It was an awards
assessment: representatives of the jury were to be met on site to
inspect the project. The meeting took place, questions were asked
about the project, and then the small group moved off to look around.
It happened first in
a general office space full of personnel at their work stations. One member of the jury moved
in, self-consciously paused and steadied the body deliberately in what appeared to
be a specially selected, ‘advantageous’ location in the middle of
nowhere in particular. The arms moved into the akimbo position as the
head swayed slowly off to one side, and then nonchalantly back again,
sometimes tilting backwards a little. The pose was held frozen for
some time while the head manoeuvred its self-consciously casual movements slightly
differently, even adjusting them occasionally in the opposite directions, again and again.
This occurred in
front of all the office personnel just doing their job,
almost as though the assessment was being made in spite of them. The
juror was not looking at the people, or their degree of satisfaction or otherwise; just something more mystical like the
character and proportions of the ambience. This appeared to be one
possible understanding of the situation: the other was that this was
a special performance put on for the staff, to show them how an
architect sees; to point out that architecture was something special,
different, requiring a bespoke, knowing eye.
The calculated performance
appeared to emphasise an enigmatic, aesthetic intention that ordinary
people just did not have, or perhaps were completely unaware of. This
place was being assessed with the architect’s eye, for an
architectural award. It is for just this vision, to capture it, that architectural
photographers exist. They walk around looking for ‘the shots’
through trained, squinting eyes and layered-hand frames, supported by their
clever lenses, seeking those special positions and angles that will
give the ‘best reading,’ as perceived by the seeing eye of the
aesthete who wants to surprise even the architect with the
cleverness of the architect's own inventive work. The process is sometimes called
‘appreciation.’ An ordinary camera snapshot would never do: such unintentional looking is merely the equivalent of Street View, everyday seeing - nothing at all.
Architecture, so the
logic goes, is far more than something merely ordinary: it has to be to win an
award: (see NOTE 9th November 2019 below). Ruskin and Pevsner were aware of this. This jury member was
making sure that there was going to be no relapse into this basic sin
of not looking at a project ‘architecturally.’ After all, it was the
‘architecture’ that was being assessed here! ‘Seeing’ needed
a certain stance to be managed properly and to be assessed.
The proposition is
that this attitude needs to be changed if architects are ever going
to gain the respect of the community. Being seen as bespoke, creative
elites, uniquely skilled dilettantes, only creates a huge divide,
leaving the word ‘architect’ and ‘architecture’ in a void, to be applied
to everything except architects and architecture in the everyday world.
P.S.
While the parts of buildings might make surprising images, structures themselves have memorable iconic
angles that are searched out by visitors and tourists, as if to confirm the original photographer’s eye: see- https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2014/04/seeing-what-we-believe-idyllic-visions.html The reproduction of this identity in another's photograph seems to confer some self-acclaimed status to the amateur.
NOTE
8th November 2019
See:
https://www.theguardian.com/cities/gallery/2019/nov/07/the-best-architectural-photography-of-2019-in-pictures
This report, The best architectural photography of 2019 –
in pictures, has the headline: the shortlist for
the 2019 Architectural Photography Awards highlights the best images
selected from nearly 2000 entries from 42 countries. The images
highlight ‘architectural seeing.’
The thought is: do
architects now design buildings inspired by the images produced by
the camera; or do they design for the camera?
NOTE
9th November 2019
Just announced: the 2019 Australian Institute of Architects National
Award Winners – see:
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2019/nov/08/pride-of-space-australias-2019-national-architecture-award-winners-in-pictures
It is interesting to see how every project is framed piecemeal, alone or in part, apart
from the Heritage and the Sustainability Award winners, and an image of one house that stands in a naked landscape. Heritage already has its context that is an integral part of the work; Sustainability always wants to try to show how happily sensitive it is to its context; and naked landscape offers no threats from ad hoc neighbours or random street paraphernalia; so it is not unusual that these projects are the only ones that want to be seen in a context. The images
might be impressive, but they tell us very little about the projects
other than that they art ‘arty,’ and have been artfully photographed to be worthy of award winners.
There appears to be an effort here to minimise the impact of the particular context.#
Did the sun set just a little too fast to get the perfect alignment?
It seems that the unfortunate glimpse of the neighbouring house could not be easily cut from the frame: but the foliage helps.
The Sustainability Award winner.
The Heritage Award winner.
House alone in a naked landscape.
#
For more images of the Green Square Library, see;
https://www.google.com/search?q=green+square+library&sxsrf=ACYBGNSu5KnaFmS62d0hKZZAcNg4YwXmCQ:1573295324290&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjGirnn9dzlAhXbSH0KHYLRB1UQ_AUIEigB&biw=1920&bih=1089#imgrc=61b5d04R1OSJ1M:
The images below do
not appear in this listing of images; they have been extracted from
Street View and appear to have been taken during construction. Note how the formal
PR images exclude the street.
NOTE
10th November 2019
Why do we seem to equate a good photograph with good architecture?
Is a photograph closer to what we have come to expect as 'art'?
24th February 2020
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