VCU Institute for Contemporary Art, Richmond ICA

Virginia Commonwealth University ICA, VCU Richmond Architecture Photos, VA Design Project, US Architects

VCU Institute for Contemporary Art : Richmond Building

Markel Center Richmond Development design by Steven Holl Architects, USA

page updated Apr 18, 2018

New Arts Building for Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond

Design: Steven Holl Architects

The new Markel Center at Virginia Commonwealth University’s Institute for Contemporary Art (ICA) in Richmond has completed.

New Arts Building for Virginia Commonwealth University

The ICA uses fashionable folding geometry that has become popular in this age of parametric design.

The arts school maintain that both the VCU and the city needed a contemporary art institution. The university needed it to stand out as a creative campus.

The building is clad in pre-weathered titanium zinc and etched glass.

Sep 11, 2012

Virginia Commonwealth University Institute for Contemporary Art

Design: Steven Holl Architects

Rendering of ICA exterior:
VCU Institute for Contemporary Art, Richmond ICA building
images courtesy of Steven Holl Architects

Virginia Commonwealth University Surpasses $20 Million Raised For New Institute For Contemporary Art

Designed by architect Steven Holl, the multidisciplinary arts institution will serve as a catalyst for exhibitions, programs, research and collaboration, working with VCUarts, the top public university graduate arts and design program in the U.S.

Richmond, VA – September 11, 2012 – Virginia Commonwealth University announced today that it has surpassed the $20 million mark in support of the university’s new Institute for Contemporary Art; raising an additional $6 million towards its $32 million campaign goal since unveiling the building’s design in April 2012. Part exhibition and performance space, part lab and incubator, the ICA will feature a series of flexible programming spaces for the presentation of visual art, theater, music, dance and film by nationally and internationally recognized artists.

Major gifts in support of the Virginia Commonwealth University ICA include:

• $5 million gift from Kathie and Steve Markel, co-chairs of the ICA’s Campaign Committee

• $5 million gift from Pam and Bill Royall, co-chairs of the ICA’s Campaign Committee

• $2 million gift from True Farr Luck, Richmond-based philanthropist and long-time donor to VCUarts. Luck’s gift will be recognized with the naming of the ICA’s third-floor gallery

• $1 million gift from Abby W. Moore, philanthropist and former president of Moore Loans Inc. Moore’s gift will be recognized with the naming of the ICA’s café

• $1 million gift from anonymous donors to name the ICA’s reflecting pool in honor of Martha D. Newell

• $1.8 million in-kind gift of the property on which the ICA will be located from a Richmond-based private foundation

• $750,000 matching grant for a total gift of $1.5 million from the Virginia-based Cabell Foundation

• $500,000 from the Lewis and Butler Foundation. The gift will be recognized with the naming of the ICA shop for Frances, Andrew and Virginia Lewis. Frances Lewis also serves as honorary Chairwoman of the ICA’s International Advisory Board

The gifts noted above, along with additional gifts from individuals and corporations, bring the total raised to-date to more than $20 million. Currently anticipated to open in 2015, the ICA will be a non-collecting institution designed to facilitate the way artists are working today by accommodating the increasing lack of barriers among different media and practices, mirroring the cross-disciplinary approach at the VCU School of the Arts.

VCU Institute for Contemporary Art, Richmond ICA building

“Since unveiling the design for the ICA in April, our community has embraced the project whole-heartedly, as evidenced by the more than $6 million in contributions since that time,” noted Joseph H. Seipel, dean of the VCU School of the Arts. “The support of these individuals and foundations is invaluable as we work towards the creation of this new institution. We are so grateful for the support and thank them on behalf of the artists, students and larger community for whom the ICA will be a resource for generations to come.”

VCUarts is one of the nation’s leading arts schools, with distinguished alumni and noted artists at campuses in Richmond and Qatar, and has long been the top public university graduate arts and design program in the country according to U.S. News & World Report. VCU is also home to the Anderson Gallery, which for 35 years has organized and presented exhibitions, programs and publications that explore a broad range of currents in contemporary art and design.

The ICA will complement and enhance the offerings of VCU while also serving as a new destination for contemporary arts and culture in the region and a cornerstone of Richmond’s already vibrant arts community — joining the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the Science Museum of Virginia, the Virginia Opera, Virginia Repertory Theatre, Richmond Ballet and the Richmond Symphony.

Apr 26, 2012

Virginia Commonwealth University Institute for Contemporary Art Building

Design: Steven Holl Architects

VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIVERSITY UNVEILS DESIGN FOR NEW MULTIDISCIPLINARY ARTS INSTITUTION DESIGNED BY STEVEN HOLL ARCHITECTS

Institute for Contemporary Art Will Serve as a Catalyst for Exhibitions, Programs, Research and Collaboration, Working With VCUarts Top Public University Graduate Arts & Design Program in the U.S.

Renderings of ICA exterior:
VCU Institute for Contemporary Art, Richmond ICA building
images courtesy of Steven Holl Architects

Richmond, VA – April 25, 2012 – Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) today unveiled the design for a new Institute for Contemporary Art (ICA) designed by Steven Holl and Chris McVoy. Part exhibition and performance space, part lab and incubator, the 38,000-square-foot building will feature a series of flexible programming spaces for the presentation of visual art, theater, music, dance and film by nationally and internationally recognized artists.

The facility also encompasses a 240-plus seat performance space, outdoor plazas, a sculpture garden, classrooms, a café and administrative offices. Scheduled to open in 2015, this non-collecting institution is designed to facilitate the way artists are working today by accommodating the increasing lack of barriers among different media and practices, mirroring the cross-disciplinary approach at VCU’s School of the Arts (VCUarts).

