31 January 2006
on progress
Not related to architecture, you say. Yet hear me out. In the ongoing disciplinary disputes over the validity of theory in contemporary architectural practice, we can oversimplify by saying there are two sides: those who value the role of criticality as a means of assessing the status quo with the hope of imagining a better future, and those who advocate more "pragmatic" or "projective" practices in which theory takes a back seat to the negotiation of real-world architectural projects. Here, at least in my assessment, the roles are reversed: the old adherents to critical theory remain committed to the greater cause of Progress (or at least maintain some sense of hope that architecture somehow can contribute to that cause), while the newer pragmatists are much more willing to sacrifice long-term vision for short-term success (monetary, fame, whatever). In other words, the post-critics are reacting to the long-term discilpinary hegemony held by the critical theorists, who, perhaps mistakenly, remain wedded to architecture's progressive imperative.
My point in all of this -- and to try to bring it back to tonight's presidential spectacle -- is that maybe the answer (or Answer?) is a hyrid of progress and reaction. Indeed, maybe the two are not mutually exclusive and are instead co-dependent -- or symbiotic, if you will. Maybe it is possible to posit a critical architecture that not only imagines, but projects and even realizes a better future. Maybe it is possible for an opposition party to do the same thing not with architecture, but with politics. Would that be a progressive reaction?
My apologies for talking in circles! It's just that kind of night. More to come, for sure - I'm working on an ongoing bibliography on the whole post-critical issue, so feel free to send links and references my way...
23 January 2006
FAT's postmodernism

I'VE BECOME FASCINATED LATELY with the work of the London office FAT (Fashion, Architecture, Taste), which recently has been commented upon here, here, and here. While at first glance, the architecture seems (at best) a weak update of earlier, perhaps more genuine attempts at architectural postmodernism, I think there may be something deeper going on here. After spending a short time on FAT's website (which, I'm sure not coincidentally, recalls that of Venturi Scott Brown), my initial disgust slowly is replaced by a more intellectual -- dare I say political? -- curiosity. Sure, it's easy to write these guys off (like I normally would) as typical anything-goes postmodernists, completely devoid of taste, ethics, conscience, or any other such redeeming quality. But this time I hesitate. Why?
It's simple: although on aesthetic grounds much of their work renders me mildly nauseous, FAT is nonetheless exonerated in my eyes by their relentless and engaging polemic. A refusal to accept the status quo -- in their case, the persistent dominance of English modernism as the benchmark for acceptable taste -- imbues FAT's project with something greater than mere "attitude." I identify with and commend the eagerness to reinvent architecture, how it is represented, and what is expected of it.
I also am intrigued (and even at times amused) by FAT's written polemic. Their website is full of mini-manifestos, many of which again bring to mind the legacy of Venturi Scott Brown. "Maybe its time to decriminalise decoration and arrange an amnesty on ornament," FAT asks us in Everything Counts (In Large Amounts), a treatise on the evolution of architecture in the age of electronic communication.
FAT member Sam Jacob, in a piece on his own website Strange Harvest, caught my attention with a subtle yet definite elaboration on the central premise of Venturi + Scott Brown's 1972 masterpiece Learning from Las Vegas. Check it out:
The Pop Vernacular is a both a graveyard for the old and the superseded and the spawning ground of unexpected futures. A cornucopia of architectural salvage. The Pop Vernacular draws on all of time and space. And despite its familiarity, it glows with optimism and freshness. Far from the end of history, it is the well spring of the imminent future.For those of you who don't remember your postmodernism, VSB begin their manifesto with the assertion that "Learning from the existing landscape is a way of being revolutionary for an architect." Yet I would argue that they never really followed through with proving Pop's revolutionary potential (at least in any political sense beyond the superficial and symbolic). Although VSB's embrace of the formal language of Pop was a valiant polemical move, especially at the time, their approach ultimately is misguided as it fails to offer a way out of the black hole of consumer capitalism. Call me crazy, but it seems like here, Mr. Jacob is suggesting a potentially progressive -- if still totally vague -- role for the Pop Vernacular. Is he hinting at an instrumentalization of Pop that maybe goes beyond that of Venturi and Scott Brown? Or will he end up at the same claustrophobic dead end of the windowless, decorated-shed interior of some casino on the Strip? Can't wait to see.
