Bureau A designed this itinerant theatre for the last play by Dorothée Thébert y Filippo Filliger, a theatrical essay about the community of artists and thinkers who gathered on the hills of Monte Verità in Switzerland at the beginning of the 20th century to explore and experiment new and utopian ways of life.

The scenography designed by Bureau A is an itinerary theatre which travels together with the comedians. Architecture is taken to its minimum in order to create a cabin which can be easily dismantled and stored and which invites visitors and actors to get together and celebrate a utopian and theatrical ritual.

Description of project by Bureau A

A unique moment in history occurred in Switzerland in the first decades of the 20th century. Following a larger search for utopia enhanced by the industrial revolution, a fantastic creative community gathered on the hills of Monte Verità in the Ticino region.

The commonly accepted idea that the 60 and 70’s gave birth to most utopian communities is a misguided comprehension of a rather continuous alternative movement probably initiated by Thomas Moore’s Utopia published in 1516. Robert Owen’s New Harmony in Indiana, Etienne Cabet’s Icarians or Charles Fourrier’s Phalanstery are only a few examples of the numerous attempts to question social and political behaviours and experiment alternative ways of living together. Within this context, Monte Verità holds its particular role; it condensed at the start of the 20th century many of the social subjects that were to become crucial 50 years later. Environmental concern, sexual liberation, gender issue, family dissolution, free education or ideological engagement were all important issues examined and experimented in new ways by the community.

Monte Verità Community. Photography courtesy of Dorothée Thébert and Bureau A.

Peut-on être révolutionnaire et aimer les fleurs? (Can one be a revolutionary and love flowers?), written and directed by Dorothée Thébert and Filippo Filliger, is a theatre play retracing, in a documentary and yet very free manner, the intense history of Monte Verità where Rudolf Steiner, Rudolf Laban, Herman Hesse, Otto Gros and many other creative and intellectual figures gathered to experiment new forms of living.

The scenography of the play proposes another community, one of simple and functional objects, supporting the activities and movements of the group. Benches, stools, shower, partitions, canopies, bleachers, standing lamps compose an elemental and direct aesthetic. Pine wood studs and natural wool felt referring to Josef Beuys’s survival obsession are the main construction materials.

The temporary theatre imagined by Bureau A is an itinerary settlement moving with the comedian from town to town. Its details and assembling are conceived to be dismantled and stored easily; architecture at its minimum. A sweat lodge built out of the same materials encourage the visitors and the actors to dress down and celebrate a moment of utopian gathering.

Text.- Bureau A

CRÉDITOS.-

Una obra de Dorothée Thébert & Filippo Filliger.
Con Cédric Djedje, Marion Duval, Lola Riccaboni y Valerio Scamuffa.
Escenografía por Bureau A.

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More information

BUREAU A. Founded in 2012 by the association of Leopold Banchini and Daniel Zamarbide. Architects by training BUREAU A is a multidisciplinary platform aiming to blur the boundaries of research and project making on architectural related subjects, whichever their nature and status.

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Leopold Banchini was born in Geneva in 1981 and is an architect graduated from the EPFL (Ecole Polytechinique Fédérale de Lausanne). He is also Master in Architecture from the University of Lausanne (2007) and graduate of the Glasgow School of Art (2004).

Is a visiting professor in the HEAD (Haute Ecole de Design et) in Geneva since 2010 and Assistant Professor at the EPFL since 2009. He has also been Archozoom project designer in 2009.

Has been placed in Lot / ek Architects (New York) between the years 2004/2005, as an assistant project Art Basel (Basel) in 2005, and as a project partner of the collective Atelier Van Lieshout (AVL) that same year in Rotterdam.

He has developed his work as an architect in b720 Arquitectos (Barcelona) during the years 2007 and 2008, and Group8 Architects (Geneva) in 2009.

In addition, since 2008 part of 1to100 Architects, and architectural collective based in Geneva. Its members have been active and decisive parts in projects such as the winning participation of Bahrain at the last Venice Biennale - RECLAIM Golden Lion 2011, exhibitions such as The Gulf - OMA-AMO's participation at the Venice Biennale 2007 and publications such as AMO-Rem Koolhaas's Al Manakh. Parallel to that, they conduce many different operations ranging from architecture, to journalism, until urban design. They have teaching positions at the EPFL and the University of Arts and Design in Geneva.

Its aim is to take position and initiate reflexions upon our contemporary environment.

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BUREAU, is the new project by Daniel Zamarbide. The practice hides under its generic name a variety of research activities. BUREAU makes things as an urge to react to the surrounding physical, cultural and social environment with a critical standpoint and with an immersive attitude. BUREAU is (in 2017) a furniture series, an editorial project, a design team, they are architects.

Daniel Zamarbide obtains his master degree at the Institut d’Architecture de l’Université de Genève (IAUG) in 1999. During his studies he followed the workshops of Christian Marclay, Philippe Parreno and Catherine Queloz at the École Supérieure des Beaux Arts in Geneva.

In the year 2000 he becomes one of the founding members of group8, an architectural practice that has acquired an important national and international recognition.


Daniel Zamarbide has developed through the years a particular interest in the protean aspects of his discipline and nourishes his work and research through other domains like philosophy, applied and visual arts as well as cinema.

As a guest lecturer and jury he has been invited at a diversity of international schools and institutions to present and discuss his work and research.

Since 2003 his interest in research and education has led him to be invited as an assistant in the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) and as a professor (2000-14) at the Haute École d’Art et de Design (HEAD) in Geneva. In 2014, he integrates the team of ALICE Lab (Dieter Dietz) at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) as a guest professor and research director.

In 2012, Daniel leaves group8 to start a new practice with Leopold Banchini, architect. Their practice, BUREAU A has explored during 5 years the possibilities of architectural making in a great variety of formats, opening the practice to work in the fields of art, garden and landscape architecture, exhibition design, temporary architecture and object making.

In 2017, following the dissolution of BUREAU A, Daniel Zamarbide pursues his more personal research interests under the name of BUREAU. This new entity produces architecture in the continuity of BUREAU A and incorporates to his already prolific activities furniture design (with a design brand of the same name) and an editorial project, which launches the first publication in June 2017.

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Published on: March 20, 2015
Cite: "Can one be a revolutionary and love flowers?" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/can-one-be-a-revolutionary-and-love-flowers> ISSN 1139-6415
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