Tuesday, 28 August 2018

ROBYN BOID - EGG-CELLENCE IN MIND-GROWING OR GRATING PUNS?


Children’s books are frequently designed for adults, and appear to be aimed at the ‘parent market,’ possibly with the intent of feeding ambitions for raising elitely brilliant children, cashing-in on this urge. A friend gave a copy of ROBYN BOID ARCHITECT to me as a birthday gift, not for any child-rearing use, but as a book that might be of interest to me as an architect: and so it was. The idea of a shared adult/child involvement arises in films too, where movies ostensibly for children also have a layer of humour throughout that is aimed at adults. Adults do take children to the movies, so it makes sense in one way – well two: if the child is not interested, perhaps the adult might be the promoter, the enthusiast for the film. It looks like a cherry offering two bites, in case one chewer does not like the aftertaste.


"What a big book you have!"



It seems that there might be something of this strategy in this Melbournestyle Books publication of ‘Mind-Growing Books’ for ‘Clever Kids.’ This self-categorisation is actually printed as ‘clever kids MIND-GROWING BOOKS’ in a pinked-edged yellow medallion – is one supposed to see sparkling gold? The text wraps around a graphic ‘CK’ that is drawn as a smiley face within the ‘C’ placed beside a book that is the ‘K’ illustrated with splayed, open pages: does it mean ‘creating happy book-lovers’?



Maree Coote

The self-promotion appears over the top – just too much. Surely one decides after the reading and the interaction with the child whether the publication is ‘mind-growing’? Still, the book is intriguing. It is written and illustrated by Maree Coote. The lettering of the title looks like ‘childish,’ cutout-paper-styled text, with ‘ROBYN BOID’ in white, ‘ARCHITECT’ in letters using nine different colours, (creative), and ‘Maree Coote,’ the author, defined in text tucked away cosily in the same white on brownish ‘nest scribble’ that includes a speckled egg on one side and a feather. All of these graphics are on a pale sky blue. A sketched paler blue and white bird flies over the ‘CH’ of the multicoloured ‘ARCHITECT,’ perhaps identifying the reference ‘bird’ in case it was missed as the mysterious, misspelled ‘Boid.’



The cover has an attractive, commanding identity and a direct message. The terrible naming using the phonetic pun is immediately obvious to those ‘in the know,’ and sets the scene for expectations that are confirmed: corny. One wonders if and why the gangster-sounding, nasal American accent of ‘boid,’ that hangs between ‘Boyd’ and ‘bird,’ referencing both of these spellings, has any relevance beyond the fact that it does cleverly allude to both. Is there something cheekily bold, brazen and ‘gangsterish’ implicated here? More intimately, one notices how the ‘Robin Boyd’ reference is so ‘tight, snug’ with the title reversing the ‘I’ and the ‘Y’ to give us this personable ‘Boyd-boid-bird’ link.


Is the title just too clever – too ‘adult-clever’ to be useful even for ‘clever kids’? Maybe it is the ‘adult’ drawcard, offering some pride, some silent, personal self-praise to the one who immediately, cleverly recognises the references? Is this the feel-good introduction, the prelude to the suggestive ‘buy me’ message? In a world where spelling has become almost as irrelevant as grammar, and where new spellings for names are invented as a matter of necessity every day, one wonders how sensible it might be to promote such variants in things phonetic for children, when a slightly more serious – and more useful? - book might spell names correctly; well, as the architect was so named.# The book too, might start the story accurately telling us that Robin Boyd ‘Boid’ attended Melbourne University rather than ‘Robyn Boid lived at the National University, high up on a ledge of the Architecture School’ - see: http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/boyd-robin-gerard-9560 Why back away from such facts when the title is so adamant in its telling, its suggestive message?




"The silly bird"?

The play in the name ‘Boid,’ meant to be read as ‘bird’ for the story, with ‘Boyd’ apparently hovering in the background – this is a ‘Melbournestyles Book’ after all - casts an immediate shadow, doubt, over the author’s name: is it a joke? - ‘Maree Coote.’ Is one supposed to do anything with this in the game of phonetical interpretation or other referencing? Maybe: ‘Mary Coote, the silly bird’? Is ‘Boid’ a cute ‘Coote’? Who knows? The ancestory.com site notes:

Coote Name Meaning
English: from Middle English co(o)te ‘coot’, applied as a nickname for a bald or stupid man. The bird was regarded as bald because of the large white patch, an extension of the bill, on its head. It is less easy to say how it acquired the reputation for stupidity.
Source: Dictionary of American Family Names ©2013, Oxford University Press
Similar surnames: Foote, Cote, Conte, Coots, Coe, Crute, Corte, Cooper, Motte, Coomer





I am interested in books on architecture that have been written for children, just as I am interested in most books for children that have been written by serious writers. Ted Hughes’ book on poetry explained for children is impressive as it tackles everything seriously, simply, openly, rather than in a complicated, skewed, child-like fashion. Strangely, most of the books on architecture for children introduce the subject by talking about the birds and the bees: not sex, but how birds build nests, and bees build their hexagonal hives. This raises the issue of shelter that then moves on into caves and the like for ‘man,’ men and women: the rest is history. Here, Coote takes the ‘nest’ idea and makes it into the whole theme; everything is a nest. She begins with the question, ‘What comes first: the nest or the egg?’ One immediately knows the ‘chicken-egg’ question, and the lack of an answer, and wonders what the Coote question might be about. Could it be referencing form and function?







