On Soft Architecture: The Poetics of Curtain

As an architectural element, the curtain is a poetic interpretation of the opaque wall, transforming buildings into porous structures—bodies that breathe, shift, and dream.

By Melina Arvaniti-Pollatou

Cross House in Schänis, Switzerland by Daisy Jacobs x Kollektiv Marudo. Photography by
Rory Gardiner.
Textile facade in Sicily, Italy. Photography by Leandro Colantoni.

From urban veils to domestic drapery, the curtain performs architecture as movement.

Obra by Pasaje 94 in Valencia, Spain. Photography by Nastassia Tarusava.
Interior drapery. Photography by Anne Andersen.
Photography by Anne Andersen.
A colorful curtain gives character at BEL-ORN by Studio Brasil Architecte. Photography by Michel Bonvin.

It does not divide space with the certainty of masonry, but negotiates it softly, allowing architecture to oscillate between concealment and revelation. In the curtain, architecture becomes atmospheric rather than absolute. Space flickers through translucency; boundaries loosen into gradients; enclosure becomes tactile, temporary, and alive.

Andreas Angelidakis’ apartment in Athens. Photography by Giulio Ghirardi.
Summer light through linen by Myrsini Alexandridi.

Unlike the wall, the curtain is never entirely still. It responds to air, light, gesture, and occupation. It records presence.

Ready Made Curtain is a collaboration between Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec and Danish textile manufacturer Kvadrat.
French designers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec have come up with a DIY kit for making curtains using a hanging cord that winds up like a guitar string.

Drawn, parted or reopened, it transforms architecture into a choreography of shifting relationships. A curtain does not simply separate one room from another—it edits intimacy itself. It filters the public into the private, shadow into illumination, exteriority into domestic ritual.

PARIS MANIN by hace architecture. Photography by Giaime Meloni.
Photography by Giaime Meloni.

In this sense, the curtain performs architecture as event.

Thai designer Natchar Sawatdichai’s collection of Qualified paper blinds are designed to offer a sustainable alternative to those made from environmentally damaging plastics.

Pockets for holding flowers are incorporated into these curtains woven from paper threads, created by artist Akane Moriyama and design firm Umé Studio.

This instability recalls Gottfried Semper’s theory of dressing, in which the origins of architecture emerge not through structure, but through textile enclosure. In Der Stil in den technischen und tektonischen Künsten (1860), Semper proposes that the primitive wall began as woven fabric—a suspended membrane defining territory before architecture hardened into stone. The wall, therefore, is not originally tectonic but textile. Architecture begins not with mass, but with weaving; not with construction, but with hanging.

Curtain walls define the experience of ÃO Atelier & Showroom by CLUBE in São Paulo, Brazil. Photography by Marina Lima.
Photography by Marina Lima.

Semper’s argument radically repositions softness as architecture’s primordial condition rather than its decorative supplement.

Metal curtains can be drawn across the windows of this house in Osaka by Fujiwara Muro Architects. Photography is by Toshiyuki Yano.
Photography is by Toshiyuki Yano.

The curtain ceases to be understood as ornament applied to architecture and instead becomes its conceptual origin. Textile carries spatial intelligence; capturing movement, establishing thresholds, regulating climate, thus producing symbolic meaning. The softness of fabric is therefore not secondary to architecture, but foundational to it. Even today, the curtain retains this primitive capacity to define atmosphere with minimal material presence.

Curtain wall by
Lea Sigg for Conny Mirbach.

A thin membrane can transform the emotional temperature of an entire room more profoundly than concrete or steel reminding that architecture’s softness persists beneath its rigid skin.

This relationship between textile and spatial atmosphere is expanded in the work of Mette Ramsgard Thomsen and Daniela Pišteková, whose writing on “wall curtains” examines the idea of softness as an architectural condition rather than simply a material effect. In their discussion of textile assemblies and responsive membranes, the wall is reconsidered not as a fixed boundary, but as an adaptive interface—something capable of negotiation, permeability, and environmental responsiveness (Thomsen and Pišteková, 2019).

