Innocad Architektur ZT GmbH

History Museum Graz

History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott

HISTORY MUSEUM GRAZ

INNOCAD

ARCHITECTS
INNOCAD

ART PROJECTIONS
Projektionstechnik Drechsler

PRINTING
Raunjak intermedias, Reproteam

MANUFACTURERS
Wever & Ducre, XAL, Derksen, Lambda Labs

SOUND DESIGN
Severin Su / 13&9 Design, Martin Lesjak

LIGHTING DESIGN
GOL Lichtdesign

DESIGN DIRECTOR
Martin Lesjak

CREATIVE DIRECTOR
Anastasija Lesjak

INTERIOR DESIGNER
Jörg Kindermann

PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Jörg Kindermann

JUNIOR INTERIOR DESIGNERS
Lisa Nett

WALL ART
Eva Stern

PHOTOGRAPHS
Paul Ott

AREA
500 m²

YEAR
2021

LOCATION
Graz, Austria

CATEGORY
Installation

The temporary exhibit, “how it was. Space and History,” is one piece of a four-part provincial exhibition in the Austrian state of Styria which showcases the region´s cultural heritage on the first floor of the History Museum in Graz.

History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott

Located in Palais Herberstein, the museum is a significant historic building in the city center. The 500 square meter exhibition, spanning from the beginning of our era to the 20th century, aims to make ancient traces of historic architecture, landscapes, borders, legislation, and society legible and visible.

The journey through time and space begins with immersive sounds and visuals, animated morphing boundaries accompanied by changing linguistics and dialects.

History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott

The “black box” circuit, an existing series of hermetically sealed wooden room cells from the 90s ingrained in the historic premises, provides the framework for this exhibition.

To invite visitors to participate and perceive history in an unexpected and unpretentious way, four diverse sensory experiences were introduced into the space: shell, structure, floor, and sound. The further one progresses in the 10-room loop, the denser and more complex, scaled, accelerated the experience becomes.

History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott

The transformation of the neutral shell into an artistically translated landscape, untouched by human hands, was the first step. An infinite landscape loop wraps around the walls (artwork by Eva Stern) and metaphorically depicts the pristine nature humans found on earth, which was then successively modified, reshaped, and transformed.

Traces of these human interventions become legible as gaps in the landscape and wall, also contextualizing the connection between objects within the historical context of the palais.

History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott

From the cutouts, a spatial wooden structure emerges, referencing material and dimensions of the shell´s wooden-frame construction.

A single element, rotated on its coordinate axes, is multiplied and proliferated into a three-dimensional space from the floor, wall and ceiling, acting as a display for a myriad of historic maps and scale models.⁠

History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott

The interplay of structure, objects and gaps in the landscape offers insights and unveils previously hidden layers of historic masonry and housing technology. The adequacy of human action is both challenged and reflected through the lens of penciled graffiti.

Visitors stride across the floor projected with town and city structures and typology, a network of roads and paths – becoming part of it, immersed in it. Large exhibits, such as a Roman tombstone, pillory, delicate organ fragment, and military tent, line the wayside as flotsam and witnesses of the past.

History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott

The sound installation, created and produced by 13&9 Design in collaboration with Severin Su, is a key element of the scenography contributing to the multidimensional visitor experience. The two-tier composition is based on an abstract and a narrative sound layer.

The abstract layer emphasizes the spatial and conceptual design themes – densification and complexity, and scaling and acceleration – through three elements: drumbeats, noise, and heartbeats.

History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott

The narrative layer accompanies the space with sound effects that mirror the atmosphere of each period while also referring to specific exhibits.

Reflecting on our past as it relates to its impact on our present and future, the final room, entered through a narrow and long transitional space, concludes the exhibition and poses the questions: What is forthcoming?

History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott

What remains? The thought-provoking installation constructed from re-arranged and layered landscape cutouts of preceding rooms, leaves visitors in a new and natural environment.

To meet the standards of a contemporary and mindful contribution, the pieces were produced locally in the museum´s workshop, made from renewable, recyclable, and partially re-used materials.

History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott


History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott
History Museum Graz
© Paul Ott


History Museum Graz
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Innocad Architektur ZT GmbH
T +43 316 710324-0
Innocad Architektur ZT GmbH
Grazbachgasse 65a, 8010 Graz, Austria