Saturday, 8 November 2025

ME-DERNITY: THE BATTLE TO BE BESPOKE


It has been argued that Modernity is singular: see – https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2023/05/architecture-is-not-singular.html; https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2017/12/solitary-architecture-ignoring-contexts.html; https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2019/03/architectures-two-remote-islands-too.htm; https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2020/02/villa-mairea-city-of-solitude.html. This argument has pointed to the way that modern architecture prefers to stand alone; that the ‘masterpieces’ are works that are either isolated physically; or stand and ignore everything around them as best they can; or are presented alone, framed from their context for everyone’s approving eyes to be fixed only on the iconic work, and nothing else.* So we see Wright’s Falling Water, the Eames house, Aalto’s Villa Mairea, Seidler’s mother’s house, Meis’s Farnsworth House, and the like all standing alone, isolated from any neighbouring interference, ideally ‘pure,’ with each wanting and getting all the attention for itself; while, if things are otherwise, the general fashion of architectural photography carefully removes all evidence of any context in any presentation or publication to simulate the iconic concept of greatness - singularity. The nonchalant, undiscerning eye, as seen in Street View - see: https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2017/10/the-need-for-street-view-in-architecture.html - is considered an irrelevance; the messy and careless, ordinary everyday. Everything is premised on ME seeing ‘Architecture’ knowingly, with an appreciative, selective, spectacular ‘aesthetic’ vision.^





With this uniquely separate, isolated stance being the most obvious claim for distinctiveness in identity, there is another singularity here that works on a different level. It is best exampled in its most brash and certain manner in Kevin McCloud’s Grand Designs. His suave, boldly assured, assertive statements tell it clearly: “Bespoke;” “Different;” “One off;” “The only one in the world;” “WOW!” are just a few words taken from a short segment of just one show; there are more, many more such phrases and terms. They are repeated often throughout the series, as the drinking game reveals, highlighting the essence of things ‘grand’ in this understanding of good, ‘great’ design, a concept embodied in the premise of the show: that excellence lies in designs that are unique – singular. The proposition is that the critical matter in design is that it stands out, proudly, starkly alone as a bespoke idea; a ‘one off.’ The defining quality of this vision is striking, distinct difference, with a lack of deference to anything but the project’s own bespoke identity.






Today, instead of caring for our cities, towns, and villages as thriving wholes, entities creating places for people to be, we merely create a conglomerate of separate sites available for competitive display, willy-nilly, to construct the highest building; the biggest building; the most . . . whatever . . . building. The declaration is: THIS IS ME/MINE! LOOK AT ME! Individuals are embroiled in this ambitious boasting with their seeking of a ‘star-like’ identity, interested in being noticed by creating a disruption, a determined, startling chaos in every aspect of our lives: things urban; suburban; car designs; driving cars; dress; television; media; meals; . . . and more, and more, with all these aspects of dwelling, of being, becoming only about clever ME, different ME, driven by the striving search to become increasingly assuredly singular - “Bespoke;” “Different;” “One off;” “The only one in the world;” “WOW!” It is all about ME!, and MY self-expression that seeks to have an impact on everyone and everything else – to be noticed.**






Community is given not one single thought other than it being the potential audience for MY genius and its acclaim; any idea of togetherness is irrelevant. It is MY & ME that demands attention, that defines this itemised, divergent, schizophrenic quality of Modernity that seeks only to attract a wondrous, admiring curiosity. Social media only ever encourages this flighty stance, creating headlines declaring that ‘Australians rave over . . . ’ and the like. It is a circumstance that might last for one second, suffering a decline in interest with time as the situation becomes increasingly ‘boring.’ This change is exampled in the news reports that delight in exposing the ‘Look at this star NOW!’ story. One needs to point out the saying that ‘Life is short; Art is long,’ noting how works of art outlive their creators;# that there are other things than the declaration of ME and MY assumed brilliance that endure and need our attention beyond the battle to be bespoke. There is the subtle wholeness in life that involves community, as best seen in language: communicated meaning understood by the group, by others. Difference might attract and entertain, even startle, for a second, until the next amazement arrives; but it fades into insignificance with time, like the ‘stars’ now photographed as sad, neglected, jaded figures: “Who would believe . . . ?” while one’s attention is off searching out the next BUZZ: WOW!, not realising the irony in the situation that converts the process of diminishment itself into an ‘eye-opening’ entertainment.+




