Wednesday 23 March 2022

THE ARCHITECTURAL IMAGE


One might talk and write about architecture, and use images to highlight matters and promote projects, but there lies a serious issue in these texts and images that frequently fudge issues, that lie by suggesting outcomes that will never be experienced in such refined, exquisite isolation.



This issue has been raised before in: https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2014/04/seeing-what-we-believe-idyllic-visions.html; https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2021/03/the-allure-of-photograph.html; https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2021/05/fabulous-photography.html; https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2020/02/the-hawthorne-house-context-place-street.html; and https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2016/11/drew-heath-bespoke-details-practise.html; and other texts, but a recent report offers a project that bundles a few of these issues into one package: see - https://www.dezeen.com/2022/03/02/arqbr-open-space-couri-house-brasilia/.




This exquisite house in Brasilia photographs beautifully, ‘weaving space’ as the words describe, but in amongst this interplay of interiors and exteriors, one is given a clear drone view of the project. The spacious vistas are suddenly terminated, challenged with the realisation that this lovely home has been built on a separate block in a tight subdivision, with the house filling nearly every square millimetre of space up to the required setbacks. One soon sees how the photographer has cleverly presented images of nearly everything except this proximity. While the courtyards look splendid, one can quickly see how the noise from the neighbour’s pool area, for example, might prove to be a disturbance to one’s enjoyment of the suggested solitude, the enjoyable, ethereal isolation presented in the images.


The plan is an example of how architects randomly apply trees to a site plan:
c.f. drone image above.


The text on the topography of settlement – see : https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2022/02/the-topography-of-settlement.html - raises the problems with subdivisions such as these. This home offers a good example of the problems that become more complex when one realises how singular modernism is: see – https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2022/02/the-necessity-of-singularity.html. We end up with an array of individual gems each seeking visual supremacy in a suburban clutter, all with a determination that ignores the other – a circumstance that might be possible physically, but is experientally impossible.




It is the experience of architecture, its lived reality, that we seem to ignore today as we drool over preferred, selected images, and hagiographic texts that are even happy to mislead on location: see –https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2021/04/wheres-granny-flat.html. The matter is serious, because, unless we recognise it, and its failings, then we will go on repeating the problems. We need change, to strip the fabricated, ideal visions of their hoax and present things as lived, as experienced; then we might start accommodating these matters in our designs instead of trying to be bespoke in everything we touch, irrespective of reality.



Architectural photography highlights this position, that perhaps has architects designing more for photographs than people: see - https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2019/11/architectural-seeing.html. One usually sees sparse, delicately arranged interiors, with pristine, empty kitchens, and chairs positioned, not for conviviality, but for composition. Life is left as a void, suggesting that it can participate in such stark wonder with some degree of satisfaction. It might be adequate for an individual with a certain psychological ‘condition,’ but one rarely sees such ideal states in lived areas.



We need to start designing for living, for living in our cities, towns, and villages, in our public places as well as in our homes, and display these as such, if we are going to achieve ordinary contentment instead of promoting an envy of hopelessness, where one yearns for impossibilities pictured and described in the glossy architectural publications, or the high-tech digital world.



The house in Brasilia is beautifully designed, detailed, and presented, but one fears it might embody the same hassles as all suburbia. We need to understand this, and start changing our ambitions that are currently stirred by our slick texts and images. We have to be far more critical, and realise that while a chair, e.g., might look stunning in the image, it is in a location that no one would ever choose to sit in; just a kitchens frequently look starkly smart, voided like a desert without footprints; as with the child’s bedroom where only one toy is artfully located in the visual perfection of the place, totally blank, super tidy, wrinkle-free, and dust-free – as if this might be real, or preferred.



We need an architectural image of life, of complexity, not of architecture alone; we need lived architecture; an architecture than can be lived in and with, supporting and enriching in both function and dreams, celebrating life, enchanting it, rather than framing it slickly as a photographic vision to be ‘seen as’ as work of art on display; a performance place.




NOTE:

All the images here have been taken from the dezeen report. This project has been used as a generic example for what is commonplace in the architectural world; the comments are not intended as a specific critique of what seems to be a well detailed, and very pleasant scheme that cleverly develops a very tight site.

Anyone who has experienced it will recognize the issue as what might be called 'the real estate, super-wide-angled, promotional image.' One never knows how much photoshopping has been involved, but the transformation is always astonishing, even to the eye familiar with the place being sold. Given this, one frequently wonders whether prospective buyers are disappointed on inspection, or whether they bring the photographic impressions with them to aid and confirm their readings.


24 MARCH 2022

Yet another good example of the character of the ‘architectural image’ has been published today: see – https://www.wallpaper.com/architecture/canopy-house-powell-and-glenn-melbourne-australia. This article is illustrated in what seems to have become the ‘classic’ style of architectural reporting. The general external images are all carefully framed to exclude any reference to context in artful compositions; and the interior images are all precisely chosen details that have been ‘artistically’ framed. The collection of images gives no indication of the totality of place, just suggestive hints of an attractive character that one might deduce from this collation of selected, piecemeal images, perceptually collaged as it were. This strategy could be considered to exhibit the ‘art’ of architecture. The house is bare, apart from some bottles of alcoholic beverages, a bowl, cushions, a record player, and some coffee table books that appear to want to add ‘style’ to the lifestyle. Does life become just a performance in ‘arty’ place?
















NOTE:

All images have been taken from the article, and are used here only in regards to displaying the photographic technique, not as part of any general critique of the home.


31 MARCH 2022

This report identifies the general perception of architecture with the brief from a young couple being that they wanted an architecturally interesting home; architecture cannot be 'ordinary': see -

https://www.dezeen.com/2021/09/07/house-sawmill-andre-caetano-ana-fiuza-oeiras-portugal/ 

This reminds one of the statement from other clients who were given a courtyard house by their architect, where every room had only three walls and opened up to the courtyard. The comment was: "You don't go to an architect unless you want something different."

The published images of the house in Portugal seem to want to emphasise an extraordinary difference by using the same approach as that described as 'the architectural image' - illustrations of piecemeal, artfully framed, stylish voids that display the art of architecture. Life, it seems, is just too messy to be displayed.












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