Friday, 23 December 2011

After Blogging

The texts have been poignant in relating architecture to political ideology, and society as a whole.

Blogging is a powerful tool allowing freedom of speech. There is no class system in the blogging world. Through writing one can develop and convey ideas, and it allows a platform to record those ideas and allow others to interact with them. Writing to express a theory is all about the reader, just as the final product of a building is all about the user. The different writing styles of the texts leads one to question who the audience is, and therefore the best way to express our ideas.

The power of the word should not be undermined. We began by discussing jargon in our every day society, and the social exclusion that this causes. The press also use words as an apparatus; spinning stories moneymaking stories as the unelected party with a commercial bias. Politicians, like buildings, have become superficial symbols of a country, mad into good and evil, selected for their charisma and spin stories – being photogenic, rather than for their integrity. The press and the consumer are attracted to the ease of black and white, the hero and the devil, incriminating victims before they have been proven innocent or guilty. But our world is not simple.

Hadid calls London a ‘city of lost opportunities’, whilst Hickey complains of the lack of any significant theorists. We need to seize opportunities and not wait for others to tell us what to do. The global crisis is very real, and we are a part of it.

Humans are susceptible to a kind of brainwashing through laziness and pressure – whether it be from religion, culture or politics. The pouring of mass hysteria at the death of Kim Jong Il was not so different from that when Princess Diana died. But we all have minds, which we should challenge in order to develop solutions and ideas.

There is no such thing as the Genius Architect working alone on a project for the greater good of mankind. Architecture and urbanism are about collaboration with the people and communities we are building in. An architectural education is not just limited to the time spent in Architectural School; it is all around us, in the politics and social agenda of the everyday.  

We must learn from past mistakes to inform the future. It is vital to understand the ideals the systems, the problems that have arisen and how this has worked. Every generation has issues to face up to, and ours is the financial crisis and the impact of technology – good and bad. And no one can resolve this except us.  



Saturday, 17 December 2011

The Architect as God

This week focuses on Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead and Evelyn Waugh’s Decline and Fall. Both look at the perception of The Architect, as a mythical God like figure, a recluse, detached from society. Yet both Roark and Silenus are crucial to the story. Perhaps the fact that we are comparing two stories set in such different contexts – Rand in the USA, and Waugh in class-driven Britain – is significant of the globalized society we live in.
Silenus is a remote mysterious character, appearing only at brief intervals. He is supremely confident in his ideas and mannerisms, yet unconcerned with society. His appearance at the end of the book in the chapter Resurrection, where he meets Paul who is about to go and study theology, boarders on the biblical. Silenus explains the meaning of life, insisting that he has found peace, and that Paul never will, embodying the stereotypical arrogant architect too important to even be able to sleep.[1]
Roark is just as aloof as Silenus, but whilst Silenus is all talk, Roark has some kind of integrity. He believes so much in himself that he won’t compromise on his style. In The Fountainhead everything is black and white, Roark is the clear hero, building for a better future, whilst the press is the enemy, corrupting the minds of the citizens.
We can also see this in our society, where the press hold a great deal of power, particularly over politicians – whoever The Sun backs will win the general election. It can still be hard to convince those in charge to build modern ideas – for example The Chelsea Barracks Scheme. And the architect is proved right at the end when of course everyone loves Roarke’s building, and he has become the creator of these fabulous modern appartments.
A running theme in these course texts is that of fame - making a name for yourself, to be remembered. Hadid, Faust, and Roark are all guilty of this. And it is perhaps Roark’s insult to Toohey that sums this up best:

Toohey: Why don’t you tell me what you think of me?
Roark: But I don’t think of you

Roark can be further compared to Goethe’s Faust. Like Faust he goes through a series of transformations from The Dreamer (at architecture school), to The Lover (Dominique who he loses to society), and The Developer (insisting that he knows best and believing so strongly that he can redesign the cityscape).
The architect as a God-like figure can be seen throughout history. In building churches and cathedrals, the architect was showing god’s work. As previously discussed, Le Corbusier certainly had a Faust like instinct, aspiring to leave his mark on the world. Hadid’s irritation at being asked to explain how she arrives at a concept can be interpreted as a subconscious desire to appear as a Goddess of Architecture who can instantly invent a new design. All these aloof figures who want to be remembered as The Genius, but in being so driven perhaps they have forgotten the bigger picture.


