Archive for the ‘le corbusier’ Category

Thinking Post-PoMo, or the “Organic” Revolution

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

More than three years ago, when I finished my Master’s thesis for architecture, I decided that I would never talk about it again… I actually went so far as telling job interviewers that they could read about it in my portfolio, but that I did not want to explain it to them (and they still hired me)!

Well, in this exclusive, I’m going to break the silence. You see, I’ve noticed more and more through this field-switch of my own—from architecture to theology and philosophy—that the cultural and intellectual crisis (or movement, or development, depending on your own  opinions) that I perceived through the lens of architecture, surely enough, can be observed in other fields as well.

pompidou1In other words, let us begin with some of my thesis research.  Some background is necessary at first.  In the “world” of architecture, there are more than a handful of architects interested in some edgy stuff in the way of what is called ‘programming’.  If you remember, Louis Sullivan (1856-1924), author of one of the world’s first “skyscrapers”—the Wainwright Building here in St. Louis—and the hand behind the pen of the phrase “form ever follows function,” gave voice to the ideas that would take the world of architecture by a Modernist storm.  Though Sullivan died almost a century ago, his words ring out through history.  Sullivan’s intentions in these words were most certainly other than what they are often taken to mean today, and yet they are but the first whisper of what would become a great cry against sentimental aesthetics.

Form following function, indeed, is no “new” idea.  The form of any created artifact with a functional intention is inevitably dictated by its purpose.  To separate the two is to render the work impotent—like making a chair out of sugar cubes or glass shards.  But Sullivan’s Modernist successors would construe his words to demand the stripping of anything ’superfluous’ of structure and function from buildings.  If you don’t believe me, just ask Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers about their Centre Pompidou (pictured above right).  Now, granted, Pompidou is a bit tongue-in-cheek, and a better example would perhaps be the sleek and orthogonal steel, glass and concrete of the international style, but the point is that this over-emphasis on function dictating the shape and appearance of buildings came to a head in the last century and carried itself over even into the Postmodern styles of the latter half.

This denuding of ornamentation was exemplified by later iconic statements such as “less is more” and surely enough, “God is in the details”.  Both quotes end up exulting the details themselves as a kind of obsessive-compulsive ornamentation: Mies van der Rohe’s designs were extremely difficult to execute because of their precision.  They can appear, to the uninitiated eye, as rather bleak, sterile, elitist… or simply ugly.

campus-iitConsider Mies’ campus design for Illinois Institute of Technology (pictured at left) which is exemplary of the fusing of the German Bauhaus and international style in the United States.  The drawing itself speaks volumes about Modern architecture’s presumptuous intentions: the rectangular and simple buildings seem to float like dominoes on an air hockey table, rising up above their grungy neighborhood surroundings like the architectural liberator of Chicago.

207aSee also Le Corbusier’s Plan Voisin (pictured at right) for urban Paris which planned to replace entire sections of the city’s landscape with an entirely new and much larger-scale project composed of glass cruciform skyscrapers surrounded by highways, parks and airstrips (and this is philosophically telling: Corbu’s skyscrapers were called none other than CARTESIAN sky-scrapers!).  The parks are meant to re-introduce the human scale—how lovely.    Each ‘function’ or ‘program’ (that is, use of a space) is segregated and neatly packed into a glass box.  All of this was done with the automobile, the true motor behind architectural modernism, in mind.  Most of the 20th century hero architects, like Wright, Corbu and Mies, had some forays into massive urban planning (daydreaming about cities of the future) especially funded by none other than—drumroll—automobile manufacturers (hey, architects got to eat too).  For more on Corbu and technology, read my post “Because Writing the Word Modernism Is Fun…

Now, it’s true, I’ve been really down on Mies van der Rohe and Corbu up to this point—but, that’s what blogs are supposed to do, right, be critical?  But, I have a point in all this, so bear with me.  At this point, I want to focus more closely on the design for IIT’s campus because it contains within it a paradigmatic building for Modernism, and even contemporary state-of-the-art architecture, and… inevitably my thesis.

