The Traction of Drawing

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I was at the The Traction of Drawing, the 2009 Interstices Under Construction Symposium last weekend. It’s good to see the Under Construction event becoming established – this time there was a sizable international contingent. Tina Engels-Schwarzpaul and Ross Jenner did a great job of organising it (and simultaneously editing issue 10 of Interstices, based on last year’s symposium On Adam’s House in the Pacific ).

New Zealand schools of architecture, and the Auckland University school in particular, has had a long fascination with architectural drawing. In the mid-nineties there was some amazingly skilled work: (I was personally conscious of the shadows of Peter Wood, Russell Lowe, Simon Twose and Andrew Barrie), some acute theorising of representation and post-coloniality, and some excellent teaching (in Sarah Treadwell’s drawing lectures in my first year at architecture school I understood very little, but remembered an enormous amount). The Traction of Drawing was, in this respect, a return visit to familiar terrain.

Sadly, there was little new at the event. In light of this symposium, I think that by the turn of the century, theorising about drawing had become consolidated: the arguments sketched, positions established. Catherine Ingraham’s Architecture and the Burdens of Linearity (1998), Robin Evans’ The Projective Cast (1995), and Stan Allen’s Architecture: Practice, Technique, Representation (2000, just released in a second edition, 2009) are the texts I find most compelling from this period. Ingraham indicates the philosophy of linearity implicit in much of architectural drawing, while Evans, with his characteristic lucidity, explores the mechanics of projective drawing and Allen insists that drawing not be artificially divorced from the context of architectural practice.

The Traction of Drawing felt dated, particularly with regard to computer drawing, which, unfathomably, some people seemed to think was somehow more problematic than any other mode of drawing. We were treated to the antique spectacle of some people standing up for ‘the digital’, others for the humanising value of hand-drawing, and others charitably proposing some kind of ‘hybrid’. Hybridity is an essentialist concept that assumes the existence of the discrete identites it merges, when in fact the extent to which drawing, modelling, simulating, rendering, geometry etc are actually differentiable as practices in the first place is precisely what is in question. Few people seemed interested in examining actual differences between computer- and hand-drawing; and there was a dearth of reference to current literature. Some bad critical habits were on display: unjustified reliance on puns and etymologies; and the tendency to build towering theoretical edifices on carefully selected edge-cases (a glaring fault of my own paper).

Drawing is ill-defined. So what? What is the desirability of establishing this kind of definition anyway? What is gained from maintaining a clearly demarcated thing called ‘drawing’? Albert Refiti’s paper, ‘Against Drawing’ described the construction of a Samoan fale as a kind of drawing in space that was not resolved as the projection of a plane, but as the aerial trajectory of a suspended curve. To call this a hybrid of drawing and modelling is to impose a categorical distinction that makes no sense in the cultural-technical context. Andrew Barrie commented at one point that the tendency to consider drawing in terms of a single authorial figure was an historians way of seeing things – and it is possible that the desire to maintain categorical distinctions like ‘drawing’ is a similar historians bias. Why defend drawing? Drawing doesn’t need to be defended from anything.

The keynote speaker, Marco Frascari, was of little interest, unfortunately (I didn’t attend his wrap-up comments on Sunday). Some of Professor Frascari’s writings (‘The Tell-the-tale Detail‘ and Monsters of Architecture especially) are excellent. Here, however, behind enjoyable although dubiously-useful latinate neologisms such as ‘facture’ and ‘sapience’, his argument was unimpressive. He began with the idea that architects are neurologists because they act on the nervous system. But then there was a blurring of emotion and sense, and  the discussion collapsed back onto the assertion that certain drawings provoke emotion and others don’t (from his examples, I had the uncomfortable feeling that he meant blurry bits were emotional and straight-line drawings weren’t). The materiality of drawings, Frascari argued (the weight of their lines, the texture of their surfaces) are to be savoured for their emotional stimulation. But it isn’t recalcitrant Cartesianism to observe that architectural drawings operate in other ways than the direct pleasuring of the embodied viewer; commonly (although not necessarily) notating or foreshadowing an act of construction in a higher-dimension space. (In fact, it occurs to me that projective drawing is not really Cartesian at all – it certainly isn’t Euclidean). To neglect these other operations of architectural drawing in favour of the pleasure of the singular drawn artefact is falling back on a comfortable auratic elitism.