I'd be interested to see if anyone has any other links/commentary/criticism with regard to FAT and their work.
link: FAT
link: Sam Jacob's Strange Harvest
link: Hugh Pearman's FAT is a postmodernist issue: British pranksters get serious.
22 January 2006
on empire (1)
I've also been reading up a lot on the (very) current debates going in academic architectural circles on the validity of "criticality" in contemporary theory and practice. You can guess on which side of the aisle I sit with regard to architecture's capacity (imperative?) to critique the status quo (and thus imagine a better future) -- but let's not get into that just yet. Part of my goal in reading Empire is to test the relevance of Hardt and Negri's political analysis to architectural discourse. In other words: can architecture both take part in and resist/subvert/undermine the power structures of globalization? What form would such an architecture take?
Expect more posts as I further sort out my thoughts... For now, I'll leave you with a quote from the authors' preface to Empire:
Our political task, we will argue, is not simply to resist these processes but to reorganize them and redirect them toward new ends. The creative forces of the multitude that sustain Empire are also capable of autonomously constructing a counter-Empire, an alternative political organization of global flows and exchanges. (Empire, p. xv)link: Michael Hardt on Wikipedia
link: Antonio Negri on Wikipedia
19 January 2006
"FEMA trailers with dignity"
No time right now for a tirade, but I'd be interested to hear comments from my readers...
link: New Urban Guild's Katrina Cottage I
14 January 2006
one last hoorah
FROM OUR FRIENDS up at Yale:
Thursday, February 16 - Saturday, February 18
Philip Johnson and the Constancy of Change
Symposium, organized with the collaboration of the Museum of Modern Art
Rumor has it that there's a panel discussion on the politics of Philip Johnson that will include Joan Ockman, Reinhold Martin, and Michael Sorkin. I'm pleased that Yale -- an epicenter of Johnson-philia -- at least has the guts to include participants who may refrain from the brainless praise and deification that often characterize commemorative events like this. Although there is a glaring omission of Franz Schulze, whose 1994 biography provided in-depth insight into Johnson's infatuation with Nazism (for even more, see this article by Kazys Varnelis), I'm especially surprised that Michael Sorkin was invited. Sorkin has been relentless in his critical stance towards Johnson, from his seminal 1988 essay "Where Was Philip?" to his more recent reflections on PJ's careeer.
Needless to say, I'll be there.
link: Philip Johnson: An Essay by Michael Sorkin, from Architectural Record
link: We Cannot Know History: Philip Johnson's Politics and Cynical Survival by Kazys Varnelis
09 January 2006
muschamp madness
Herbert Muschamp returns to the pages of the Times today with a rambling, stream-of-consciousness reflection on Edward Durell Stone's 2 Columbus Circle, claiming it as an icon for New York's 1960s gay culture. How this tiring and somewhat senseless article -- actually, more of a diary entry -- slipped past the Arts editor, I have no idea. The strangeness of this aimless piece approaches -- yet does not match -- the absurdity of his article on Zaha Hadid from 2004, which contains one of my favorite moments of architectural "criticism" ever printed:
link: The Secret History of 2 Columbus Circle by Herbert Muschamp
05 January 2006
"the deaths could have been prevented"
link: Space and Culture, Volume 9, No. 1
04 January 2006
megachurch

Check out Slate's slideshow from back in October for some examples of this emerging typology.
Also - does anyone know of any other research on the architecture of megachurches? I know Jeannie Kim did a studio titled "Superchurch" this past summer at Columbia GSAPP (syllabus here), but I haven't seen any of the output. Any other resources around?
link: Jesus, CEO from the Economist
link: An Anatomy of Megachurches from Slate
03 January 2006
complex conservatism?
link: Complexity and Conservatism
working for nothing
link: Zeroes of our time: Foreign Office Architects