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe’s design for the architecture school building at IIT’s campus, S. R. Crown Hall (pictured at left), consists of two levels, the upper level being an entirely open and column-free space for architecture studios.  It was called a “universal space”.  This was achieved by way of steel trusses spanning over the roof (see the beams that seem to pop up over the building?).  Now, the structure is clear, the function is clear, the intention is crystal-clear.  The building, I can’t deny, is marvellously executed.  But here’s the crux of this post (I know, 12 minutes later)… Mies’ “universal space”, entirely open, free to interpretation, without limits in its use, is the beginning of something entirely different for architecture.

layout_reviewiiWhich leads me to my thesis (finally, you say).  It should come as no surprise that my thesis bordered more on urbanism than architecture, or rather, it was precisely that no-man’s-land between the human scale of architecture and the communal scale of urbanism that attracted me.  “Up from the Road” it was called, and its intentions, at least, were golden.  Take a strip of would-be interstate in my hometown, Memphis, and find a way to use it to re-habilitate the texture of the damaged urban landscape.  You see, as you might have already, interstates and highways in general had a tendency at their inception to bore their way through cities in a rather destructive manner.  For the sake of progress, they left a ruinous path through the dense patchwork of American cities—but gosh if I couldn’t make it to work on time from my suburban chalet.  Memphis’ own Sam Cooper Boulevard was a piece of “living” history: one of the first interstates in the country to be stopped by a local initiative, I-40 stopped dead in its tracks at the edge of Overton Park in Midtown Memphis.  Now, it was never finished, but a four-mile strip of 6-lane highway remained.  For almost fifty years now it has served as a highway to Midtown, carrying mostly local traffic.  On weekends and at off-peak hours it is rather empty.  My thesis, among other things, proposed ways of re-using the road surface for other purposes.  Think universal space here.

And there you have it: the universal space becomes the point of encounter between the generic and the specific, infrastructure and detail, the massive scale and the exquisitely ornate human scale, the imposition of a global network on the local bricolage.  Ah, now you’re talking my language, you say.  The concrete monster, the autistic and monolithic freeway system speaks of imposition, globalization, generic, and incites the local, grassroots, human, yes, yes YES!  Fight the man!!!––wait, just a second.

Recent years have seen an upsurge of interest in urbanism, from the New Urbanism of Seaside, Florida to plans to rebuild New Orleans, there is renewed attention paid to public space and communal usage.  The urban plaza, especially those of Europe, have become iconic again for urban design.  Public spaces, urban spaces—what is called “negative” space on a field-ground diagram of a city (where buildings are shaded and open areas and streets left white)—is the place to be, in short.  My thesis was certainly about finding a way to create public, specific, local space within the generic language of the interstate highway system.  Now, whether or not it succeeded is not particularly important.  I want to draw attention, rather, to the interests… the process, if you will, because here I think is the connection with theology/philosophy.

So, at this point I want to introduce yet another project: Foreign Office Architects’ Yokohama International Port Terminal (below left).  Here is an excerpt from their own writings about the project:

“We started with certain principles and later combined and changed them. The changes are never visual or aesthetic; they are always technical or practical. We do not believe in the origin or in the end of a project. We believe in the medium of the process. We are totally opportunistic. The end is determined only by external forces, like deadlines of the contractors or the client.”  (emphasis added)

archartdNotice two particularly important statements: “the changes are never visual or aesthetic” (sound familiar… an extrapolation of “form follows function” maybe?) and “we believe in the medium of the process” (the architects are less interested in the completion of the project and more in the design and building of it).  The project lives on precisely because of its flexibility, its capacity to change drastically over time according to use and interpretation.

Where are we going?  Well, one more thing.  I researched, for the thesis, some infrastructural and manufacturing terms like ‘post-fordist’ infrastructure and ‘just-in-time’ manufacturing.  Particularly interesting was Stan Allen’s “Infrastructural Urbanism” in his magnificent book Points + Lines: Diagrams and Projects for the City.  Allen and other writers such as Gandelsonas led me along a path that saw America’s own particular development of urban space as linear.  As opposed to the more European standard of plaza/square surrounded by buildings, America was built up around Main Streets and Broadways.  But, that’s a bit off topic.  Allen and others like Reiser + Umemoto talk about generic infrastructures and their ability to respond to local contingencies and adapt to topography and urban environments (for the liturgical buffs, here Re: Inculturation) while maintaining continuity of the system.  Allen focuses specifically on a ‘bottom-up’ infrastructure which establishes a loose envelope of fixed points of service, access and structure setting technical and instrumental limits to other designers’ work on the same site.