The ‘boid’ then explores various geometrical, Platonic(?) shapes. The idea that architecture involves ‘thinking outside of the circle’ is then floated, laying the subtle suggestion that architecture, even at this early stage, is something uniquely different: ‘thinking outside of the square.’ So the nest is inverted, creating a dome: then the games develop. One expects the Goldilocks idea to be used: too big; too cold; too small; too rough; etc. In one way it does become the theme, but indirectly. Cootes muddles this old story-line that always makes for a good child’s book as it involves experience; feelings. She mixes the idea with architectural matters as she explores various historical examples and architectural details, noting how clever ‘boid’ is to build these, and that none of these models is good for eggs. Why should they be? Is ‘egg’ meant to be symbolic of some nice fit for function? What function? What fit? We get the sense that ‘boid’ is wanting to create a startlingly different ‘architectural’ nest. One wonders why the original nest was rejected, inverted, (to let the egg fall out), and otherwise distorted and defaced. This strategy is, of course, simply a way of introducing names and buildings that teachers can use as ‘teaching aids.’ The message at the rear of the book tells one that this is so on various levels, just in case teachers do not know how to use the publication. The book has to be something to make ‘kids clever;’ and parents smarter too? ‘CAN YOU COUNT the 34 speckled eggs; CAN YOU FIND the 14 wiggly worms?’ Even counting skills get involved in this educational tome.




Hardly a 'nest,' but an impressive interpretation.


Our ‘boid’ flies over historical buildings and other examples, all illustrated ‘nest-like’ in brownish scribbled lines, with Coote noting how each example is no good for the egg. Finally, ‘boid’ discovers ‘egg-actly the right shape for the egg’ . . . ‘egg-shaped’ - on page 19: shucks! Is this really so? Pages 20 and 21 get filled with ‘egg-shaped’ holes in ‘nested’ buildings that are apparently perfect containers. Pages 22 and 23 do likewise, complete with hanging egg chairs, egg-shaped openings and egg-shaped curves in scrawled, hatched, thatched(?), walls and roofs. The inspiration for ‘Robyn Boid’s Nest-Building’ ideas are listed on page 25. The building images on pages 22 and 23 were inspired by Robin Boyd’s ‘Casa Lloyd, Melbourne.’ The book finishes up with Robyn Boid wanting to write a book – of course; what else? – called Great Egg-xpectations:Architecture is like an egg, thought Robyn, full of egg-citing possibilities.’ Oooooh! It almost hurts. What might the author of The Australian Ugliness think of this? What happened to the symbolism? Is it really too hard to be serious about children’s books? What might the children think when they discover that Great Expectations is Charles Dickens’ thirteenth novel, and has little to do with architecture? Are the children as readers merely being ‘egged’ on with adult versions of the child’s mind?


1. A bird can live anywhere, but an egg needs a nest. (really?)
2. Thinking outside the circle can lead to egg-xcellent ideas.
3. The egg comes first. (?)

Perhaps there is something one can be pleased with here, in this publication - maybe that it is about architecture; but there is much that grates and grinds; and there is the concern about talking down to children in ‘childish’ chat. It is a little like the stuttering attempts at exaggerated simplicity in hyphenated English that one hears when another is speaking to a person not fluent in English: words are transformed into pidgin soundings, grammar is clipped, and volume is increased in a concerted effort to make sounds more easily comprehended, as if this befuddling approach might make anything more intelligible. Does this Coote book do too much of this? It is a little disconcerting that architecture is seen as something special, uniquely different. Why promote this vision that causes so much strife for the profession? Might a greater emphasis on the quality of the fit in the solution have been a more appropriate approach to touch on, to allude to - a quality within architecture as an experience, rather than endorsing mere visual appearance and impact? This, of course, would have meant that the original nest was discovered to be the best: "Why did I ever turn it upside down?" – an outcome at odds with the ‘clever kids’ educational intent. What really is the message?


Inspired by Boyd's Casa Lloyd and hanging egg chairs.