The session I found most interesting was the final one (possibly because I had already given my presentation, so I could relax!). Andrew’s discussion of Japanese folded-paper drawings accessed a practice unfussed about maintaining distinctions between drawing and modelling. Mike Davis’s demonstration of how drawing operates in a host of ways in his own current practice was refreshing because it classified drawing by forms and degrees of abstraction rather than media. Christine McCarthy, noting the origination of section drawings in renaissance anatomical practice and ideas about architecture as a body, catalogued current medical diagnostic techniques which have supplanted cutting (MRI, CAT, PET), raising the possibility of new parallel architectural drawings. I almost laughed out loud when, in response to yet another lengthy question about whether computers are stealing the souls of our drawings, Christine simply replied that in a few years nobody would care, so it wasn’t a big deal. This session at least felt like it was taking place in the present.

Interstices has always had high academic standards, but it needs to continually update itself. In my view, The Traction of Drawing was too hidebound to assist with this.

Mandelbulb

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The Mandelbrot and Julia sets are two-dimensional fractals that most of us have wasted some time zooming in and out of. The Mandelbulb is a three-dimensionalisation of the Mandelbrot set. Not sure if it’s actually mathematically a pure fractal, but it’s freaky awesome inside! More 3D fractals here and a low-tech fractal by sevensixfive here.

A Meeting at Sea

It is an ugly or perhaps homely sailboat, broad and blundering along.  The other is the magnificent red steel hull of a much larger vessel, loaded up with containers. On the sailboat, a man is moving frantically, heaving on stays and turning the wheel. The other is an implacable wall moving steadily. The sailboat begins to turn, but the arc is too shallow. It is drawn roughly across the surface of the other, a blunt pencil stabbed against a table. Unperturbed the other passes by, leaving the stunned and splintered sailboat in its considerable wake.

Infinitely Diffused Interior

theotokos and child 867, st sophia istanbul (lowden 177)

From the outside, Byzantine churches are homely brick piles. The exterior surfaces of the architecture diminish in importance: the patterning of brick and stone supplant pseudo-classical elements, although these sometimes remain in a vestigial form.

daphni athens c1100 (lowden 261)

Daphni, near Athens, c1100

It has been noted that while for the Greeks, architecture had primarily been a plastic art of exterior form, allied to sculpture, for the Romans it was the interior that was defined plastically. Although this distinction is already clear in Nero’s Domus Aurea, it reaches its peak in the Hadrianic interiors of the Pantheon and the Villa Adriana. Apollodorus has been criticised for not really resolving the collision of the circular drum of the Pantheon with the rectangular portico – certainly from the outside, the meeting is unlovely, and modest attention is paid to the exterior surface of the drum. But this is because the Pantheon is primarily (I should probably stop short of saying exclusively) an interior.

san vitale mosaic (flickr mpuppett1)

Byzantine space is an extension of this tendency. The exterior ceases to be a site of attention, but as the exterior becomes more and more prosaic, the interior becomes deeper, richer, and more ornate. The interior surfaces become particularly lavish. The plastically-defined volumes of Roman interiors become vivid spatial envelopes enclosed by a precious gold skin.

san vitale mosaic (flckr unertikm)

The bodies of the saints, angels, and courtiers who populate these envelopes hover over a gold mosaic ground. Their space is not defined by aedicules or contextual clues. They live over luminous gold depths, emphasising their detachment from things of this world. Candlelit, these surfaces are animate: glinting and shimmering amongst regions of deep shadow. The circular haloes around their heads were sometimes slightly dished, inducing an atmospheric disturbance in this divine ether as the light reflects off the curved surface, and making the head emerge from the plane of the wall.

san vitale floor (flickr tanaise)

The mosaic circles of the floor of S. Vitale in Ravenna, c547, are carefully given drop shadows, producing the effect that the floor is actually a series of layered geometries. The floor, like the walls visually dissolves and shimmers.

s vitale ravenna 547 (lowden 127)

In S. Vitale the space is layered so that interior views ever yield a complete picture. We always look through into new depths. From almost any point on the plan, it is possible to see through two, three, or more layers. Although the chapel is circular, a spatial form typically associated with unity and visual completeness, it packs huge depths into its plan. There is a sense that the space is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. Later churches amplified this effect of the infinitely-extended interior: St Sophia in Kiev, c1040, is an extreme example: the central and transverse axes and dome devolve into a field of piers and cupola.

st sophia kiev, c1040 (lowden 253)

From the perspective of an architectural culture apparently convinced that exterior form is the primary rhetorical dimension of architecture, Byzantine churches appear unimpressive. But the spatiality of the interior and the calibration of diffusive effects are remarkable.

