Artist Studio and Residence for Ronald Davis (navaho hogan idiom in pumice-crete)
Arroyo Hondo (Taos County), New Mexico, 1990
In
1990, the Los Angeles artist, Ronald Davis, inquired about the Colorado
Solar Hogan Demonstration, in Boulder, Colorado. The result was a collaboration
between artist and architect for a new Taos, NM, Davis Residence and Studio
(initally called the "Buck Westwood" Studiofor a mythical western
hero, loved and admired by allincluding Native Americans!) The artist
was enamored with the Navaho hogan idiomespecially the crib domeand
had for years been doing art pieces directly relating to this profound
native geometry. From inital discussions about the project at the site
in Arroyo Hondo, Taos County, NM, and a coffee house on a Malibu, CA,
beach, the concept that evolved called for a series of traditional and
modern polygonal hogans that varied in the number of sides from five to
twelve.
Each
hogan contains a different function and is not connected to other hogans
by corridors or interior space connections. Each hogan stands free in
space. Each has an entry door facing the traditional eastwhich coincidentally,
is the direction towards the spiritual focus of Taos ValleyWheeler
Peak.
The
program evolved to contain each functional space in a polygon in the following
schema:
guest kitchen: six-sided
guest bedrooms: five, six, and eight-sided
painting and sculpture studio: in a double five-sided
master bedroom: nine-sided
living room: eleven-sided
computer-studio: within seven-sided
sculpture: studio eleven-sided
gallery: twelve-sided (with a solar venting tower as an extended crib
dome)
Today,
only the first phase of construction is completed. Local materials of
pumice-crete (volcanic beads mixed with a small amount of cement), adobe
bricks and plaster, and vigas (logs) are the primary media for the architecture.
The artist has expanded the depth of the composition by placing his polychrome
crib-dome sculptures contiguous to the complex of hogansresulting
in a lyrical art field on the edge of the Rio Grande Gorge. The project,
originally unique to the Taos Valley, has inspired other people in the
neighborhood to mime the hogan theme.
—
Dennis Holloway