There seemed to be, in my summation, an important shift in design which suggested a re-arrangement of the relationships between form, structure and program (anticipated use).  Skipping ahead to the end of it all, we can observe a sort of massive shift in systems.  We see it in governments (post-Franco Spain’s de-centralization into autonomous communities), we see it in urbanism, in the way our cities exist (freeway systems connecting sporadic suburban technoburbs in the outskirts of a de-centralized city), in our architecture, in our liturgy (inculturation, adaptation, structure and form), even in the way we eat (organic foods, homegrown, free-range, small farms and free-trade coffee)… in short, in a variety of our systems today, we can observe a sort of de-centralization.  Now, this is a generalization, and becomes even more so the more that I add other disparate systems.

My whole point is this: much of this work done toward adaptation, local color, contextualism, autonomy, individuality, particularism, regionalism, etc. often over and against universal structures and the imposition of what are seen as inhuman infrastructures, and so on… stems from a general rejection of the Modernist movement. Sure, it took long enough, but Postmodernism came around to reject Modernism’s till then unabated hunger for the novel and universal, the panacea to end all panaceas, the search for the global solution, only to fall on its own rather Modernist foothold.

The organic revolution, as I’d like to term it rather irresponsibly and just for fun at the moment, is something that, I think, comes out of this.  The desire to create buildings and spaces, for example, or inculturate-able liturgies, that anticipate future uses in their own vagueness draws a fine line between what can reasonably be called organic and what is decidedly and unabashedly manipulated and imposed.  What do I mean?  In some way, the organic fuses together form and function.  In some other ways, organic connotes the lack of the artificial, the exterior.  In another way, it is about harmony and continuity, the necessary and natural.

apple-bite-lgWhen the Church, for example, stipulates that something should be organic, I have the urge to laugh.  Not because I think that the Church is silly for saying this, but because in reality, I think she’s saying something that is not coming across as clearly as it might.  The organic does not come about by imposition, whether it is on the local or global scale… by defintion, the organic comes about by necessity (not argued, rationalized necessity but real necessity)…by natural processes, over a long period of time, and is RARELY observable while in progress.  Does this mean that we cannot intervene?  I don’t think so… what is it to be a human author if it is not intervention in nature?  What is human art but the manipulation and imitation of nature?  A fin de cuentas, we’re going to have to answer the question: what is organic?

. . .  . . .  . . .

*** Apple-bite used without permission: http://sprott.physics.wisc.edu/Pickover/pc/apple-bite-lg.jpg

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Because Writing the Word “Modernism” Is Fun…

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

I had a professor who once said “You can’t put something [a building] up that is funny and expect people to laugh at it for the next 50 years.” His point was, what seems vogue, cool, hip, in style today and makes a witty critique or a showy statement, in 50 years will just be trash. Mind you, he was a European Modernist. I think the same kind of principle goes for liturgy……. but before you say anything, that’s another conversation!

So, with some “free” time on my hands I can return to my ‘real’ passion: poking fun at Modernist and Postmodernist architecture. Er… I mean, talking about the pros and cons of contemporary design. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but I have: I get more comments when I talk about things other than architecture. But, thankfully, I’m not in the business of getting comments.

VillaSavoyeYou might not be as disappointed as I was when I realized it, but today one of my old images of the Swiss-French architect-high priest of the Modernist movement, Charles-Edouard Jeanneret-Gris (otherwise known as Le Corbusier), as self-styled (re-)incarnation of all things “good and holy” about architecture… was shattered. That is, slightly so. You see, for a while now I had thought—in my limited knowledge about the French language—rather naïvely, I admit, that the pseudonym ‘Le Corbusier’ meant ‘The Builder’. Long story short, it doesn’t. Thus, Jeanneret’s choice of a new, reinvented name is not such a satisfying story of architectural delusions of grandeur as I had thought. Granted, there are still some overtones of classism in his appropriation of this name, but since it doesn’t mean what I was told it did (most likely a rumor perpetuated by anti-Corbu types like myself)… I was a little chagrined.