 

The Traction of Drawing

Just a note to say I’m presenting at the upcoming Interstices Under Construction symposium at the University of Auckland. The symposium runs from Fri 13 – Sun 15 November. The topic is drawing. I think now is a good time to re-visit some of the questions about drawing that were asked when it first became evident that digital drawing was going to become the norm in architectural practice, hopefully without some of the silly polarisation of the earlier round of questioning. The keynotes are from Marco Frascari (whose Monsters of Architecture was an important book for me), and Laurence Simmons.

My paper is going to look at two drawings, one by Enric Miralles, and one by Preston Scott Cohen, and explore the idea of the drawing as a crowded field or a collective formation. Or something. I’m blogging about it rather than actually writing it right now…

Hydriotaphia: The Failed Case

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Etruscan urn-burial from Rykwert, The Idea of a Town (1976)

Hydriotaphia (1658), Sir Thomas Browne’s meditation on the discovery of a group of Bronze Age burial urns in an English field, elaborates a theory of the body, and it is this elaboration that distinguishes it from Browne’s other writings. It is the most systematic of his texts; where Religio Medici (1643) is a confessional document following a loosely segmented train of thought, and Pseudodoxia Epidemica (1646) proceeds according to no discernable plan, Hydriotaphia anchors itself to specific material artefacts, which it places in context and interrogates. It is not, however, simply the documentation of a discovery.  Although Browne’s analytical and descriptive technique raises some of the concerns which have become central to modern archaeological practice, his text is not a report, but an inquiry in which, I argue, the nature of the body is pivotal.

Browne’s immediate concern is for the body as raw material, mere matter. He notes that “the body completed proves a combustible lump,” and discusses the body as fuel in the frank manner of a doctor: “How the bulk of a man should sink into so few pounds of bones and ashes, may seem strange to any who considers not its constitution, and how slender a mass will remain upon an open and urging fire of the carnal composition.” Human remains are of the earth, and burning returns them to their elemental state: “That devouring agent [fire] leaves almost always a morsel for the earth, whereof all things are but a colony; and which, if time permits, the mother element will have in their primitive mass again.” In Chapter II, while discussing the way various materials decay, ashes, teeth and bones are simply enumerated alongside ivory, leaves, wood, metal, coal, eggshells, brass. The body, as it appears in Hydriotaphia is primarily a ‘lump’ of raw material.

hydriotaphia urn burial engraving browne

Frontispiece engraving from Hydriotaphia (1658)

Browne focusses on decay as a temporal index. In a similar manner, Ruskin later develops the theme of decay in his Seven Lamps of Architecture (1849), arguing strongly against the repair of historical structures on the grounds that it is precisely their state of decay that constitutes their historicity: if worn materials are replaced with new ones, then the structure has lost its authenticity, and remains only as a parody of the original. Ruskin considers the perception of age to be a crucial dimension of architectural experience; he is concerned with the scarring and eventual vanishing of the object. In Ruskin’s account, the architectural body ages by analogy with the human body: it bears increasingly evident marks of its age, and eventually collapses. It is important to note that Ruskin is concerned primarily with the maintenance of authenticity. His prohibition against intervention on historical buildings and his acceptance of decay are grounded in his requirement that building be authentic; that the truth of the building remain.  In Browne’s account of the body, the truth has departed with the soul and passed into the spiritual domain. His inquiry is into what remains. Where Ruskin’s project is to elevate the spiritual on the back of the material, Browne muses on the value of the remainder.

