Sophia Tabatadze

links projects cv upcoming contacts
 
   
2002  
- Wallpaper  
- Self-Portrait as Architecture  
   
2003  
- De Doorzonwoning  
- House on Wheels  
   
2004  
- Architectural Drawings  
- Buildings and Strangebuildings  
- What We Thought Was a Wall   Turned Out to Be a Curtain  
- Tunnel  
   
2005  
- Heroes of Stagnation  
- Subu-Diet  
   
2006  
- Caucasian Memory Game  
- Georgian Toasting Traditions  
- Much More  
   
2007  
- Humancon Undercon  
   
2008  
- From Flags to Flowers  
- All my Re-Collections  
   
2009  
- Travelers Journal  
   
2010  
- Calendar and F Words  
- Just Buy and Put a Fence
Round it
 
   
2011  
- Gulo  
   
2012  
- Limitations of Imitation  
- Screens  
   
2012-14  
- Pirimze  
   
Title: De Doorzonwoning
Year: 2003
Size: Variable
Material: Wood, fabric, paper, plastic
Project: "De Strip"
Place: Vlaardingen, The Netherlands
 

De Doorzonwoning, the ‘look through’ or the ‘light through’ house, is about Dutch architecture and a Calvinist ideal the home in which the inhabitants keep everything open as they have nothing to hide. By this time I had been living for quite a while in the Netherlands and no longer wanted simply to ‘fit in’, but had started looking more critically at my surroundings. Though it seems as if everything is transparent in these houses at first, you find your gaze is always being directed to what the tenant wants you to see – what you get to see is thus always in a sense staged. It is never simply transparent, never simply open; or rather, it is not as open and transparent as it claims or wants to be. That’s why I built a tunnel running through the house which, by means of periscopic mirrors, allows one to see one end of it from the other. This project was also a reaction to regulations, for everything about the layout of the Doorzonwoning was predetermined. When you move into one of these apartments you already know where the living room and the bedroom are going to be, and where to put the sofa and the TV.

This work was about searching for home, and among the questions I asked myself were, what is a home, and how much of it is physical and how much mental? Can I make my home in a place I don’t belong to? At the time I had the project’s location in mind, a suburb of Rotterdam; but now, looking back, I think this question can be applied to the whole country and to my experience of being foreigner there. Instead of bringing my own furniture and painting the walls to my liking, my work was a reaction to the house itself, its empty walls, the traces of the former tenants, the color, the smell, the neighborhood. I brought only what I absolutely needed with me when I moved to this apartment; the rest I started to create. I decided to build my own ‘home’ by reacting to the place and working in it. Lifestyle and work were therefore interconnected.