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Jo Farb Hernandez follows the construction and dismantling of Josep Pujiula i Vila’s labyrinthine cabins

Raw Vision #40

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Excerpt:
...For almost twenty years, a spectacular art environment had been rising alongside a curve in the shallow Fluviá river in northwestern Catalunya, Spain. Nestled among the medieval villages of La Garroxta, this fantastic sprawling construction at once harmonized and collided with the well-worn stones, deep valleys, and verdant volcanic landscape of the local surroundings. Locally known as a ‘wild park’ (parc salvatge) or ‘wild village’ (poblat salvatge), the seven soaring towers, innumerable bridges, shelters, and walkways, and, above all, a labyrinth, 1.5 kilometers long, had all been created by the labor of Josep Pujiula i Vila. The entire intricate construction covered more than one hectare of land, and the towers soared some 30 meters high, jauntily capped by Catalan flags and banners. It had been an unaffected open-air sanctuary, a devilishly enjoyable maze, the ‘Sagrada Familia of Art Brut,’ in an appropriate aesthetic and conceptual reference to one of Spain’s most recognizable architectural treasures, Barcelona’s cathedral, designed by Antoni Gaudí.


Yet on June 18, 2002, Pujiula began the process of dismantling his work, the result of a meeting held the week before with representatives of the Generalitat of Catalunya and the mayor of Argelaguer, the owner of the land upon which Pujiula had – illegally – built his masterpiece. The mayor and his family were concerned about public safety, particularly the possibility of visitors being hurt while climbing on the structures. Pujiula’s wife and daughter shared these concerns. The provincial government’s Department of Public Works (MOPU) has also been improving the infrastructure of roads and public buildings throughout the region, and it determined that National Route 260 must be slightly rerouted and widened to eliminate a dangerous curve. Not coincidentally, it will be rerouted directly through Pujiula’s environment, thus necessitating its demolition.

 
Interior viewLower north side of structure
Interior view, through a passage of the labyrinth; Lower north side of structure prior to any demolition, June 2002
 
Raw Vision #40 cover

For more text and images,
see Raw Vision
issue #40


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