VCUarts has long been the top public university graduate arts and design program in the country, according to U.S. News & World Report. The ICA will complement and enhance the offerings of VCU while also serving as a new destination for contemporary arts and culture in the region.

VCU Institute for Contemporary Art, Richmond ICA building

Steven Holl Architects’ design for the ICA will be presented in an exhibition opening April 26 at New York’s Meulensteen gallery. “Forking Time” includes more than 30 study models and concept drawings that depict the design’s evolution.

“The ICA will be a transformational resource for arts education, experimentation and for the enhancement of VCU and Richmond as a capital city committed to the arts,” said Virginia Commonwealth University President Michael Rao. “The ICA brings a vital new dimension to us as a national research university, providing highly motivated students with opportunities to engage the arts in their learning experiences and to work across a range of disciplines. Steven Holl Architects’ design captures our global vision and commitment to human excellence. We look forward to the dynamic collaborations that the ICA will spark at VCU, within the region and around the world.”

Sited at the corner of Belvidere and Broad Streets directly off of Interstate 95, and one of Richmond’s busiest intersections, the ICA will form a gateway to the University and the city. The ICA will feature dual entrances—one facing Richmond and the other fronting VCU’s campus.

At the heart of the building will be an inviting, double-height “forum,” a flexible space for both spontaneous encounters and planned events that connects to the ground-floor performance space and also opens to the sculpture garden and cafe. The galleries radiate out from the forum in forked arms, shaping the space of the garden.

Large pivot doors open to the garden in order to create a seamless interplay between interior and exterior spaces. The open circulation serves to remove the formal protocols associated with entering traditional arts facilities. The three levels of galleries are linked through the open forum, allowing artists to create works that extend across, and visitors to circulate through, the spaces via a variety of paths.

The ICA’s exterior walls of pre-weathered satin-finish zinc will complement its urban setting. Additional clear and translucent glass walls will create transparency, bringing natural light into the building during the day and radiating light at night, signaling the activities taking place within.

VCU Institute for Contemporary Art, Richmond ICA building

“We have designed the building to be a flexible, forward-looking instrument that can illuminate the transformative possibilities of contemporary art,” said architect Steven Holl. “Like many contemporary artists working today, the ICA’s design does not draw distinctions between the visual and performing arts. The fluidity of the design allows for experimentation, and will encourage new ways to display and present art that will capitalize on the ingenuity and creativity apparent throughout the VCU campus.”

“The ICA will be a catalyst for new kinds of artistic explorations and discourse for the VCU community while contributing to the national and international conversation in the arts. It will allow us to mount large-scale exhibitions, installations and commissions in all media,” said Joseph H. Seipel, dean of VCU’s School of the Arts. “We envision that the ICA will become a new destination and the building will serve as a beacon for contemporary art and ideas.”

In advancement of VCU’s commitment to science, technology, and environmental responsibility, the ICA’s design incorporates many environmentally-friendly elements, making use of natural resources whenever possible. This includes the use of geothermal wells to provide heating and cooling energy for the building, green roofs to absorb storm water and maximize insulation, and glass walls designed to exhaust heat in the summer and harness it in the winter. The project is designed to meet LEED platinum certification standards. BCWH is the architect of record in Richmond.

The ICA will serve as a cornerstone of Richmond’s already vibrant arts community, joining the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the Science Museum of Virginia, the Virginia Opera, Barksdale Theatre, Richmond Ballet and the Richmond Symphony. VCUarts is one of the nation’s leading arts schools, with distinguished alumni and noted artists on faculty across its more than 16 areas of study at campuses in Richmond and Qatar. VCU is also home to the Anderson Gallery, which for 35 years has organized and presented exhibitions, programs and publications that explore a broad range of currents in contemporary art and design.

A capital campaign is underway for the $32 million project, with $14 million raised to date, including two lead gifts of $5M apiece from Kathie and Steve Markel and Pam and Bill Royall, who together chair the ICA’s Campaign Committee. A director search is in process.

VCU and VCUarts

Virginia Commonwealth University is a major, urban public research university with national and international rankings in sponsored research. Located on two downtown campuses in Richmond and a satellite campus in Qatar, VCU enrolls more than 31,000 students in 216 certificate and degree programs in the arts, sciences and humanities.

With a distinguished faculty of professional artists and 16 departments, including Craft/Material Studies, Fashion Design and Merchandising, Dance and Choreography, Graphic Design, Music, Painting and Printmaking, Photography and Film, Sculpture + Extended Media and Theatre, VCUarts has been the top ranked public university visual arts and design graduate program in the country for nine years, according to U.S. News & World Report. Its campus in Qatar provides students and faculty with a direct tie to the Middle East, a region of increasing significance in the contemporary art world.

For more information on VCUarts, please visit: arts.vcu.edu For more information on the ICA, please visit: ica.vcu.edu

Virginia Commonwealth University ICA – Building Information

Location: Richmond, VA
Design: Steven Holl and Chris McVoy

Address: Virginia Commonwealth University, 1001 West Franklin Street, Richmond, VA 23220, United States

Contact Virginia Commonwealth University: (804) 828-8813

Virginia Commonwealth University Institute for Contemporary Art images / information from Steven Holl Architects

Steven Holl

Location: 1001 West Franklin Street, Richmond, VA 23220, USA

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Website: https://www.vcu.edu/