The recurrent figure of Hydriotaphia is that of the body enclosed or encased. Browne addresses the various framings and encasings the human body is subjected to, or shown to depend on. This is also an architectural theory (as theories of the relationship between the physical body and the world necessarily are). The initial example, and the one which establishes the type of all others is of course the burial urn, which is repeatedly opposed by Browne to the mausoleum or monumental tomb.  The central passage regarding this enclosure is concerned with the general and extreme cases of enclosure: “Circles and right lines limit and close all bodies, and the mortal right-lined circle [the character of death] must conclude and shut up all.” This statement (epitaph, perhaps) follows closely upon Browne’s conclusion that “To extend our memories by monuments, whose death we daily pray for, and whose duration we cannot hope, without injury to our expectations in the advent of the last day, were a contradiction to our beliefs” and his idea that the modern condition is that of a latecomer, and modern minds are naturally disposed to an awareness of the rapidity of time’s passage and its impending conclusion. According to Browne, all bodies exhibit closure, and this closure is a geometric figure. A body’s closure is its property of exclusion: its ability to be distinct and separate from other things; that is, as Browne says, the body is a state of ‘limit’.

Browne here is evidently evoking Vitruvius with the image of the body framed by circle and square (that Browne’s erudition extended to Vitruvius’ Deci Libri is shown by his citing of it in The Garden of Cyrus, 1658). The Vitruvian figure of the body, centrally pinned and stretched on a graphic rack, illustrates the body receiving passively or achieving strenuously geometrical closure, and is familiar to the point of being an architectural trope. But where for Vitruvius, this figure was a demonstration of the body’s innate proportionality as a basis for architecture, Browne sees this figure for what it is: a marking of limit, the body’s enclosure. Architecture is a case which encloses with lines.

Browne also draws an explicit association between this figure of embodiment and the use of the quartered circle (the ‘right-lined circle’ – either a circle enclosed by a square, or a circle squared) as a symbol of death. Metaphorically, the figure of death is a case, because it brings finality and limit. It would perhaps not be out of place to suggest that Browne considers architecture to be a deathly case. It would certainly seem to be in keeping with Browne’s explicit pronouncements against architecture.

As he writes of ‘circles and right lines’, Browne appears too, to be evoking writing: words themselves being constructions of lines and circles, particularly in their monumental, inscribed format as they are used to provide epitaphs, accounts of deeds, and records of names.  This form of funerary writing, too, could be considered as offering closure. Oblivion is the enemy of memory. Memory is a kind of afterlife (albeit one that Browne remains somewhat dubious about), and is best served by the leaving of records. It is “cold consolation to students of perpetuity” to persist in physical remains, but to be nameless and without record of deeds. In this way, the physical body could be said to depend on writing for its proper closure; and therefore writing be seen to be function similarly to physical construction. Indeed, it is the writing of the grave: inscription, epitaph, with which Browne is specifically concerned.

For Browne, all bodies depend on some kind of a case to ensure their limits and finality. This case operates against, while remaining subject to, the natural forces which tend to dissipate the body.

Great and Terrible

The best thing I ever heard someone say when I was at graduate school was “Great things happen in terrible buildings and terrible things happen in great buildings”. If you think as an architect that you can pre-determine experience, you are hoping for something that’s just not going to happen. The idea that a designer is creating their perfect vision which no one is supposed to touch. I’m completely shocked by that. How weirdly perverse for an architect to even want that.

Joshua Prince-Ramus, here. ( Thanks ryanj )

Architecture Depends, Jeremy Till

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Architecture is a demanding study, requiring long hours, hard work, frequent failure and criticism. But why is going through architecture school so punishing? There are some destructive patterns built into the intense, even tribal, culture of architecture schools that have little or nothing to do with learning to be a good architect, or personal development. There seems to be a common attitude amongst teachers and practitioners that ‘it was good enough for me’, and that students just need to toughen up and deal with monumental workloads, seventy-two hour sleepless runs, and hostile, even abusive criticism. Teachers who try to run studios in a different way are fighting institutional inertia. A recent article by Jennifer Epstein on Inside Higher Ed (referring to this 2002 report; discussed here) points out recent efforts by a number of American schools to make changes to studio culture to make it more positive and healthy.

