reads as a quiet extension of the landscape, a structure of stone and lime plaster that feels both grounded and ethereal. Within its pared-back forms, classical principles quietly guide the experience: symmetry, perspective, and carefully composed sightlines create a dialogue between the visitor, the art, and the surrounding environment. Light and shadow, filtered through the oculus and open volumes, transform simple materials into an expressive medium, revealing that restraint can achieve profound spatial poetry.

What resonates most is how Meridiano balances the monumental and the intimate: a humble building that elevates experience, where minimal architectural gestures are amplified by the genius loci of the coast, the play of air and sun, and the careful orchestration of materiality. It demonstrates how architecture can be at once reverent, timeless, and deeply connected to the spirit of its site.

image-ddb3f3943d0de90c0e47bcec7a8fbebec0429570-2000x1332-jpg

Meridiano

Meridiano, art space situated on the Oaxacan coast in Puerto Escondido, Mexico, opened in February 2023.

Expanding the possibilities of the traditional gallery model, Meridiano offers an open framework for long-form, site-specific, and experimental exhibitions of new work by artists working internationally and across disciplines. Founded by Nicholas Olney and Boris Vervoordt on the principles of dialogue and exchange.

image-81ae909bd56e83d4927c04a1c6c26b6acfcef6ab-2048x1536-jpg

Meridiano is situated on a remote one kilometer stretch of the Oaxacan coast to the west of the port town and beaches of Puerto Escondido, where the space joins a community of other arts destinations in the immediate locale. The gallery space is aligned to the four cardinal directions: the Pacific Ocean to the south, the mountain range to the north, and the border between land and sea striking straight from due east to due west. The area’s manifestation of the elements - earth, wind, fire, water — has long influenced both local and international artists, and acts as a fertile locale in which to encourage artists to embrace the basic principles of materiality.

Beyond its spectacular natural beauty, Meridiano’s remote location offers artists an opportunity to experiment with the imaginative benefits engendered by distance from the commercial art centers in major cities where many now work. Presenting an exhibition at Meridiano might involve evolving a practice to utilize commonly-used local materials, or staging new work informed by immersion in the natural landscapes of Oaxaca.

The physical structure of the gallery was conceived by architect Tatsuro Miki and Axel Vervoordt. Bringing form to several aesthetic and artistic traditions, the minimalist architecture of Meridiano can be likened to a cloister or atrium. Accessed by a secluded pathway, the gallery’s footprint consists of an open square leading to a covered rectangular room whose only light source is an oculus open to the sun and stars.

The breach in the enclosure invites an isolated fragment of sky, changing in its composition and illumination from minute to minute, to converse with the works on view. Similarly, the aperture allows for the incoming breeze to amplify the space’s sensorial experience, contrasting the coolness of the interior with the sun outside. The structure of the building, a trapezoidal prism, employs simple architectural forms drawn from the tenets of sacred geometry. The resulting space offers a timeless vessel for contemplation, where visitors are invited to experience not only the artwork but the changing conditions in the environment that focus perception on the passage of time.

image-5263de7a4fd993de5a4342683bd5304ec63c0691-3000x2000-jpg
The full version of this page is only available for subscribers.Subscribe now and get 180 days free trial
The full version of this page is only available for subscribers.Subscribe now and get 180 days free trial