This solemn work by Peter Zumthor and Louise Bourgeois (architecture and art) honors the victims of 17th-century witch trials in Vardø, above the Arctic Circle in Norway's northeastern reaches. The haunting site is illuminated by the midnight sun and narrated by the calls of seabirds.

Between 1600 and 1691 witch hunts left 91 victims in the small Norwegian town of Vardo, located northeast of the Scandinavian peninsula. To commemorate these deaths, the architect Peter Zumthor and the artist Louise Bourgeois have joined forces to create Steilneset, a double monument located in the place of execution.

The end of the 410-foot-long structure illustrates how the cable-stayed PTFE-coated fiberglass exhibition space is tapered at the end and suspended within the wood frame composed of 60 bays. The roof is corrugated aluminum. Peter Zumthor designed two distinct structures, one a delicate, elongated, wood-frame building perched on a granite coast above a sound; the other, a glass and Cor-Ten steel-frame volume containing Louise Bourgeois’s installation. The roof is corrugated aluminum. The building is inspired by the shape of the tables that the local fishermen used to dry the catch of the day.

In fact, Peter Zumthor has designed two different structures with two properties that determine the monument:

- The wooden structure that houses the exhibition area that has 91 small windows with a light bulb inside (91 is the number of victims) and extracts from court records.

- The second item is a black glass cube, which in itself is the installation by Louise Bourgeois entitled: "The damned, the possessed and loved." In the center of the cube is a chair leaving five llamas (number 5 is the symbol of the family), symbolizes the trials of Vardo and is part of the feminist claim that runs through much of the work of Bourgeois. The work was one of the last projects of the French artist who died in 2010.

Peter Zumthor said at the opening made ​​with the Queen of Norway:

"There is a line and a point is mine is yours. The installation of Louis [Bourgeois] is more about the burning and aggression, while my installation talks about life and emotions [of victims]. "

 

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Peter Zumthor was born on April 26, 1943, the son of a cabinet maker, Oscar Zumthor, in Basel, Switzerland. He trained as a cabinet maker from 1958 to 1962. From 1963-67, he studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule, Vorkurs and Fachklasse with further studies in design at Pratt Institute in New York.

In 1967, he was employed by the Canton of Graubünden (Switzerland) in the Department for the Preservation of Monuments working as a building and planning consultant and architectural analyst of historical villages, in addition to realizing some restorations. He established his own practice in 1979 in Haldenstein, Switzerland where he still works with a small staff of fifteen. Zumthor is married to Annalisa Zumthor-Cuorad. They have three children, all adults, Anna Katharina, Peter Conradin, and Jon Paulin, and two grandchildren.

Since 1996, he has been a professor at the Academy of Architecture, Universitá della Svizzera Italiana, Mendrisio. He has also been a visiting professor at the University of Southern California Institute of Architecture and SCI-ARC in Los Angeles in 1988; at the Technische Universität, Munich in 1989; and at the Graduate School of Design, Harvard University in 1999.

His many awards include the Praemium Imperiale from the Japan Art Association in 2008 as well as the Carlsberg Architecture Prize in Denmark in 1998, and the Mies van der Rohe Award for European Architecture in 1999. In 2006, he received the Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal in Architecture from the University of Virginia. The American Academy of Arts and Letters bestowed the Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize in Architecture in 2008.

In the recent book published by Barrons Educational Series, Inc. titled, Architectura, Elements of Architectural Style, with the distinguished architectural historian from Australia, Professor Miles Lewis, as general editor, the Zumthor’s Thermal Bath building at Vals is described as “a superb example of simple detailing that is used to create highly atmospheric spaces. The design contrasts cool, gray stone walls with the warmth of bronze railings, and light and water are employed to sculpt the spaces. The horizontal joints of the stonework mimic the horizontal lines of the water, and there is a subtle change in the texture of the stone at the waterline. Skylights inserted into narrow slots in the ceiling create a dramatic line of light that accentuates the fluidity of the water. Every detail of the building thus reinforces the importance of the bath on a variety of levels.”

In the book titled Thinking Architecture, first published by Birkhauser in 1998, Zumthor set down in his own words a philosophy of architecture. One sample of his thoughts is as follows: “I believe that architecture today needs to reflect on the tasks and possibilities which are inherently its own. Architecture is not a vehicle or a symbol for things that do not belong to its essence. In a society that celebrates the inessential, architecture can put up a resistance, counteract the waste of forms and meanings, and speak its own language. I believe that the language of architecture is not a question of a specific style. Every building is built for a specific use in a specific place and for a specific society. My buildings try to answer the questions that emerge from these simple facts as precisely and critically as they can.”

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