[1] Waugh E Decline and Fall page 194

Friday, 18 November 2011

Paranoia + The Revolution


This week as we read Allen Ginsbergs poem Howl (1955), and William Burroughs The Job (1969). 

The texts are both written in the hype of post-World War II USA, at the height of the Cold War, when a culture of paranoia was being fostered by figures such as Senator McCarthy, who manipulated the media to encourage suspicion of anyone who appeared to hold socialist ideals, as they might be a spy of the enemy.

When Howl was released, it went on trial for its explicit ideas, particularly on sexuality. Making something illegal, in a culture of rebellion, was perhaps the best publicity for Ginsberg – in creating paranoia McCarthy was also creating curiosity and suspicion by figures such as Burroughs and Ginsberg of the state itself.  This was a time that Berman states ‘the Faustian man became obsolete’,[1] it was perceived that modern economic development had come as far as it could go and it was time for something new.

The ideas expressed in both texts, revolutionary at the time, come across as paranoid and anarchic to the modern-day reader. Burroughs calls the written word a “virus that made the spoken word possible”.[2] He recognized the power that politicians had over people through the press. And now it is the press that manipulates the politicians - anything to sell papers. Politicians can’t survive with the press and they can’t survive without it. People read something and people talk about it. It is still not possible to be openly gay in politics, because the press will write about it. The Leveson enquiry is the result of the press becoming its own worst enemy, and in an age where the line between (anti-)propaganda and press has become blurred, it will be interesting to see the outcome.

We look back at the 60s as a time of hippies and freedom. America did not have to struggle with post-war debt. It was the time of the renewed American Dream, interior design and fashion. Yet Ginsberg’s poem begins “I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked”.[3] He is alluding to the obsessive society, convinced that anyone who did not share the same ideals must be mad.

The culture of suspicion and paranoia still exists in American society, where since 9/11 Muslims have become a part of racial exclusion. The Suspicions about communism and socialism are embedded into American society and politics, as made clear by the difficulty of Obama passing the recent Health Bill, the Republicans opposing the right to free medicine as a malicious socialist ideal.

But what happened to these drugged up hippies and dreams of freedom, they must look at the young generation now and be bored by their lack of passion, their obsession with watching endless sitcoms and playing fantasy video games, and their obnoxiousness at being bound by the nation and political ideas, of which much of society don’t understand or engage in. Hippy music festivals of the sexual revolution have been corrupted into commercial money-making machines.

After reading these texts, glimpsing the sense of rebellion, excitement, and hope from rebelling against the system, you can’t help but realize that Eagleton’s thoughts on the laziness of our society, who complain but don’t really do anything. There is a lack of real enthusiasm, passion and emotion for anything anymore. There was a time when there was so much hope for the future, and there is a possibility to return to that hope and drive, but we must recognize that the current situation is not sustainable first. The financial crisis gives the chance of rebellion and change, as it is proof that capitalism is not working.



[1] Berman M  All That Is Solid Melts Into Air  page 80
[2] Ginsberg A  Howl  1955
[3] Ginsberg A  Howl  1955

Saturday, 12 November 2011

The Tragedy of the Developer (Part II)

Imposing our own ideals on other cultures is not the answer.


In India I came across a charity who were rebuilding concrete homes for a community that traditionally lived in shelters with very low ceilings made from wood and leaves. These shelters were washed away in heavy rain, so the charity had stepped into help. However the local villagers could not accept these alien buildings made, with their high ceilings and electricity. So they rebuilt their own homes out of materials they could understand and trust, leaving the concrete buildings empty. 


   