We need to seek out an art that is rich, vital, alive with the lasting energy of and commitment to life itself, and all of its subtleties, instead of concentrating on all the perversions that attract the eye as arty, architectural porn. We need to engage the ‘heart and soul’ with that gentle, familiar, energising sameness, rather than constantly searching for berserk, bespoke differences and divergences that startle, sprawl, and shatter emotions rather than quietly enrich and contain them. The flush of life and its continuity is like the flow of a river, with the individual’s existence, that step into the flow, being short, while art endures, defining the flow and being defined by it. Things bespoke are the different splashes on the rock that get noticed, but soon dry up and disappear; and those different pools and eddies that form on the edges of the river, only to be eventually flushed away with the flow. It is this flow that art can embody, and which embodies art; everything else is a distraction; a fleeting, individual interruption to the momentum of wholeness that needs our attention.




This perception that design is ‘good’ when it is ‘grand,’ something differently exceptional and uncommon, is again revealed in the article on the ‘Swedish duo,’ Front: see -

https://www.dezeen.com/2025/10/31/front-sofia-lagerkvist-anna-lindgren-ai-interview/

The text explains how the drive is to be distinct:

the Swedish duo explain how curiosity helps them stay ahead of the curve.

Design is seen as a constant search for things new and unknown, surprising:

"It allows us to find new knowledge and do things we would never do otherwise," said Lindgren.

This concept of design embodies the notion of 'progress,' the constant move forward away from familiar things into vague, unfamiliar ‘futures’ preparing for the next WOW!:

This curiosity often leads to collaborations with experts in other fields, from scientists to manufacturers, and helps to explain why the pair are so good at anticipating future design trends.

Design is always ‘ahead,’ acting as the primary source of revelations that ‘prefigure’ possibilities and ‘educate the masses’ with constant change that is never satisfied, only entertained as perpetual amazements:
The project was a far-sighted pre-figuring of ideas that have since become embedded in the public consciousness through virtual reality, NFTs and the metaverse






The 'Swedish duo' must have flown Business Class with Qatar.

Qatar Airways has single line drawings on the Business Class cushions.


*

This article provides exact examples of this syndrome of modernity:

https://www.dezeen.com/2025/11/02/isolated-modernist-homes-roundup/


^

To equate the love of art with a love of fine sensations is to make of works of art a kind of aphrodisiac. The words “disinterested aesthetic contemplation” are a contradiction in terms and a pure non-sense.

“A Figure of Speech, or a Figure of Thought?”

Ananda K. Coomaraswamy


#

“Life is short, art long, opportunity fleeting, experience treacherous, judgment difficult.”

― Hippocrates

https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/18238-life-is-short-art-long-opportunity-fleeting-experience-treacherous-judgment

This is understood to mean not only that art endures, but that a lifetime may not be sufficient to adequately master the craft, a notion that requires personal humility rather than the heroic grandstanding of individuals demanding attention:

ars longa, vita brevis

Latin phrase

ars lon·​ga, vi·​ta bre·​vis ärs-ˈlȯŋ-ˌgä ˌwē-ˌtä-ˈbre-wis 

art is long, life is short learning one's craft takes so long that a lifetime may not be adequate

also works of art may outlive their creators

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ars%20longa%2C%20vita%20brevis


+

See: https://www.news.com.au/sport/olympics/swimming/olympic-goat-michael-phelps-is-completely-unrecognisable/news-story/eb4d9d5ac6b18b62e3843dd84f8a10ac


**

See:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-11-15/act-super-kaylene-whiskey-exhibition-national-portrait-gallery/106012440: No one like her in the universe!

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