These buildings are promoted as being everything one can expect of architecture: wild and new with a jolt. It sounds something like the latest in brain shock therapy: see - https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2022-04-26/3-wild-new-buildings-give-boston-an-architectural-jolt
But what do we see?
Why is the world so enthralled with things like this? Are we really so bored with life and ourselves that we need to seek out things ‘wild and new with a jolt,’ as one might talk about the latest drug to hit the streets? Are we so addicted to things that they have to become more and more extreme for them to have an impact, like drugs themselves? We need to ask more about this situation because we may all have to be rehabilitated so that we can extract ourselves from this demanding hype to allow ourselves to settle back into a more caring, a more subtle, responsible world that does not make such demands.
There is a flip side to this where even things that are really not that wild or jolting are promoted as being so, or photographed in such a unique manner as to make one believe that they are. The demand for excitement makes it essential that things should be so noticeable, or be nothing. So it is that our architecture becomes like Hadid’s work, and Gehry’s too, extreme in any and every way possible so that it can be seen to be the very wildest, new, with the greatest jolt: the very best!
We have to rediscover an architecture that can amaze us quietly, generate a contentment rather than give us the buzz that we expect from electroconvulsive therapies or street drugs. Has the social circumstance of hyping the body for treatment or enjoyment been taken up as an aim, an ambition for architectural experience, rather than developing an understanding of how place and bodies can interact to enrich both? We have to be careful here, for drugs are addictive; and seek out more exotic extremes. We might find ourselves in such an uncontrollable circumstance in architecture if we are not careful, working harder and harder to be wilder and more jolty.
The problem with such over expectant hype is that reports like this become mocked for their false exaggeration, even if they expose our condition. We need far better analysis than the suggestive proposition that buildings can be like addictive stimulants, even if we want them to be like this.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.