Traditional town dwelling near Orccha, India vs. Imposed western ideals

Thursday, 10 November 2011

The Tragedy of The Developer

A Marxist theme is developing among the texts. This week Henri Lefebvre’s The Production of Space and Marshall Berman’s All That is Solid Melts Into Air form the basis of the discussion, which starts to relate Marxist theory directly to the notion of the architect and the built environment.
As a child of Eagleton’s ignorant post-golden age generation, Lefebvre’s dense text, which centres on the production (and corruption) of social space, is particularly challenging, and will no doubt require re-reading for years to come. 
The chapter Social Space begins by discussing how the notion of production has changed. Lefebvre writes that ‘The absolute Idea produces the world; next nature produces the human being; and then human being in turn…produces history, knowledge and self-consciousness – and hence that mind which reproduces the initial and ultimate Idea.’[1] This relates to Berman’s use of Goethe’s Faust as a representation of modernisation through his transformation from The Dreamer, to The Lover and finally The Developer – who becomes the Idea. As the Developer Faust strives to be the Idea, as he wants to be adored and worshipped. But as Berman alludes to in the title of his chapter, there can be no development without tragedy.
Faust undergoes an intellectual and cultural revolution, comparable to the Enlightenment, after which there is no going back. With good intentions he goes out to make a difference to the lives of the civilians, but rather than listening and assessing the real problems, he patronises them with his personal ideals on how society should be. 
At this point it is interesting to bring in Lefebvre’s theory of Social Space, which argues that every society of a particular time creates its own space. Ancient Rome was not just an agglomeration of Romans in Rome, it had its own spatial laws, dominated by temples, amphitheatres, and the gods, suited to the culture and beliefs of the time, and the intellectual ideas developed within Rome were related to its spatiality. So, if a society tries to copy the social space of another society, then a strange abstraction no longer related to the culture is created. This can be seen round the world as through the corruption of globalisation cities compete for the tallest buildings, of benefit as a political symbol rather than to the local community, and skylines blend into one. Chinese cities, for example, imitate capitalist urban design, rather than embodying the production of a socialist space.
Society cannot change without producing the appropriate space. Capitalism will only allow spaces that make the most profit to be produced, hence the shoddy state of new builds. Nostalgia, the devil of social space, is also rife among pastiche architecture. Prince Charles’ influence on British planning, most recently at the Chelsea Barracks, proves that we are in a strange feudal-capitalist-class driven society.

       
The destruction of old Hutong Housing in Beijing[2]; OMA CCTV Tower, Beijing[3]

If the capitalist financial crisis is, as Badiou suggests, about a housing crisis, then architects must play some role at the core of the capitalist system. Berman’s analysis of Faust tells us that The Developer is selfish, destroying communities in the wake of his own ideals. And the architect is no better, whoring himself out for the next big commission. We only have to look at the starchitects building in the UAE, USA and China, countries governed by completely different political ideals, to be proved of that. Iconic structures are using space as a product of control in order to show a dominance of power over society.

Architects, rulers and developers share the same common goal of making history and a name for themselves through their buildings, disregarding moral standards. Thousands of employees in air-conditioned London offices click away on their screens designing the next phallic skyscraper for governments hardly known for their human rights. Like Faust they outsource the dirty work ignoring to contemplate the horrific on site health and safety records, or communities that their baby will replace. How like the modernday architect, complaining about planning objections and ignoring the plight of discplaced community, is Faust, under the pretence of enriching the life of his citizens, forgets why a house might be symbolic to the elderly couple, worth more than any amount of money.

There cannot be development without destruction, whether that be of nature or the built environment. “All natural and human barriers fall before the rush of production and construction.”[4] The cruellest irony is that often these buildings, which destroy whole communities, are in fact just a façade, lit up at night to appear like they are used. In the build up to the Beijing 2008 Olympics, with stadiums built as the ultimate Chinese political symbol, many of the traditional Hutong Communities were destroyed to be replaced by skyscrapers in order to give the city a signature skyline symbolising progress. OMAs CCTV tower, for example, is empty, but is still lit at night to give the impression of being occupied, and thus a “success”.[5] Whilst developers and architects are sure that the next big project is what the world needs, what they need for satisfaction, the truth is that “men are not satisfied by the satisfaction of their conscious desires.”[6] 

In running away from Gretchen, Faust is like the heroic architect sacrificing their life for their work, with the notion that ‘he won’t be able to create anything unless he’s prepared to let everything go.’[7] Le Corbusier is perhaps the most obvious comparison to the Faustian developer, who “strives to change not only his own life, but everyone elses as well” by constructing a radically new social environment that will empty the old world or break it down”.[8] He wanted to exert so much control and leave his mark that he even invented his own measuring system. He tried to convince authorities to destroy whole cities and communities, and re-build according to his Modulor system, and impose his vision of life on all. So adamant in making an immortal name for himself. He had no real political agenda, trying to convince fascists and communists that his ideals were the same as each others. How fitting that the designer of concrete mass buildings lived in a shed.

Recently on a visit to La Tourette one of the friars living there complained of Corbusier competing with God in his daily routine. There is only one way to arrange each room, one way to go about your activities. Corbusiers legacy lives on, the architect is the creator.