An exposed concrete frame, red brickwork and a large silver curtain define House K in Thailand, which has been designed by local studio Bangkok Tokyo Architecture. Photography by Soopakorn Srisakul.

Soft architecture is not secondary to tectonic structure; it is indispensable precisely because it allows for transformation.

Photography by Soopakorn Srisakul.

Thomsen and Pišteková’s work reframes the curtain as a design medium through which visibility and bodily proximity are negotiated simultaneously. Rather than enforcing a rigid separation between interior and exterior, soft architectural systems allow spatial gradients and shifting modes of occupation to emerge. Space becomes layered rather than enclosed. Operating instinctively within this logic, the curtain filters light, absorbs sound, and responds subtly to air and movement, transforming spatial perception while awakening the imagination.

Curtains glide along tracks on the ceiling to constantly reconfigure the space inside the Dutch Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2012.

Through softness, architecture is liberated from the fixity of form and reimagined as a living, responsive condition.

Called Re-set: new wings for architecture, it hints at the possibilites for transforming existing, underused space. It was designed by Dutch designer Petra Blaisse of Inside Outside and curated by Ole Bouman, director of the Netherlands Architecture Institute.

Christo and Jeanne-Claude pushed this gesture to its extreme, wrapping buildings, bridges, and coastlines not to conceal them, but to render them newly visible. Through fabric, mass became palpable and monumentality was softened. Their interventions transformed architecture into an atmospheric condition suspended between disappearance and revelation.

L’Arc de Triomphe, Wrapped, Paris, 1961-2021. Image © Jared Chulski.

Few artistic practices explored this transformation of surface, softness, and temporality more radically than Christo and Jeanne-Claude. Throughout their work, fabric was never treated as concealment alone, but as a way of re-sensitising perception itself.

Their soft architecture allowed structures to exist momentarily as trembling bodies, animated by wind, light, and movement.

By prioritizing process, ephemerality, and collective experience over fixed monumentality, their work embraces softness, revealing architecture as a vulnerable, living creature (Christo and Jeanne-Claude, 2001).

Christo wrapped the Reichstag in silver fabric in 1995. Photo: Wolfgang Volz/laif/Camera Press © 1995 Christo.

Scaffolding follows a similar logic: a provisional architecture that allows buildings to exist in states of transition. Wrapped in mesh, netting, or translucent sheeting, construction sites acquire a curious softness. They become unfinished bodies—veiled, suspended, transitional.

Photography by Melina Arvaniti-Pollatou.

The scaffold functions as a working curtain, exposing architecture as process. These temporary skins often reveal more about architecture than the completed façade itself, because they foreground labour, maintenance, fragility, and time.

Photography by Albert Rygg Karberg.

The building breathes differently while under construction; it exists as a cosmos in becoming, and the working curtain renders this condition visible. As John Korn suggests in The Art of Scaffolding (2008), temporary structures generate alternative urban façades that transform the city into a landscape of incompletion, where architecture exists as continuous transition.

Unidades CR in Buenos Aires, Argentina by Young Experienced Studio.

The softness of scaffoldings destabilises the authority of buildings presenting architecture as something perpetually unfinished.

Photography by Melina Arvaniti-Pollatou.
Photography by Melina Arvaniti-Pollatou.

In domestic space, the curtain remains architecture’s most intimate gesture. As Penelope Curtis suggests in Patio and Pavilion: The Place of Sculpture in Modern Architecture (2007), spatial boundaries are never neutral; they choreograph social behaviour. Mediating proximity and separation, the curtain performs precisely this ambiguous role.

The curtains of LocHal, a library installed in a former locomotive shed by the Mecanoo agency ©Inside Outside, Peter Tijhuis.

Neither mere air nor wall, it constructs spatial relations through the suggestion of softness rather than the certainty of fixed form.

Exterior curtains for the Villa Lemoine in Bordeaux ©Inside Outside.
The layout of the curtains for the Villa Lemoine. ©Inside Outside.

