Jorge Otero-Pailos
Jorge Otero-Pailos is an artist, preservation architect, theorist and educator, recognized for his contributions to experimental preservation and as the founder and editor of the journal Future Anterior, the first scholarly journal dedicated to preservation theory. He is best known for his “The Ethics of Dust” ongoing series of artworks created by casting pollution and surface residues from monuments, which was exhibited at the 53rd Venice Biennale. Westminster Hall, the Victoria & Albert Museum, and SFMoMA, amongst others. His work often intersects art and preservation, as seen in his advocacy for the restoration of modernist embassies, where he integrates artistic practices into architectural conservation. He is Director and Professor of Historic Preservation at Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation.
Early life and education
Jorge Otero-Pailos was born in Madrid, the only son of Justo Otero, a landscape painter and forestry engineer, and María Jesús Pailos, a computer scientist. His early childhood was marked by international travel to historic sites, facilitated by Spain's transition from dictatorship to democracy, which made it easier for Spaniards to go abroad. He attended the Lycée Français de Madrid. His father taught him painting. In 1985, Otero-Pailos traveled to the United States through a study abroad program, and was a foreign exchange student at Barrington High School, a suburb of Chicago, Illinois, where his art teacher introduced him to Frank Lloyd Wright, and encouraged him to study architecture.Otero-Pailos received a Bachelors of Architecture and a Masters of Urban Design from Cornell University College of Architecture, Art, and Planning, where he was awarded the Richmond Harold Shreve Award for best graduate thesis. He studied design with the Texas Rangers (architects) Colin Rowe, John Shaw, and Lee Hodgden, and studied theory with art historian Hal Foster, who introduced him to psychoanalytic theory, and became a pupil of philosopher Susan Buck-Morss, who trained him in Critical Theory. In 1991, he founded the student journal Submission, to advance theoretical discourse within the school. Together with fellow students Alfonso D’Onofrio and Jess Mullen-Carey, he conceived and directed the public television series V.E.T.V., which explored the relationship between architecture, broadcasting and digital media. V.E.T.V. featured surrealist scenes acted by fellow students and narrated by Otero-Pailos, spliced between interviews with Mark Jarzombek, Rem Koolhaas, Mark Wigley, Susan Buck-Morss, and others.
Academic career
In 1995, Otero-Pailos moved to San Juan to join Jorge Rigau in the effort to found the New School of Architecture at the Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico, serving as the school's first full-time professor. He received the Angel Ramos Foundation Research Grant to continue his investigation of the relationship between architecture and media, this time focused on the portrayal of Puerto Rican social violence and architecture in the news. He exhibited his paintings, collages and sculptures made of recycled materials in Puerto Rican galleries, and wrote opinion pieces about architecture and urbanism in the press.In 1997, Otero-Pailos conducted doctoral studies at the MIT School of Architecture and Planning under Prof. Mark Jarzombek, and wrote a dissertation on the history of architectural phenomenology, which was later published as the book “Architecture’s Historical Turn: Phenomenology and the Rise of the Postmodern”
In 2002, Otero-Pailos was appointed Assistant Professor of Historic Preservation at Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation.
In 2004 he founded the journal Future Anterior, the first scholarly journal in the US to focus on the history theory and criticism of historic preservation, published by the University of Minnesota Press.
He has contributed to numerous scholarly journals and books including the Oxford Encyclopedia of Aesthetics, and Rem Koolhaas’ .
In 2016, he was appointed as the Director of Historic Preservation at Columbia University GSAPP, and director of the Columbia Preservation Technology Laboratory, which serves as a hub for teaching and advanced research on the preservation of existing buildings through evolving technologies.
In 2018, he founded the Columbia GSAPP PhD program in historic preservation, the first such program in the United States. Otero-Pailos collaborated with Dean Amale Andraos and Dean Emeritus Mark Wigley to create the program.
In 2023, he authored Historic Preservation Theory: Readings from the 18th to the 21st Century the first English-language anthology of historic preservation theory with an international perspective.
