100 words, two quotes and some notes | iii. age of projective
I am thankful
that modernism, post-modernism, post-functionalism and other -isms have paved
the way toward a more pragmatic/projective/participative approach. By providing us
with examples of what a very rigid framework can lead to when realized in the built
world, the old theorists have shown us why all this preoccupation with an exact
theoretical position can sometimes be boring and beside the point. I’d rather see
buildings get built that work well and deliver performance, than see architects
write books formulating some idealized absolutist pseudo-intellectual stance that then
leads to unfulfilling buildings on subjective (experiential) and objective (performative) levels.
As my friend
Yage reminds me occasionally, “Simplify your life”.
[possibly by cutting out the bullsh*t and unnecessary noise; also by not overthinking as is the case with this blog entry]
[possibly by cutting out the bullsh*t and unnecessary noise; also by not overthinking as is the case with this blog entry]
“A projective architecture does not make a claim for expertise outside the field of architecture nor, does it limit its field of expertise to an absolute definition of architecture.”
"One might characterize the shift from critical to projective modes of disciplinarity as a process of cooling down or, [...] of moving from a "hot" to a "cool" version of the discipline. [...] While cooling suggests a process of mixing, the hot resists through distinction, and connotes the overly difficult, belabored, worked, complicated. Cool is relaxed, easy."
- Somol and Whiting, Notes around the Doppler Effect and other Moods of Modernism
__________
Note to myself, or an ironically absolutist-simplistic view of my reaction to the themes explored this week:
absolutist, simplistic, post-functionalist, autonomous, indexical, critical and methodical; hot representation
Good:
emergent, projective, diagrammatic, atmospheric, participative, pragmatic, propositional, interpretive, speculative and transformative; cool performance
It was also interesting to note how Eisenman's work was interpreted as post-critical in one reading and yet inextricably linked to the critical project in the other reading, only affirming my belief that all theoretical problems in architecture, much like in philosophy, are but problems of semantics (as Wittgenstein would say) - in part due to the vagueness of human language and the incoherence arising from partial truths.
Projective Process (Alvenaria Social Housing Competition Entry / fala atelier)


I agree with you about wanting buildings to be more than a manifestation of an architect's personal philosophy. I think that Eisenman misses a huge opportunity by disregarding the site, constructive details and functionality of architecture. It's possible to balance both theory and "real architecture". I don't think Eisenman has found this balance.
ReplyDeleteI don't think he wants to find that balance, nor does he care about what others define "real architecture" to be. Which is ironic because he goes on to define a "theory of modernism" in absolutist terms, hence becoming part of the problem he so wanted to oppose in the first place...
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