Jeremy Till’s Architecture Depends (MIT Press: 2009), a strongly-felt polemic against the stultifying aspects of contemporary architectural practice and education, addresses some of these concerns. Many aspects of the culture of architectural education are not about good training as architects, but about perpetuating professional and institutional authority:

“[T]he main way that architectural education avoids staring the stasis of its own processes in the eye is by confusing radical making with radical thinking. Because things look different, from school to school, and from year to year, the assumption is made that the formative educational processes are equally different and equally evolving.”

One of the most strongly entrenched ideas, Till argues, is that architecture is a discrete and autonomous enterprise; a pure field that only engages with the mess and disruption of the world under duress; that the work of architects is primarily answerable to other architects. Professional institutes such as the RIBA frame architects’ responsibilities as primarily to the clent, neglecting far greater, or at least equivalent, responsibilities to users.

The modernist tradition of equating ethics with aesthetics exemplifies the concept of an autonomous architecture. It is actually a way of escaping genuine ethical concerns by calling what you’re already doing a kind of ethics. If aesthetics are ethics, then architects can carry on worrying about formal elegance and feel good about their ethical standards. Architecture is contingent, Till points out: contingent on external forces, social conditions, inherited ideas and images, finance, material inconsistencies, the mess of human existence. The cover image of Architecture Depends shows a man in a bear suit (artist Mark Wallinger) wandering around Mies’s Crown Hall. Wallinger satirises the concept of abstract, autonomous architecture by becoming a conglomerate of things it excludes: animals, wildness, the low-brow, humour. Till’s book is like this: it confronts the hermetic closure of the discipline with the messy, contingent world that it often seems to ignore.

However, the book is explicitly polemical, an impassioned editorial rather than an a study, and with this have come some flaws: generalisation, condescension, and poor editing. The main line of the text is punctuated with anecdotes that serve to illustrate aspects of the arguments. Common in these parables are people not getting things that are patently obvious, and Till seems to be inviting us to shake our heads with a wry smile at each one.

“Some time ago there was a wonderful television series called ‘Sign of the Times.’ In it the photographer Martin Parr and social commentator Nicholas Barker quietly observed the British in their homes… One such moment is set in a sparse modernist interior. A woman, voice choked with emotion, is lamenting that her husband will not allow her to have ‘normal’ things such as curtains: the camera dwells on expanses of glazing. When her husband Henry appears, he despairs of the ‘rogue objects’ disturbing his ordered interior. ‘To come home in the evening,’ he says, ‘and to find the kids have carried out their own form of anarchy is just about the last thing I can face.’

The rogue objects are his children’s toys.

Henry is an architect.”

Oh, Henry. This was pompous and snarky when Adolf Loos did it (cf. his ‘Tale of a Poor Rich Man’), and it comes off as snarky here, too. There are crowds of these straw men wandering around between the covers of Architecture Depends. The author takes a reductive approach to the arguments of people whose work he doesn’t appreciate, reducing their arguments to simplified outlines. For example, faced with Mark C. Taylor’s suggestion that “aesthetic principles (of twists, curves, and color) are coded in ways that carry significant ethical and social weight”, Till does not even pay the courtesy of examining the proposition. He argues in the chapter in question that architects have repeatedly tried to equate ethics with aesthetics as a way of escaping actual ethical concerns, but he doesn’t convince us that this is what Taylor is doing. Especially for someone who further down the same page is insisting that his own words be weighed up carefully, this is a bit hard to swallow. And the argument of the chapter would not be weakened by a less dismissive treatment of his interlocutors.

Similarly, Till makes assumptions about teaching and practice that are generic and not necessarily representative. He may have a far wider experience of schools of architecture than I, and I certainly recognised the architectural education he described, but the program I am teaching on now (not technically an architecture school) bears little resemblance to this, and I am aware of other schools that operate quite differently. Similarly, his characterisation of practice is very generalised. There are already many design/art/object/architecture/landscape/furniture/detail/interior practices working in some of the ways he suggests, undermining the status quo, engaging aspects of society traditionally ignored by architects, operating across disciplinary boundaries. If Till intended to promote this kind of work, he might have spent more time talking about it.