Closer to home I can see all the problems mentioned above on the site of my unit project in Silvertown. The local community is trapped between heavy industry and London City Airport. The residents are constantly losing out to the big developers, the latest of whom is Crossrail. The area is essentially one big building site for Crossrail, which will eventually run through Silvertown, but not have a Crossrail station within it. A transport scheme being marketed for the benefit of East London is actually disrupting Silvertown and giving the area nothing in return.

It is impossible to know that were it not for this Faustian kind of development, had industrialization not happened, had a capatilist society not given the goal of money to the big software giants, whether I would be sitting here writing this blog on a computer. Maybe there would be no need for such a blog, maybe something even more exciting would have been invented, who knows. We cannot change history, but we can learn the lessons from tragic mistakes of the past. As the future we have the power to “create new modes of modernity, in which man will not exist for the sake of development, but development for the sake of man.”[9]



[1] Lefebvre H  The Production of Space page 68
[2] http://chinaexpat.com/wp-content/uploads/u659/P1000799_0.jpg
[3] http://www.architecturelist.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/cctv-building-beijing-001.jpg
[4] Berman M  All That Is Solid Melts Into Air  page 64
[5] Interestingly the artist Ai Weiwei refused to attend the Olympic Opening ceremeny in a form of a political process on China’s oppression. His collaborators on the Birds Nest Stadium, the European Architects Herzog & de Meuron, did. Go to China and you will easily be fooled by the ex-pat community that the lifestyle is amazing. Get to know some of the educated Chinese and then you will realise the truth.
[6] Berman M  All That Is Solid Melts Into Air  page 64
[7] Berman M  All That Is Solid Melts Into Air  page 48
[8] Berman M  All That Is Solid Melts Into Air  page 61
[9] Berman M  All That Is Solid Melts Into Air  page 86

Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Interlude: A Human Face


Today we had a live blogging session, which led me to question the value of human interaction in the age of online degrees, skype, texting and email. Communicating in the virtual world is not the same as the real world. CAD is the tool of the office, but sketching, writing and discussing are the keys to developing architectural ideas. Technology is an aid, not a replacement for the human voice and face – attending live gig or lecture is still more enjoyable than watching through the screen. Live in the real, not through robots.  

After Theory - What Next?


Terry Eagleton’s After Theory examines the academic generation after the ‘golden age’ of cultural theory in the mid 20th century. By referring to the golden age, Eagleton is implying that the height of cultural theory has been and gone, and he mourns the missed opportunity for any exciting or significant contributions to the theoretical world since. But After Theory is not about being nostalgic, but rather it is futuristic in its outlook – provoking the reader to focus on the unsustainable present world and its failings, which still has potential, so long as we react now.

Like the Enlightenment, the golden age has transformed the way we see the world, ‘there is no going back’.[1] Yet the current generation are ignorant to what cultural theory really is, content to accept society as it is, complaining passively rather than taking the time to actively question and change. We are more interested in reading about Kate Middleton’s wedding dress, or the latest football scores than understanding EU policy changes or political Marxist theories. How many of us, dipoloma architecture students, were actually familiar with the theorists that EagIeton refers to in his opening paragraph before reading the text?

Eagleton questions education as a product impossible to define quantitively, and increasingly lacking rigorous judgement of the critique. There is an inherent short-sighted selfishness in the greed that Capitalism survives on, whereby we don’t look further than our immediate surroundings, and “it is suited to those in power that we should be able to imagine no alternative present.”[2] Life and theory have become intertwined in a distorted way - ‘The fashionable topic is the erotic body, not the famished one”.[3] Dubai survives on ex-pats coming to work and “forgetting” (or ignoring) the slavery, which is constructing the buildings they design, live, and work in. For it is Capitalist Corporate firms that have designed the most prominent buildings in Dubai’s skyline.

But this is the platinum credit card age.  Capitalism runs to the core of the education system. By charging money for education, many of the most respected educational institutions, including The AA, The Ivy Leagues, and now the state-funded British Universities, run according to Capitalism. Capitalism creates it’s own kind of elitism, eliminating the human right for education - is it really a surprise that the dramatic increase in fees saw a 17% drop in Architecture (a 5 year degree without secure job prospects) applicants.[4] Higher Education is not just about buying knowledge, anyone can sit in on lectures, or have a library membership, but it is also in part about buying an affiliation with a university.[5]