Collaborations with architects
Restoration of the former U.S. Embassy, Oslo, Norway
Jorge Otero-Pailos has been a leading advocate for the preservation of U.S. modernist embassies, emphasizing their architectural and cultural significance. Notably, he collaborated with Oslo-based preservation architect Erik Langdalen on the restoration of the former U.S. Embassy in Oslo, originally designed by Eero Saarinen in 1959. Their work involved developing a comprehensive preservation plan, restoring the original concrete facade, and guiding the project through the landmark commission review process. This project received several accolades, including the City of Oslo’s Architecture Prize, the Design Award of Excellence from Docomomo US, and the OMA Awards for Transformation Project of the Year.Masterplan for New Holland Island, St. Petersburg, Russia
In 2013, Otero-Pailos was selected as Preservation Architect to work on New Holland Island, an 8-hectare site located the historic center of St. Petersburg, Russia. Otero-Pailos collaborated with Work Architecture Company, Master Planner and Design Architect. The client team was Dasha Zukhova and Roman Abramovitz. Otero-Pailos won the for his contribution to this project.Artistic career
''Influences''
, Otero-Pailos cites his father as a key figure in his artistic development. Otero-Pailos explains how his father would bring him along as "he would set up easels at the Prado Museum, copying paintings by Goya" and how "Trips to the Parthenon in Greece and Teotihuacan in Mexico cultivated a lifelong interest in architecture and its connection to art." Otero-Pailos credits Krzysztof Wodiczko, a Polish artist who works on architectural facades and monuments for making him realize that “Art can make monuments speak in a contemporary language.” Otero-Pailos further credits Leila W. Kinney, the Executive Director of Arts Initiatives and the Center for Art, Science & Technology, at M.I.T, for introducing him to sculptor Eva Hesse, whose work with latex became a major influence for Otero-Pailos.The Ethics of Dust (2008 to present)
The Ethics of Dust is a series of artworks where Otero-Pailos transfers the pollution on monuments onto latex casts. The title of the series indicates a dialogue with John Ruskin, one of the founders of preservation. Each work in the series is distinguished by the subtitle, which takes the name of the monument.Works in the series thus far include:
- The Ethics of Dust: Ex-Alumix
- The Ethics of Dust: Doge's Palace
- The Ethics of Dust: Carthago Nova
- The Ethics of Dust: Trajan's Column
- The Ethics of Dust: Maison de Famille Louis Vuitton
- The Ethics of Dust: Old United States Mint
- The Ethics of Dust: Westminster Hall
Distributed Monuments (2017 to present)
Distributed Monuments is a body of work made of dust transferred onto latex casts and enclosed in light boxes. Each cast is extracted from distinct site-specific interventions performed by Otero-Pailos as part of his series of works called The Ethics of Dust. The artworks’ materials come from monuments such as Westminster Hall in London, the Doge's Palace in Venice, or the U.S. Old Mint in San Francisco. Designed to be easily transported, Otero-Pailos explains in an that the work "questions our relationship with building as cultural objects and inspire us to care for the object as such, to become cultural stewards." The Distributed Monuments series was first exhibited at the Seaman's House, a, and second at the Chicago Architecture Biennial 2017 titled Make New History curated by Artistic Directors Sharon Johnston and Mark Lee of the Los Angeles–based firm Johnston Marklee. Otero-Pailos' contribution to the Chicago Architecture Biennial received .Analogue Sites (2024)
"Analogue Sites" was a public art exhibition by Jorge Otero-Pailos displayed on Manhattan's Park Avenue from April 1 to October 31, 2024. The exhibition consisted of three large-scale steel sculptures crafted from sections of the fence that originally surrounded the former U.S. Embassy in Oslo, a landmark designed by architect Eero Saarinen. These works engaged with the modernist architectural landscape of Park Avenue, including landmarks such as the Seagram Building examining themes of cultural diplomacy and architectural preservation.The exhibition was produced by Otero-Pailos Studio at the invitation of The Fund for Park Avenue Sculpture Committee. The exhibition led to numerous public programs with cultural partners and a digital guide created in partnership with Bloomberg Connects, part of Bloomberg Philanthropy.
Treaties on De-Fences (2024)
"Treaties on De-Fences" was an exhibition by Jorge Otero-Pailos held at the National Museum of American Diplomacy in Washington, D.C., beginning June 4, 2024. The exhibition focused on the decommissioned U.S. Embassy in Oslo and featured sculptures made from its original steel fence as well as an artist's book of prints. The exhibition was curated by Todd Kinser and produced in partnership with the Foundation for Art and Preservation in Embassies.American Academy in Rome (2021-22)
In 2021 and 2022, Jorge Otero-Pailos completed the Roy Lichtenstein Visual Art Residency at the American Academy in Rome. During his residency, he created a series of cast works that explored the material traces of time and decay through the lens of experimental preservation. His work was included in the group exhibition Regeneration, curated by Lindsay Harris, interim Andrew Heiskell Arts Director, and Elizabeth Rodini, interim Director.The exhibition opened on April 13, 2022, at the American Academy in Rome and featured works by artists across five continents. Regeneration examined themes of decay and renewal in historical and cultural contexts, with Otero-Pailos’s contributions tying processes of change, such as dust and rust accumulation, to the city of Rome itself. His work was exhibited alongside notable pieces by artists such as Guillermo Kuitca, Sonya Clark, and Yeesookyung.