The headlines seemed to sum up our expectations for architecture today: 9 Stunning Homes Around the World That Defy Gravity – see:
https://www.architecturaldigest.com/gallery/stunning-homes-around-world-defy-gravity.
Buildings, so it appears, have to be ‘stunning;’ they have to catch our attention; they must be ‘bespoke,’ ‘different,’ ‘unique’ in the extreme, just to emphasise the clever ‘creativity’ of the ‘genius’ mind.
So, to our 'gravity defying' amazement, we see nine houses with large cantilevers screaming out, “Look, no legs!”
Is this our problem today?
Why not scream out in wondrous admiration with much acclaim for 'stunning' upside-down houses; for crooked places; sideways houses; leaning homes? What variation in deformity has not yet been thought of? Is modernity merely a hunt for things uniquely unusual?
Our problem appears to be that we equate ‘creativity’ with ‘bespoke, startling difference.’
There is an obvious problem here that needs more attention.
SYNONYMS
Are the synonyms of deformity the language of modernity that defines the desired qualities in ‘creative’ outcomes?
deformity
abnormality
defect
impairment
malformation
aberration
asymmetry
buckle
contortion
corruption
crookedness
damage
defacement
depravity
evil
grossness
hideousness
injury
irregularity
knot
misshapenness
repulsiveness
ugliness
unattractiveness
unnaturalness
unsightliness
warp
malconformation
misproportion
misshape
12 MAR 22
NOTE
When the architecture is not so ‘stunning,’ the project is often given a labelled reference as a name, or as an inspiration that seems to want to ‘jazz’ things up a little, or add some rational complexity to a concept that appears to be struggling for some meaning and context. So we have the Brownie house, referencing a Kodak camera: see - https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2022/01/the-box-brownie-house.html; and the Hadid office statement that the dhows of Qatar inspired the new stadium in that country: see note in – https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2022/01/the-box-brownie-house.html. Today’s news reports on a project that is called the Upside Down Akubra House, a classic Australian outback hat: see – https://www.archdaily.com/931920/upside-down-akubra-house-alexander-symes-architect. While the house may not be dramatically upside down, the reference apparently seeking to hype things up a little, can be.
14 MAR 22
And now a Radius House: https://www.archdaily.com/977870/radius-house-pentagon
31 MARCH 2022
More 'stunning' cantilevered buildings: see - https://www.dezeen.com/2021/09/05/dramatic-cantilevered-houses/?li_source=LI&li_medium=rhs_block_2
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