The title of the opening chapter The Politics of Amnesia alludes to the fact that we have forgotten the bigger picture, a similar idea to the Badiou movie scenario. As discussed in the Badiou entry, often those in power use jargon as it is in their interest that we, as the civilians, don’t question. It is clear that many politicians hate dealing with the very constituents that put them in power, making politics an advertising game of charisma, gimmicks, graphics, and slogans, with the televised election debates, under the pretence of being there to make politics more popular, in fact made a further mockery of this marketing game. The press were more interested on the race between two brothers than the political ideologies of the Milibands. The reality is that constituents are more addicted to X Factor than Prime-Ministers Question Time. It is astonishing that people will pay to have a say on who lives in the Big Brother House, yet not bother to vote in the political elections which directly affect them, once again relating back to Badiou’s movie scenario.[6]

Politicians are so disillusioned with reality that they wonder why students would rather protest than vote, and were shocked by the summer riots.[7] Needless to say what did the protest actually achieve, other than the arrest of some of societies most educated?  The government, and non-students, ignore the protests in their very own country, yet are quick to support The Arab Spring or the freeing of Ai Weiwei.  “Other people’s revolutions are always more eye-catching than one’s own”[8]

In fact Eagleton only misses the “old fashioned bourgeouis values” as they were transparent. Capitalism is conceited and pretends to be open to everyone, when in fact that is not really the case. Ignorance is bliss, until it hits you back in the face, and short-sightedness has convinced us that capitalism has rid society of the class system. In fact we are still obsessed with status, only now it is money that determines class, the difference is that the class system now extends globally. Capitalism is the International Class System, thriving on the sweatshops of the poor. “Marxism did not assume that ‘Third World’ meant good and ‘First World’ bad”, but we do.[9] Governments give aid packages to poorer countries as a disguise to buy allegiance, and Western gap-year programs make a living from middle-class children paying to lay a few bricks in an ex-colonial country for the good of their CV. Ex-pats create communities abroad bringing Starbucks and McDonalds with them. Nor are exploitation and slavery dead. Dubai uses slave labour to build the Pyramids of tomorrow, suppressing the majority so that the privileged few can boast their power and wealth. Similarly, as Badiou suggested, bankers use technical jargon so that only the educated economists can understand how they are gambling with our money. Capitalism thrives on the fact that there are always losers, but cause and effect teaches us that this is not sustainable. Previously, like the ex-pats we mock in Dubai, we chose to ignore the losers. But ‘capitalism is an impeccably inclusive creed: it really doesn’t care who it exploits’, and now we are now the losers.[10]

Over referencing leads to stale, mediocre, and repetitive ideas, and the monotonous skyscrapers and pastiche architecture in the global cities of the 21st century show this in physical form. One begins to understand that Vegas, by staking the odds, and allowing anyone to play, is actually a rebellion of Capitalism. It is taking the piss with its endless money-losing games, and society content with working its way up from food to drinks. Hickey, in his comparison of criting art to the slot machines, was alluding to the same conclusion – that the majority just copy one another and do not really think. The lack of good architecture and theory is already haunting us. Eagleton is warning us to be more ambitious in our thoughts in order to make sense of what is going on around us, to develop rather than go back.

The problem of not thinking in fact goes back to the core of our education system, which has become a memory test - a student can gain a decent GCSE grades just by regurgitating information. Theory can only take us somewhere if we are passionate about thinking, using and understanding the fundamental theories of the golden age rather than preoccupying ourselves with the race for the largest bibliography.

The digital age could be the saviour of cultural theory, but only if we realise how and react on it. It has already paid part in the Arab Spring after all. The blog promotes freedom of speech, and is an addictive expression of ideas. The instant nature of blogging and commenting can potentially allow for a new kind of development and collaboration of minds. Blogging is like Vegas – you as the blogger make the rules.






[1] Eagleton T After Theory  page 1
[2] Eagleton T After Theory  page 7
[3] Eagleton T After Theory  page 2
[4] Ibid.
[5] Noone will forget the film Good Will Hunting where Matt Damon’s character claims to learn more for free from the library than the Harvard students spending $40,000 a year.
[6] There is also irony in the fact that viewers enjoy playing Big Brother through their t.v. screens, forgetting about the CCTV society we live in.
[7] Students were largely disgrunteled that they voted for the Liberal Democrats due to a policy about not raising tuition fees, yet once in power they compromised on the policy. Equally, it is a failing of society that the summer riots occurred.
[8] Eagleton T After Theory  page 8
[9] Eagleton T After Theory  page 9
[10] Eagleton T After Theory  page 19