With 144 impressive tree trunks, the British architect David Chipperfield (born 1953) transformed the open glass hall of the Neue Nationalgalerie into a dense colonnade for three months. The installation Sticks and Stones is at the same time an examination of the architecture of the Neue Nationalgalerie and a prologue to the monument-compliant renovation of the museum, which David Chipperfield Architects will carry out at the beginning of 2015.
For the title of his intervention, David Chipperfield borrows the catchy beginning of an English nursery rhyme: “Sticks and Stones [may break my bones, but words will never hurt me]”. He thus refers to two basic elements of the Neue Nationalgalerie, but also of architecture in general: the support or column and the stone. As light-hearted as the title may seem, this last special exhibition before the museum closes for several years is just as profound.
With Sticks and Stones, Chipperfield draws attention to the spectacular construction of the museum building, which was built between 1965 and 1968 according to plans by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886-1969). Only eight slim steel columns support the monumental roof, which appears to be floating because the columns are set far away from the corners of the roof. The two marble-clad pillar-like installation shafts inside the glass hall have no load-bearing function.
Like a temporary support structure, the 144 debarked, eight-meter-long spruce trunks symbolically support the weight of the roof. They fit into the clear grid that characterizes the steel ceiling, granite floor and overall proportions of the Neue Nationalgalerie. Chipperfield's installation creates a new spatial experience within the modern rigor of the Mies building. Sticks and Stones is therefore a nod to the great predecessor Mies van der Rohe and at the same time a metaphor for the upcoming construction site.