The subtle touch at the end of the book is a nod towards ‘good architecture,’ and references the Casa Lloyd, Melbourne, 1960, a Robin Boyd residence – mmm: think ‘Boid.’ I did not know ‘eeg-actly,’ (yuk!), what this building was; I could not recall it, so I looked it up. There was nothing in Google Images, so I checked the text references. Could this be so?

Robin Boyd-house faces wreckers’ ball 28 June 2003 – 10:00am The Age.

A Brighton house designed by influential Melbourne architect Robin Boyd is likely to be demolished next week after Heritage Victoria decided it was not of state significance.
The crescent-shaped glass and wood house in Newbay Crescent, Brighton, was built in 1959 to a Robin Boyd design that featured a curved building overlooking a pear tree.
A photo of the house, which was built for local barrister Edward Lloyd and his family, was reproduced on the cover of Robin Boyd's biography by Geoffrey Serle. But experts and residents are in dispute over whether the house is important enough to warrant heritage protection.
Professor Philip Goad, of Melbourne University's architecture faculty, said yesterday that the house was a valuable part of Victoria's architectural heritage and it would be a great pity if it were demolished. He said the home was built when Boyd was at the height of his powers. It was among his 20 best houses.
But Neil Clerehan, an architect and former colleague of Boyd, said the house had been substantially altered and was no longer worth saving. "There are many more important Boyd houses that councils are not doing anything about. This is a minor work," he said.
A Heritage Victoria spokeswoman said executive director Ray Tonkin had recommended the house be allocated only "local" significance.
The manager of sustainability at Bayside Council, Michael Top, said that if the recommendation was accepted at a Heritage Council meeting next Thursday the house would be demolished.
Mr Top said the Boyd home had been assessed twice and was not on a council list of 1000 significant buildings.
But Bernard Lloyd, who grew up in the house, said he had made a late submission to Heritage Victoria seeking to have the house protected.
He said that even though the house was not visible from the street or open to the public, it should be saved.
"I've never been in a house like it. It is curved. There is not a single right-angle in it. I remember when I was growing up, architecture students used to knock on the door and ask if they could have a look at it," he said.
Charles Butler, who bought the house from the Lloyd family in March, said Mr Lloyd had been unfair because he did not warn him that the house was of heritage significance before the sale.
He said he would lose hundreds of thousands of dollars if he was unable to knock the house down.
"If Bernard Lloyd believes this house warrants heritage protection, then for heaven's sake why didn't he do something while he was living in the house?" he said. He said an interim order prevented him from knocking down the house and the "whole process had been an emotional wrench".
Shirley Andersson, acting secretary of the Bayside Ratepayers Association, said it was extraordinary that the Lloyd family was trying to dictate what could be done with the house.



The hanging egg chair - for big 'egg-heads'?


The ghost of Casa Lloyd?
Was this the Casa Lloyd reference made by Coote? Serle’s book cover illustration was Googled. Does the building still stand in 2017, the publishing date? Children might be savvy with the Internet and Google, but will they discover any illustration of the main ‘good-feel/fit’ reference from which to learn? The Sydney Opera House, Wangu Pavilion, Saint Basil’s Cathedral, The Chrysler Building, The Sydney Tower, Eiffel Tower, etc., (all inspirations listed in the back of the book), can be researched; but the poor Boyd/‘Boid’ building? Is the lesson that everything eventually passes, even good work?


The sketch of Casa Lloyd - from the book cover?

As John Betjeman said of his poems that had been put to music and dance by others: he admired the effort, but thought that it added very little. In a similar manner, this book by Coote can be acknowledged as a good effort, perhaps adding as much to architecture as Betjeman spoke about the music and dance adding to his work. It has to be acknowledged that writing for children is one of the most difficult things to do successfully. It requires less effort, and more inspiration; a sheer delight with the enterprise: something seriously childlike in its being. In this sense the books will always relate to the adult, the child at heart, without any clever, self-conscious distortion, any predetermined, carefully-structured strategies and games, or any silly puns.


Robin Boyd Architect
3 January 1919 - 16 October 1971


# NOTE:
Even Google is confused with ‘Robyn Boid’: ‘Showing results for: Robin Boyd’ - as if it is being helpful.


P.S. All images have been selected from Google Images.

MORE EGG SHAPED CHAIRS & BUILDINGS
JUST FOR THE STORY PUNS



Math-egg-matics?


Scrambled eggs?

A 'three-minute' egg: soft centre?



Just a yolk? (Punning is contagious).


Hard-boiled egg?

Egg cup?

Egg- aggerated?


EGG-CITING!
BUT DO THEY SUIT EGGS?

NOTE
28 February 2020
A point of further importance is this: that the traditional oral literatures interested not only all classes, but also all ages of the population; while the books that are nowadays written expressly "for children" are such as no mature mind could tolerate; it is now only the comic strips that appeal alike to children who have been given nothing better and at the same time to "adults" who have never grown up.

5 APRIL 2021
SEE: 
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