It is perfectly fine that the book has a strong authorial voice, but I think Mr Till’s editors have taken too light a hand in the text. There are sprawling passages that need cropping, vague passages of which the editor needed to demand more substantiation and precision, and passages that are just badly written (take for example this Dan-Brown-esque line: “Space and time. Time and space. Inseperably linked”).

Many aspects of Till’s argument are more fully handled by others: the relationship between theory and practice in Stan Allen’s Architecture: Practice, Technique, Representation; the supposed linearity of practice in Catherine Ingraham’s Architecture and the Burden of Linearity; the machinations of power at work in Vitruvius’s theory of architecture in Indra Kagis McEwen’s Vitruvius, the social construction of space in Henri Lefebvre’s The Production of Space, the workings of institutional power in Foucault or one of his many explicators. But of course this is not possible or desirable for all. The book has value, then, in transmitting some of the provocative value of these other books.

Architecture Depends itself is a book of uneven quality. I didn’t enjoy the tone, and as Till himself predicts in the Preface, I found some parts to be operating not much above the level of truism. At its worst, the reader is offered commonplaces as insights. The better parts are marked by flashes of wit and the scent of a provocative architectural counter-culture. In particular, students and teachers immersed in the thick hothouse air of studio could find the book bracing. The concerns which underly this polemic, however are of undoubted importance to the future of architectural education, and the urgency with which Till presses his case, understandable.

Note on Modernism as Rurality

A curious thought following from the previous post: what if for Schinkel, the stripping of ornament that is performed at the New Pavilion is actually a marker of rurality, rather than urbanity, as Loos claims? In favour of this thought, the fact that the Pavilion is in fact a rural, or at least semi-rural building. It is constructed in the grounds of the Schloss Charlottenhof as a retreat for the Emperor, a place to withdraw from the formalities of the court and European politics, a place for ‘slumming it’. The simple form of the house would then be understood as a kind of poverty. The New Pavilion requires no extensive tour to reveal its extents. Rather, it sits in a clearing, able to be apprehended as a single block. Loos similarly makes his Moller house in Prague a single white block. But Loos calls on this blankness, these scraped surfaces, to signify the dislocated condition which he argues is innate to civility and urbanity; and perhaps it is in this movement that we might seek  Loos’ greatest originality.


Daemonization

dore paradise lost

At the close of ‘Architecture (1910)’, an essay in which Adolf Loos has described formulated his theory of the alienation of the architect, he concludes with a stellar commendation of Karl Friedrich Schinkel:

“But every time the minor architects who use ornament move architecture away from its grand model, a great architect is at hand to guide them back to antiquity. Fischer von Erlach in the south, Schluter in the north, were justifiably the great masters of the eighteenth century. And at the threshold to the nineteenth century stood Schinkel. We have forgotten him. May the light of this towering figure shine upon our forthcoming generation of architects!”

Schinkel is commended as a kind of lighthouse, invoked to shine forward onto the following generation, and simultaneously a guide to a return path, (along with Fischer von Erlach and Andreas Schlüter, to the ‘grand model’ of Classical antiquity. Just a little earlier, prior to this monumental figuring of Schinkel as an illuminating tower, Loos has remarked upon the potency of the Classical, which appears as a autonomous cultural force:

“Our culture is based on the knowledge of the all-surpassing grandeur of classical antiquity. We have adopted the technique of thinking and feeling from the Romans. We have inherited our social conscience and the discipline of our souls form the Romans… Ever since humanity sensed the greatness of classical antiquity, one common thought has unified all great architects. They think: the way I build is the same as the way the Romans would have built.”

The true power of great architects, it is implied, derives from the amorphous potency of Roman classicism, the ‘one common thought’. In this way, Loos disarms Schinkel, too, and places him on a pedestal as a lamp. Schinkel’s greatness, his potency, is in his channeling of the historical force which Loos has just described. It follows that when Loos makes his own claim to be carrying out a purified form of classicism, he is opening himself up more fully even than Schinkel to this classical daemon. Classicism is not merely a style, but an expression of a daemonic force, openness to which is associated with the stripping-off of ornamentation. He observes:

“It is no coincidence that the Romans were incapable of inventing a new column order, or a new ornament. For they had already progressed so far. they had taken all that knowledge from the Greeks and had adapted it to their needs. The Greeks were individualists. Every building had to have its own profile, its own ornamentation. But the Romans considered things socially. The Greeks could hardly administer their cities; the Romans administered the globe. The Greeks squandered their inventiveness on the orders; the Romans wasted theirs on the plan. And he who can solve the great plan does not think of new mouldings.”