In ‘honor’ of my discovery, I decided to read an article on The New Liturgical Movement that I had been meaning to look at for quite some time now: “The Dangers of Architectural Positivism” written by Matt Alderman of the Shrine of the Holy Whapping. But, before a certainly more substantial foray into the world of cornerstones and filigree, a quick jaunt into the world of history:

In investigating good ol’ Corb, I found something more interesting to my now Dominicanly-sensitized ears, this:

Jeanneret [that is, "Corbu"] was also fascinated by his more distant ancestors, the Albigensians and Cathars passionate heretics persecuted by the Church. The persecution mattered to him as much as the passion, as Corb thought of himself, not without cause, as a despised loner. “Some men”, he groused in his autobiographical My Work, “have original ideas and are kicked in the arse for their pains.” [emphasis mine]

That explains, at least for me, why every time I heard him spoken of in school, my pre-Dominican hairs bristled with unease. Granted, I know little about what Le Corbusier would have appreciated about his dualist ancestors [who thought the material world was created by an evil demiurge in order to trap human souls in physical bodies], but how fascinating, nonetheless. It seems, of course, he was probably more interested in the fact of being persecuted—as it seems most (Post)Modernists are—but I think the question of dualism in Modernism and Postmodernism is still worth further investigation. I think it confirms, at least superficially, my observations about the dualism/spiritualism of minimalist design (see: Novy Dvur Monastery & “A Christian Critique of Minimalism”).

… … …

There is, it would seem, a strong ‘tradition‘ (I use this word rather tongue-in-cheekedly) among more than a few Catholics, when thinking about architecture (because I know, you think about it all the time!), to bemoan the rather destructive renovations and restorations of church buildings in the past several decades and, inevitably to blame modernism—”why are our churches so ugly?” I, personally, will admit to having done this. The blame, nowadays, is often laid squarely on the shoulders of the liturgical/architectural consultants, but their ideas and designs are founded in something much more basic that stems back to the beginnings of Modernism. So, in short, I think this criticism of Modernist trends in all fields is valid, and can be useful. After all, we learn from history and the mistakes, sins, and generally stupid things done, as well as the rare successes. It is, in my summation, highly important that people generally know that the horrible things done to their cities, homes and churches in the name of architectural progress were because of heinous totalitarian philosophies and utilitarian cultural-renovation machines like the Modernist movement. Postmodernism, we must remember, is a Modernist rejection of Modernism.

In reading up on my architectural history, something struck me though. It is the distinctly unfortunate but necessary character of historical study that it tends to ‘leave off’ at the point of current events. This is not what struck me though. Instead, it was a paraphrase of the words of Frank Lloyd Wright in 1901:

“the architecture of the future would be built of machine-formed elements; the modern architect would of necessity need to embrace the machine in every aspect of design.” [Understanding Architecture, first edition, p. 456]

Now, those familiar with architectural education today will know the fascination in the biz. with technology, especially in the way of innovative materials, prefabrication, SIPS panels, pre-stressed concrete, building ’skins’, computer-engineered shapes, and the ubiquitous plasma screen. Architecture students in general are heavily doused in this and many a thesis is about machine-engineered furniture, the manufacturing process, and the reuse of industrial technologies as architectural elements. In many ways, Wright’s vision has come true. The relative ease with which an entire subdivision can be constructed in several months out of mostly pre-fabricated materials, the reality that to work in the most prestigious of firms today you have to have extensive knowledge of 3D drafting programs, or the fact that you too can have a kitchen that looks like a Starbucks is certainly nothing new (back in ‘the day’ you could order a house from the Sears catalog).

This emphasis on technology, as far as I can tell, will not die out soon. It is patently more enticing to the 20 year old iPod-carrying architecture student than Palladio and Vitruvius. And, of course, maybe it does not have to die out. However, if we are expecting a resurgence in beautiful Catholic churches we have to take some things into consideration, as we do in other cultural matters when it comes to Catholics in contemporary North American culture. It is true, I think, that Catholics are more and more craving the splendors of their religion’s traditions, especially among the youth. Now, I’m not interested in the traditionalist-progressive debate here. We can, as I said, bemoan the destructive, renovationist tendencies of the past that, in so many words, ruined many a well-designed church. But, and this is what I was thinking of when I read Wright’s thoughts, we can also recognize that, again, secular humanist culture is still exuberantly flying off tangentially from generally ‘religiously-minded’ world views. That means, and I think that New Urbanism learned this the hard way, that for all the re-creating we can try and do, we’re recreating a physical world stylized by a culture that no longer exists. We can make of that observation whatever we like, suggesting that now we have to build modern, or that now we have to close ourselves off at times from the influences of contemporary society, or that now we have to find a synthesis of the two. But, and especially if the answer is either the first or the third, how can that be achieved? Are we satisfied with the results so far? (Re: Cathedral of Christ the Light, Oakland) For the sake of argument, I’m going to make some generalizations.