This ambiguity becomes especially potent when applied to home allowing domesticity to remain fluid and emotionally responsive. Softening daylight into atmosphere, transforming exposure into privacy, and shaping rituals of opening and withdrawal that structure everyday life, curtains become instruments of spatial modulation: half-drawn curtains translate hesitation while heavy drapery thickens silence and darkness.

RESINA, a dialog between INA architectural practice and RESI Bender’s atelier, creating textiles inspired by the Greek archipelago while giving a new life to vintage fabrics.

Few buildings embody this condition more literally than Shigeru Ban’s Curtain Wall House (1995) in Tokyo. In this project, the conventional façade is replaced by enormous white curtains suspended across the exterior of the building.

Curtain Wall House by Shigeru Ban, Itabashi, Tokyo, Japan, 1995. Photography by Hiroyuki Hirai.

Rather than separating inside from outside through fixed enclosure, Ban creates an architecture that remains perpetually adjustable.

The domestic boundary becomes performative rather than rigidly tectonic.

The house opens and closes through movement, allowing the inhabitants to continuously recalibrate their relationship with the city, light, weather, and visibility. By rejecting the notion of architecture as a static object, the Curtain Wall House exemplifies Shigeru Ban’s practice through impermanence, lightness, and spatial adaptability, treating wind and climate as spatial materials. The house does not simply contain life; it performs it. Through softness, Ban challenges the authority of the conventional wall and proposes a more adaptive architecture rooted in openness and change.

A giant curtain defines the facade of O House by Hideyuki Nakayama Architecture in he ancient city of Kyoto, Japan. Photography by Takumi Ota.
Photography by Takumi Ota.
Photography by Takumi Ota.
Photography by Takumi Ota.

The curtain therefore occupies a peculiar architectural territory: neither fully inside nor outside, neither solid nor absent. It exists between visibility and concealment, permanence and disappearance. Its softness allows architecture to become emotionally resonant, climatically responsive, and temporally aware.

Between Sugar and Rot – live performance by Allegra where soft sculptural forms are continuously built, altered and dismantled.
”An Incomplete Archive” by Naomi Benitez. Through painting, textile, and installation, she uses photographs from her family archive to point out aspects of memory and emotion that do not settle easily into words. Photography by Marc Pricop.
Photography by
Marc Pricop.

In a discipline historically obsessed with endurance and monumentality, the curtain reminds us that architecture also lives through fragility, atmosphere, and transformation.

The Center for Traditional Music by Office KGDVS in Muharraq, Bahrain explores the idea of architectural fabric through layered metal and glass façades. Photography by Bas Princen.
Photography by Bas Princen.

Perhaps this is why the curtain continues to endure architecturally—not despite its softness, but because of it. It reveals that architecture is not only constructed through structure and material, but through gesture, perception, and movement.

Photography by Jules Villbrandt.

The curtain is architecture at its most intimate: a membrane through which space breathes.

A room wrapped in banner fabric. A vertical cut. Paint, marks, a chroma key surface. Fragments of a digital archive enter the space. By Natasha Goncharova. Photography by Pavel Polshchikov.
Artwork by Natasha Goncharova. Photography by Pavel Polshchikov.
Curtain House by Amy Fisher Price.

References

Christo and Jeanne-Claude (2001) Christo and Jeanne-Claude: Early Works 1958–69. Cologne: Taschen.

Curtis, P. (2007) Patio and Pavilion: The Place of Sculpture in Modern Architecture. Los Angeles: Getty Research Institute.

Korn, J. (2008) The Art of Scaffolding. Kempen: teNeues.

Semper, G. (1860) Der Stil in den technischen und tektonischen Künsten. Munich: Friedrich Bruckmann.

Thomsen, M.R. and Pišteková, D. (2019) ‘Wall Curtain: On the Idea of the Soft within the Digital and Fabrication Realms’, in Proceedings of Textile Intersections 2019. London: Loughborough University.

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