The Greeks, not the Romans, were inventors of ornament. The Roman advancement is in the disregard they developed for ornament. Their inability to invent ornament is not a failure, but a mark of their progressiveness. Loos argues that the time has now come to move even closer to the ideal which the Romans represented. Not only should the production of new ornament be ceased by civilised people, but what ornament remains should be actively stripped off. Ornament may continue in the country, or for the non-urbane: the farmer and the shoemaker are less civilised in Loos’ terms, and there would be a sort of parental cruelty involved in taking ornamentation from them. The progressiveness of the Romans is in their urbanity, characterised by their disinterest in ornament. And it is this force of Roman progressiveness that Schinkel is taken to be a herald for.

neues pavilion schloss charlottenburg

The one work of Schinkel’s which could most easily be Loos’ is his New Pavilion in the Schloss Charlottenburg Park, built in 1824-25 for Freidrich Wilhelm III. It is a white, almost cubic mass, like Loos’ houses of the late twenties, especially the Moller and Muller houses. It does not present a distinct facade: in each face at the first floor level there is a dark recessed balcony; there is scant difference in the treatment of the front and side balconies. The facade retreats into the face of the block. It develops no baroque thickness, instead becoming a surface, as thin as a coat of white paint. Loos also repeatedly used the seating-niche arrangement which Schinkel uses in his Charlottenburg Pavilion: in the first floor Garden Room, the niche is opposite the balcony, and so someone seated in the niche looks across the room and out the window. Loos’ arrangement is more complex, but retains the basic pattern: seated in niche of the Moller House, we would be looking back through the interior and out towards the back garden.

loos moller niche

Loosian touches are seen elsewhere in Schinkel’s oeuvre: the tent-room of the Charlottenhoff Palace uses fabric to create a ceiling canopy that drapes the walls and forms a canopy over the bed. In Loos’ bedroom for Lina Loos, the interior is similarly shaped by draping and spilling fabric: the fur which covers the bed spills onto the floor, and meets the wall-hangings.

schinkel tent roomloos bedroom for lina

What Loos would have us believe about the relationship between Schinkel and himself is that they share a common daemon. Schinkel’s significance for Loos is that he has opened himself to the civilising and urbanising force of this daemon; and this opening is marked particularly by Schinkel’s attitude to the removal of ornamentation as a movement of civility. Loos then casts himself in Schinkel’s light, as advancing this daemon‘s purposes even further, by opening himself more fully to it. Harold Bloom, according to his Anxiety of Influence (1973) calls this movement Daemonization, and suggests that it is a defensive move, a way to fend off the overbearing weight of a precursor. In this way, some of the elements of Loos’ mature work which we might take to be his most personal of touches: those signatory marks which we look for in order to recognise Loos in his work, might in fact be seen to be the points at which he is most closely Schinkel’s disciple.

UA Divergent Forces

A few images from critting yesterday in Mike Davis’s third- and fourth-year studio Divergent Forces at UA. There was some very slick presentation work, some very adept formal manipulation, and some clever application of abstract systems to a specific architectural problem: the council-owned Cook St site where Placemakers used to be. Perhaps not done so well in general was working out how the site engaged with the city: quite a few projects were just sitting in the middle of the site being cool.

[ If any of this work is yours and you would prefer I didn’t have it up here, let me know and I’ll take it down. ]

UC National Conservatorium of Music

uc national conservatorium 2

The University of Canterbury National Conservorium of Music have posted plans and images of Miles Warren’s concept for their new building next door to the historical Old Arts Centre in Christchurch. It’s a bit rubbish, unfortunately. Discussion here.

The architect is clearly trying to follow the grain of the existing urban fabric, mimicking the agglomerative logic of the Old Arts Centre. It adds a third quadrangle to the block and maintains the street-edge line of the existing buildings.

But what is the building trying to say? It doesn’t seem to convey much of anything.

