Don't Mistaken Your Eggs For Just Eggs
by
push
02/03/2008, 12:03 AM
Don't Mistaken Your Eggs For Just Eggs:
Why some critics can't understand the Avant-garde
This contribution by Slate's architecture critic presented some of the newest projects under construction by Herzog and De
Meuron, Zaha Hadid and Rem Koolhaas amongst others, in the increasingly high
profile cities of Abu Dhabi and Beijing with a sweeping argument aimed at
discrediting the entire field of Avant-garde Architecture. The piece amounts to
not only an absurdly xenophobic simplification of what is happening in "an
obscure sheikdom on the Gulf and the world's largest Communist
dictatorship" - more significantly it underscores an all too common
barrier that comes between works of Architecture and good Architectural
criticism.
The piece posited that so-called '"experimental,"
"innovative," or "cutting edge"' architects of the past
have tried but rarely succeeded in predicting how buildings of the future will
look - invoking clichéd images of the three Modern architects Wright, Mies and
Le Corbusier for no good reason other than to indicate the truism that
buildings today don't, in fact, all look like what these men designed. In the
same way, he argued, neither will buildings of the future look like
"Herzog and de Meuron's bird's nest, Andreu's egg, and Koolhaas' twisted
donut" - all currently being completed in Beijing for this summer's Olympics Games. He
goes on to infantilize his audience with an etymology of the generic label of
avant-garde, asserting the faulty-logic that buildings have limitations and so
by definition cannot be avant-garde.
Mr. Rybczynski's argument highlights the widespread lack of
understanding of many armchair critics, evident in his caricature of Le
Corbusier as "one of the leading white-box practitioners" who
"soon got bored and turned to rougher, more sculptural, raw concrete"
- I know a few people who think his work was about a little bit more than that.
It is the attempt to distill the products of complex social and cultural
conditions and ideas into bite-sized concepts for simple minds, by loosely
evaluating only the most superficial qualities - in this case as in most, Form.
It is a blatant disregard for all of the contemporary political and economic
conditions that produced these unique projects forcing architects to react with
technologically innovative solutions at various stages of design, manufacturing
and construction - the first Olympic
Games in the increasingly image conscious, open-for-business East-Asian
juggernaut for goodness sake! It is an unwillingness to engage the unfamiliar
and open-ended questions posed by the juxtaposition of star western architects
practicing amidst the messiness of such Oriental cities, their culture, their
pace, their pride. Any one of these topics could have made for an engaging
criticism - but instead Mr. Rybczynski chose to take on the Avant-garde - yes,
all of it - at once.
Ultimately Mr. Rybczynski's argument does Architecture and
its criticism a great disfavor by dismissing a whole swath of work without any
attempt to understand it. Had any cursory examination been made he may have
noticed that there are many more differences between the projects cited and the
processes which brought them about than the mere fact that they all look
futuristic to those unwilling or unable to look deeper. The assertion that
"buildings belong firmly to their own time" is as naive as it is
clearly untrue. At least since Adolf Loos' "Ornament and Crime",
critics as well as architects have recognized the choking effect of stragglers
who insist on doing things as they have always been done, when the rest of the
world has moved on. The Avant-garde in this sense is merely all that which is
not straggling, as Architecture has always been a conversation about the future
- not simply in the all-encompassing formal paradigm-shifts that Mr. Rybczynski
imagines, but increasingly, in the way in which we think about the design and
production of buildings within larger geopolitical contexts. The future will
not likely hold more bird's nests, eggs or twisted donuts - but I know a few
people who think these projects are about a little bit more than that.
I can however think of a few "titanium eggs" that
have hatched and "foreshadowed the future" - the Guggenheim in Bilbao and the Jewish Museum in Berlin. These have subsequently spawned more
than a few similar looking projects, with similar programs, clients and budgets
around the world - in a sense defining their architects' work as a single
formal gesture fitting in a new but equally rigid mold, willingly or otherwise.
If this is the future Mr. Rybczynski argues individual works of architecture
should but generally fail to predict, then that is precisely why he will never
understand the broad field he calls “the fad for Avant-garde Architecture.”