Architecture school, like most higher education, produces a kind of idealism which can certainly be healthy. But, in most, I would say, this tends to wear off. After a few years of being a ‘CAD-monkey’ [computer draftsman] one tends to be at least a little disillusioned and shaken of those ideals. This is probably to be expected. What happens, however, is that over time the exigencies of career advancement take precedent over delusions of revolutionary architectural innovations. Practically, this means that most will be designing shopping malls, public schools, office buildings, restaurants and the occasional bank. These architects are, for lack of a better term, cheap—they cost less, and they spend less. What’s the result? Well, more people hire them. Most likely, they, not Charles-Edouard Jeanneret-Gris or Bernini nor even those brave and chosen few who spent their money on a good (and rare) classical education, will be designing the new sanctuary for your parish. They follow, sometimes slavishly, the trends of the business that are presented to them monthly in publications like Architectural Record. It’s not necessarily their fault, they don’t have the time or money to explore these kinds of things. What’s more, these students graduating today, the Catholic ones, grew up in these churches we tend to think are ugly: auditorium churches, churches in the round, churches with nothing but crucifixes (if even that), university chapels with huge graffiti murals behind the altar, etc… or, they’re converts! But, there is a good chance that they won’t think they’re ugly. There’s a good chance they will have emotional attachments to these buildings and see good in them that others do not. There’s a good chance, dare I say it, that they will see the ‘old’ and think ‘ah, that’s nice…’ and that’s about it. These new architects are now further removed from the church designs even of the not-so-distant past. They see them in Architecture History courses, and they see them in cathedrals every now and then, and in books… but they don’t know how to produce anything like these things [at least I don't!].

Most graduating architecture students don’t know the first thing about how to design a column [myself included]. “Design a column?” we might say, “You mean, like, structural sizing? You know, figuring out how big it needs to be?” Not exactly. I mean, like, this:

Classical_orders_from_the_Encyclopedie

In the time between when I started and graduated from architecture school there was a considerable change. When I entered first-year, the only reason you took your computer to studio was to check e-mail and play music. We did not produce drawings using computers for the first two years of our education [I think this was a good thing]. By the time I graduated, however, new students were coming in and very early-on learning the latest techniques in 3D design. I would be surprised if many schools haven’t altogether stopped teaching students how to draft on paper.

The implications are that, perhaps apart from Notre Dame, architecture schools are few and far between that are producing architects that will be capable of successfully designing new Catholic churches expressive of the values of a contemporary American Catholicism that cherishes a real cultural continuity with the past and not just an “in the Catholic tradition…” slogan.

In the Baroque style, the Catholic Reformation had a unique style of its own to express its values and ends. In the Gothic, likewise, the entire spirituality and worldview of the Medievals was expressed in stone and glass. What… however… will be the architectural expression of Evangelium vitae and the Culture of Life? Where will it come from? Can it legitimately find a home in the Post-Postmodernist highly industrialized, over-technologization of contemporary architecture? Or must it resort to drumming up the best and brightest of 13th-16th century design?

If Thomism could survive all these years and still find refreshingly new (and faithful) expression in the writing of some of today’s philosophers, why not the same for Gothic, Renaissance, Romanesque, and Baroque architecture? Now, this is an analogy of course. When it comes to the plastic arts we are dealing with a rather different creature—not exactly a question of transporting or copying buildings like snippets of the Summa transplanted into modern texts—but, all the same, what can be done, practically speaking, to put all the right elements in place that future Catholic architects, nourished in a revived faith, can develop a true embodiment of the ideals of the Culture of Life in a language intelligible to modern sensitivities? That is, must we, really, first reproduce architecture like that of the past before we can hope to move again in the direction of a true physical expression of our time?

If we take the route of recovering architectural forms of the past, which I don’t think is a bad idea, what happens when this intersects with modern technology? What happens when it runs up against modern budget constraints, or modern skill limitations? I’m talking about your friendly neighborhood parish now, built by your friendly local architect who wears black all the time, not this diocesan cathedral or that one, this monastery, or even this university chapel.

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