It looks about thirty years out of date. The design certainly doesn’t say ‘international institution of the arts’ like the University seems to think it does.  There is a bunch of arbitrary divisions into blocks and gables, as if ameliorating the substantial mass of the building was the sole design agenda. The building doesn’t contribute to the historical block so much as blush embarrassed in the corner.

uc national conservatorium 1

Two of Warren’s buildings are among my favourite buildings in the country: his own house and studio, and the College House dormitories and chapel. Warren and Mahoney have done some great buildings, but also some truly awful ones (I haven’t forgiven them for the Royal Oak Mall). Perhaps the University gave a little too much credence to a big name? I realise you aren’t supposed to say this in NZ for fear of disloyalty, but perhaps an international competition might have yielded some more worthy results?

Transformers

A few random pictures from Friday night’s Architecture Week exhibition Trans-Form-ers, a joint venture between the University of Auckland School of Architecture and Planning, the Unitec School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, and AUT’s Department of Spatial Design. The whole thing was crazy: a convoy of cars, trailers, utes, vans, and trucks departed from Unitec and jammed up traffic all the way into the old ARC workshops near Victoria Park. When they got inside, complete chaos ensued as everyone unloaded their vehicles, tried to deploy their contraptions and get them working properly. Things were folding out, stretching, making a racket, being bolting together, lighting up, inflating, getting wired and tuned up. Madness.

I didn’t write down who did the ones pictured, or even what school they were from, so sorry about that.

City as Battlesuit / Criticism and Enthusiasm

Prawn-suit-District-9

Kind of late to the party here, but an interesting discussion based on this piece by Matt Jones at io9 is nicely signposted by Rob Holmes at mammoth. Jones’ piece groups together a collection of thoughts about science fiction and the future of cities, with particular reference to invisible infrastructure. His clearest proposition is that Archigram was influenced by comic-book cities like Megacity One from 2000AD, but the post is really held together by an enthusiasm for future cities as sprawling, amorphous prosthetics. The assertion that he makes in the title of his post, ‘The City is a Battlesuit for Surviving the Future’ is repeated at the end, but I have to confess the proposition seems underthought to me. Why see the future as a hostile environment to be confronted by a conceptually weaponised city? Battlesuits express the fantasy of being in a powerful body, specifically a body with destructive power (cf. the Prawn battlesuit worn by van der Merwe in District 9, or the demigod robots of Neon Genesis Evangelion). If Jones is suggesting that the city of the future needs to be understood prosthetically, I think he is right, but of course cities have always been prosthetic. Delanda points out that from a planetary perspective, cities can essentially be seen as a mineralisation of human populations, parallel to the evolution of biological exoskeletons.

In a follow-up discussion at Kazys Varnelis’ site, the discussion turned towards an apparent conflict between enthusiasm and criticism. Varnelis suggests that Jones’ piece reflects an enthusiastic but uncritical approach to its subject-matter. Geoff Manaugh joins in with a great comment on the way Archigram’s ideals were co-opted by naked capitalism; and he takes issue with the idea that criticism, rather than enthusiasm, is needed.

I’m not sure I can accept Geoff’s premise that criticism is negative (based on picking things apart) and enthusiasm positive (based on amplifying something you respond to positively). I don’t see pure enthusiasm as particularly liberating: for me, it too easily slips back into the most airheaded post-modernism (a kind of enthusiasm that seems to feel any systematic or rigorous approach is a throwback to discredited aspects of modernism), and plays into an increasingly cynical entertainment culture (not that this extreme form of the argument in any way resembles what I take to be Geoff or anyone else’s position). Nor does a return to the capital-C Criticism of previous generations (that seemed to want to drag everything off to it’s own particular hermeneutic lair) sound particularly attractive. I think everyone in the discussion seems to recognise that what is needed is a new sense of criticism, one that is capable of accommodating enthusiasm, but isn’t reduced to it. So what is criticism, then – or more importantly, what does criticism need to be?

To hazard a suggestion, perhaps criticism could be best conceived as the probing of limit states. This doesn’t necessarily mean the establishing of limits, as if criticism was all about putting walls around things; but it does mean trying to trace out the interfaces between things, and discover as-yet undetected surfaces of connection.

We can’t do without criticism or enthusiasm; but we can certainly live without Criticism or Enthusiasm.