François Roche (born 1961[1]) is a French architect. Roche is the co-founder and director of R&Sie(n) Architects and the research architectural firm, New Territories/M4.
Early life and education
François Roche was born in 1961 in Paris, France.[1] Roche studied science and math at University, but, decided in 1981 to switch his degree to architecture.[2] His interest in the sciences would go on to influence his architectural work.[3] He spent time in the Algerian desert during his time in college, deciding whether he wanted to complete his degree in architecture.[2] In 1987, he graduated from the École nationale supérieure d'architecture de Versailles.[1]
Career
Roche founded his first studio in Paris in 1989.[1] He expanded to incorporate in 1994, after his first solo show "Action" at IFA (Institut Francais d'Architecture), Stephanie Lavaux as a partner, naming the studio R&Sie(n),[1][4] the "R" in the name is for Roche, the "S" is for Stephanie, and is pronounced similarly to the word "heresy" in French,[2] but also "RSI" in reference to Real Symbolic Imaginary of J. Lacan. The studio specializes in architectural "investigations" and "scenarios" with the goal of connecting the relationship between humans and buildings.[1] Roche would go on to create New Territories/M4, which houses R&Sie, along with other installation, architectural, and digital design projects, with partner Camille Lacadée.[5][6]
Since the 1990s,[3] Roche has been represented by an androgynous, digitally created avatar named s/he.[7] Roche describes s/he as "a kind of doppelgänger, a Siamese twin, the mask of Mishima, an avatar of Vishnu. Androgynous in appearance and with a queer attitude, s/he has enabled me for twenty-five years to maintain a singular voice, coming from nowhere, emerging from territories that abandoned the posture of authority, of discourse, and of academia."[3]
In 2004, R&Sie(n) created DustyRelief for the Museum of Contemporary Art, Bangkok, Thailand.[3][4] The piece was designed to absorb the city smog, which would then cause the structure to grow. The piece was inspired by Man Ray's Dust Breeding. The project was canceled due to a coup d'état.[3]
While speaking in at an event in London in 2010, Roche shared that he would be "happy" if somebody went into one of his buildings or designs, got lost, and abandons need of exit, in reference to S. Brussolo novel (Trajets et Itineraires de l'oubli, 1981).[2] That same year, Roche ended his professional relationship with Lavaux and began working with Camille Lacadée.[4] In 2011, the avatar used to represent the R&Sie(n) committed "suicide" only to re-emerge in 2017, to perform his-her first solo retrospective at Frac Orléans.[8] Around 2013, Roche opened a studio in the Talat Noi neighborhood of Bangkok.[8] Before relocating from Paris to Bangkok, Roche transformed his Paris house in a project called I'm Lost in Paris. The project involved cultivating bacteria which turned into vegetation covering the house.[8]
Roche and Lacadée launched a Kickstarter to raise funds to an "experimental hybrid building" called MMYST. The project was to be built by robots in Thailand.[9] In May 2015, Roche, Lacadée, and Pierre Huyghe to create "What Could Happen," an "experimental euthanasia expedition" in the Swiss Alps.[6][10][11] In October 2015, he lectured with Lacadée at the University of Michigan's Taubman College.[12] That same month, Roche and Lacadée exhibited #mythomaniaS at the Chicago Architecture Biennial. The exhibit included videos of "architectural scenarios" around the world.[5] Roche's professional partnership with Lacadée ended in 2015.[4]
In 2016, Frac Centre-Val de Loire held a retrospective, titled S/he would rather do fiction maker of Roche's work with New Territories/M4.[7]
Roche's work has been exhibited at Mori Art Museum,[13] Columbia University, the Pompidou Center, the Museum of Modern Art, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yale University[14] and other museums and galleries.[1] Roche has exhibited in the Venice Biennale multiple times,[12] including in 2004's Metamorph International Architecture Exposition;[15] the 2008 International Architecture Exposition in which R&Sie exhibited their "bi[r]o-bo[o]ts";[16] the 2014 "Time Space Existence: Made in Europe" biennale;[17] and 2018 at the Bembo Pavilion and the Lithuanian Pavilion.[18][19] Roche has also participated as a panelist at the 2012 United States pavilion.[20] His 2010 installation, Building Which Never Dies, was partially confiscated by Italian police for containing uranium. The incident caused an entire section of the Biennale to be closed for an entire day.[8]
Themes and concepts in Roche's work
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2021)
Architecture doesn’t mean only to create buildings in the public space, but also to create debate in public space, through building and/or attitudes able to make a building.
Roche's works often represent the divergence of science, architecture, philosophy, science fiction genetics, art, identity, and biopolitics.[3][4] However, through the avatar, Roche explores philosophical concepts of the LGBTQI community, communications, and philosophy. In describing his beliefs and work, Roche often cites fiction and non-fiction, ranging from Jacques Lacan to Noam Chomsky to Paul B. Preciado. Roche describes s/he and New Territories as "tool to knot and unknot realities" in the spirit of Michel Foucault.[3]
The Frac Centre-Val de Loire calls Roche's early work as veering "towards hybridization and "hyperlocalism", aimed at distorting reality and bringing out its most significant unusualness." In 1996, Roche started using digital processes to create his work. Roche's later works also incorporate robotics complemented by writing and lectures.[4]
All monographies/ texts / article are public and free downloadable [36]
Academia
Roche and S/he were involved in Guest Professor position among other places and chronologically at Bartlett-UCL-London 2000, at UPenn-Philadelphia 2006 and 2015–016, at GSAPP-Columbia-NYC 2006–2017, at USC-Los Angeles 2009–11, at RMIT-Melbourne 2012–2017, and few years at IKA (2017) and Angewante-Vienna (2009), AFAA-Bratislava (2018). He taught 'processes' in 2023 at KHM-Koln, and his a permanent member of EGS _ Division of Philosophy, Art and Critical Thought since 2012[37]
Notable exhibitions
1993: Action, Solo exhibition Institut Francais d'Architecture
1999-2000: @namorphous changes, Columbia University (New York), UCLA (Los Angeles)
1996: le monolythe fracture, Venice Architecture Biennale, French Pavillon
2000: aqua alta 1.0/2.0, Venice Architecture Biennale, International and French Pavillon
2001: In any way, it's already happened, ICA, London
2007: "Heshotmedown, Demilitarized Zone, Korea", with R&Sie, SFMOMA, San Francisco, California[51]
2017: Multiples Scenarios with Drawing, Models, Movies, Texts in a donation to Frac Centre, Orléans, at the occasion of retrospective S/he would rather do fiction maker
2021: MythomaniaS, acquired by Frac Centre, Orléans, serie of architecture cases studies and movies
2018: mind [e] scape, as New Territories, Echigo-Tsumari Art Field, Niigata Prefecture, Japan[53]
Roche, François & Lacadée, Camille. (2016). "Parrhesia-stases (The Preamble)". Architectural Design. 86. 66–71. 10.1002/ad.2112.
Personal life
Roche lives in Bangkok. Roche goes to great lengths to avoid having his photograph published, a concept he has compared to Daft Punk or Margiela.[2][6]