Artist's exploration of inclusive skateboarding inspires architects
An Edmonton artist helped an architecture firm explore the idea of "delightful unburdening" by imagining a more inclusive skate park during a recently completed residency.
"I discovered a way to delightfully unburden, and it's through community connection through the world of skateboarding," Lexi Pendzich wrote as the latest artist-in-residence at architecture firm hcma.
From Feb. 23 to May 5, Pendzich created a project called SKATE WORLD, designing and building a skate park for toy skateboards called Tech Decks using floral design elements. The choice was deliberate.
"When I was younger, I never felt like skateboarding was accessible to me," Pendzich told Taproot. "How I got into skateboarding was (with) a little Tech Deck fingerboard."
This was Pendzich's first-ever artist residency. She used the opportunity to draw on a previous project photographing women and LGBTQ+ skaters as well as to experiment with different media.
"Because I'm photo-based, I've never even built 3D models. So I was like, 'Oh, cool. Now I get to be super hands-on, this is awesome.'"
The residency was part of Tilt, hcma's playground-cum-laboratory for creative experimentation on projects outside client-based architecture work.
"It's not directly informing the architecture practice. It's not directly informing the design practice," hcma director of community projects Ali Kenyon told Taproot. "It's something that takes us outside of our comfort zone and gets us to use our brains or our bodies in a way that's different from our day-to-day. We think that's really valuable in terms of helping us to build divergent creative-thinking skills, as well as being more well-rounded humans overall."