Details
DOME / КУПОЛ
Photography by Petr Antonov
Curated by Pedro Ignacio Alonso and Hugo Palmarola
Princeton University School of Architecture Gallery
February 17 - March 4, 2016
Exhibition Reception on March 1, 2016 at 7pm
In the 1960s, the work of Soviet engineer Yuri Streletski culminated in the construction of twin astronomical domes located in Santiago de Chile and Kislovodsk in the Caucasus region. Separated by 14,265 kilometers, these kin structures were nevertheless bound by invisible lines that connect and divide north from south, and east from west. Indistinguishable from one another save for slight modifications made to account for the heat of Chilean summers and the cold of Russian winters, these dome structures were constructed to protect the delicate Large Passage Instruments contained inside. In operation throughout the Cold War, Streletski’s observatories produced scrupulous studies of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres – recording the passage and position of the stars and marking the routes of future interplanetary ships that would carry man to other planets.[1]
Featuring archival materials from the Calán Hill National Astronomical Observatory in Santiago and the Pulkovo National Observatory in Saint Petersburg, along with the work of Russian photographer Petr Antonov, this exhibition explores the ways in which science and technology were designed, constructed, practiced and exchanged among global networks during the “space race” era.
On Tuesday, March 1 at 4:30pm exhibition curators Pedro Ignacio Alonso and Hugo Palmarola will lead a panel discussion titled Space Race Archaeologies bringing together specialists in architecture, technology, politics and visual culture to discuss how scientifically advanced structures designed to explore the universe –observatories, satellites, telescopes – shed light on complex political and social relations on the ground.
DOME / КУПОЛ and Space Race Archaeologies are presented by the Princeton University School of Architecture with support from the Princeton-Mellon Initiative in Architecture, Urbanism & the Humanities, and the Princeton University Art Museum.
[1] Science: Soviet Astronomy Activities in Chile. Unclassified Confidential Airgram No A-673, from Embassy in Santiago to Department of State (June 19, 1968), p. 2.