The Reactionary Avant Garde Once Again
I am working diligently at getting my book ready for publication. I have changed the title to The Humanists versus the Reactionary Avant Garde: Clashing Visions for Today's Architecture. Here is another excerpt, which is funny as well as being revealing.
It would be monotonous to keep describing the foibles of our
celebrity avant-gardist architects. They all have the same goal—being new and
different, even if the building is uncomfortable and disorienting to its users.
They all design buildings as abstract sculptural objects and as intellectual
games, rather than designing good places for people.
Instead of making these same points about each of the avant
gardists, we can sum up their approach by looking at the story of one of Peter
Eisenman’s early commissions.
In the late 1960s, Eisenman was known for his fiercely
polemical and hard-to-read architectural manifestos, but he had only built one
project, an addition to a house in Princeton that he called House I. He met
Richard and Florence Falk at a cocktail party in Princeton, and they were so
fascinated by his dense architectural theorizing that they hired him to design
a house on a farm that they had purchased in Vermont, which he called House II.
Richard Falk recalled in a later interview that, when he heard Eisenman’s
theorizing at this party, “I don’t know what it meant, but it sounded good.”
When the Falks returned to their Vermont farm after a
sabbatical, they found a house that was not yet complete but that would
obviously be totally unusable. It had a flat roof, which would not hold up
under Vermont’s heavy snow. It had a series of openings in the upper floors,
which were meant to let light penetrate but which were also very dangerous for
the Falk’s one-year-old son. It had hardly any interior walls: there were just
half walls between the bedrooms. Because there were not complete walls, even a
whisper could be heard through the entire house, and the Falk’s son was not
able to play inside during his entire childhood because his parents needed
quiet to work.
The Falks were able to make the house barely usable by doing
a major remodeling a year later. Ms. Falk commented that Eisenman’s design “was
all about space, the eye moving with nothing to stop it”—which meant, she
added, that it impressed their visitors but was very difficult to live in.
Three decades later, Eisenman was still bristling at the
Falk’s criticisms of his house: “I don’t design houses with the nuclear family
idea because I don’t believe in it as a concept. I was interested in doing
architecture, not in solving the Falks’ privacy problems.” When Eisenman talks
about “doing architecture,” he obviously means designing buildings for the
cognoscenti who are interested in abstract art and obscure theoretical issues.
He does not mean designing buildings that are good places for the people who
use them.
A parable can help us understand Eisenman and the other
starchitects. Once upon a time, there was a tailor who became famous by writing
hard-to-read essays about sartorial theory, though he had never actually made
any clothing except one suit for himself. Finally, his fame attracted a
customer, and the tailor created a suit that was in keeping with his
decontructivist theory of clothing design. When the customer put on the suit,
he found that it had an arm where the left leg should be, which made it painful
to walk; it had a leg where the right arm should be, which made it difficult to
use his right hand; and it had two arms coming out of random locations in the
back of the suit jacket. The avant-gardist critics all said the design was
brilliantly subversive of conventional ideas about what a suit should be. When
the customer had the suit altered so he could walk around without pain, the
tailor was furious and said, “I was interested in doing clothing design, not in
solving his mobility problems.”
At the end of the parable, we learn that this tailor
obviously attracted very few customers and could not support himself designing
such of uncomfortable clothing. He was forced to change his occupation, and he
ended up doing honest work by getting a job as a taxi driver.
The difference is that tailors sell suits to the people who
wear them, while architects often sell buildings to people who rarely use them.
In particular, the trustees of museums and other cultural institutions enter
the buildings only on occasion, and they do not have to live with the
buildings’ avant-gardist designs. Museum trustees also tend to have more money
than knowledge, so they are easily impressed by the obscure theories of
avant-gardist critics. The staffs of these cultural institutions do have to
live with the buildings, but they tend to be so artsy that they are among the
few who are eager to suffer in a building acclaimed by the critics. This is why
so many of our famous avant-gardist buildings are museums and other
institutions dedicated to what now passes as high culture.
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