| Anna Klingmann & Philipp Oswalt | 1999 | |
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Formlessness |
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| I The architecture of the last five years has shown a clear trend towards
simple, reduced forms. This is not only noticeable amongst the prophets
of a 'new simplicity' and the disciples of minimalism. High-tech architecture,
too, after a phase of techno-expression and pop-art has come closer to
the cool, calm objectivity of 'slick-skin' buildings, while the work of
O.M.A. and their successors has developed from collage buildings (e.g.
Dans Theater Den Haag) to almost monolithic structures (e.g. Congrexpo,
ZKM or the libraries for Paris). And Hans Kollhoff has turned from his
earlier expressive large-scale forms to 'conventionalism'. Following an
era of formal experimentation, eclecticism and fragmentation, beginning
with post-modernism and reaching its peak (and perhaps the end of the
line) with deconstruction, today's architecture appears to be developing
in the opposite direction. The most talked-about architecture of the present
day is being built in two countries largely untouched by post-modernism:
Switzerland and Holland. In contrast with the post-modern collage on the
one hand and the modernist concept of dividing up, separating out and
stacking on the other, there is a move towards monolithic coherence. It
is interesting that despite the many regional and theoretical diversities
this seems to be a general trend, which we call here 'formlessness'. Just as modernism was closely connected with the economy of a production-oriented society and thus with the optimization of the production process (fordism), post-modernism is the expression of a consumer society. With the shift from production to consumer oriented society the economy's demands on architecture have also changed. While industrial demands on architecture as a means of increasing production abated, economic pressure on it to perform as a market product grew. To maximize consumption it was necessary to satisfy the aesthetic tastes of a post-modern society. The result was a formal diversification of products. Packaging became a central feature of the economy. Whereas in the modern era function dominated (form follows function), in the post-modern context effect gained ground. Frivolous combinations of form and colour and any sort of geometry were now possible. Eclecticism was accelerated as the influence of the media on society spread. With increasing 'mediatization' politics, culture and architecture have become saturated with images. Architectural products and images are turned over at an ever-increasing rate. In a climate of short-lived aesthetic and cultural values the relevance of these images fades fast. The problem facing the architectural product is that, as in any area of fashion, it is subject to permanent demands for innovation in style which render it passé as soon as it is built. Through the separation of form and content and the exponential acceleration of fashion trends, form has become trivial and meaningless. The result of this development is the trend to 'no-style' architecture. The post-modern era also saw a change in construction clientele. Whereas the social-democratic state was the most important sponsor in post-war and modern times, since the 70s and 80s the initiative has come increasingly from the private sector, a shift from socialistic and social-democratic forms of economy and government to free capitalism and global markets. The new clientele build as developers for anonymous users. This in fact has generated a new demand for featureless buildings. While buildings in the modern era were standardized for technical reasons (mass production) or ideological reasons (equal standards for all), now the demand is for 'formless' buildings that allow the largest possible degree of flexibility of use by potential tenants and must therefore satisfy requirements of a most general and standard nature. For some years now, the Swiss architectural theorist, Martin Steinmann, has been analysing and describing developments in northern Swiss architecture. In the work of the minimalists he sees an attempt to escape the images of the media world - the contagion of objects through images - by means of an architecture that pre-empts these images. He claims this architecture avoids symbolizing anything, does not want to mean anything or refer to anything else, only wants to be itself, in exactly the same way as minimal art. "What you see is all you see", says Judd, meaning, according to Steinmann, "that works of minimal art refer to themselves, or more precisely: to the experience they induce in the onlooker, an experience whose subject is the experience itself." Things no longer mean anything, they no longer refer to anything else, but are only themselves and can thus be experienced directly. Because it presupposes a convention, meaning is an experience, as Steinmann explains, that reaches us indirectly through the medium of the convention. Minimalist architecture, in contrast, is concerned with a pre-semiotic experience. Only when it is freed from meaning is an architectonic object perceptible as such. The banality of present-day building briefs is the starting point of the conventionalist approach. As Hans Kollhoff says: "Let's not delude ourselves, or rather, stop deluding the public - office buildings that want to be competitive basically all look alike: approximately 3.6 meters floor height, wall grid dimensions of between 1.25 and 1.45 meters, a bilaterally symmetrical floor plan with a building depth of about 14 meters..." Which is why Kollhoff concludes that "in most cases the most economical, durable and easiest construction" is in conventional style. As with the minimalists, standardization and norms are accepted. However, in contrast to minimalism, banality is not aesthetically veiled and mysticized in specially selected materials, but simply exhibited. The disarming openness of conventionalism looks progressive at first, a revelation of the essence. But it is more than that. The conventionalists, too, want to transcend the banal, but via a different route, in which the normal is morally charged, is elevated to an ethical value and becomes an expression of the collective, the community. "There is a reassessment of values taking place that for a long time were considered dispensable." (Kollhoff). From their reading of architectural history the conventionalists understand the term 'convention' to mean a collective, common will. Kollhoff also describes how the structure of a building or the design of a facade follows more or less automatically from these canons of 'convention', from employing the stereotyped, classical architectural vocabulary (roof, base, corner, front, entrance etc.). Architecture appears to take refuge in its own cliché as the only way of protecting its autonomy and integrity from the media and the marketplace. Formlessness here is not openness and lack of definition of form, but the opposite: non-individual, universal, absolute form. The commonplace and generic supplies the pretext for eliminating individuality and propagating community and collective. The graphics are clear and stereotyped. Formlessness becomes a universal, unequivocal form. For Rem Koolhaas the generic, the featureless and the formless are the neutral basis of a subversive architectural strategy. He dispenses with the usual means of architectural expression in order to develop difference, heterogeneity, polarity and incident from this neutral base. Koolhaas distills the programmatic demands of a project down to the universal basic function, i.e., each project is first of all reduced to its most general form. What is a university library but an area, on which bookshelves are placed, and a path, along which the public is directed to them? What is an opera house but a shell for theatre productions and a place for the public to assemble to watch them? (Jeffrey Kipnis) In contrast to conventionalism and minimalism Koolhaas uses reduction as a method of subversive disestablishment to free a project of prevailing morality, convention and aesthetics. With each new project, the programme and organization are stripped of cultural, symbolic and stereotyped references and defined anew. In Koolhaas' work the generic defines itself in the first place via realistic parameters. Starting with the project's essential constituents - zoning, site, programme, access, engineering, construction, exterior - he develops an architecture, and thereby an aesthetic canon, of difference. He reduces the programme to its essence and uses this as a basis for a new interpretation along non-conventional lines. Thus the specific is distilled from the essence, the commonplace is presented anew and the usual becomes unusual. In the wake of the post-modern deluge of images and the attendant loss of meaning of form the concept of originality has been discredited. Criticism of originality has become a commonplace of the architectural discourse, though for varying reasons. The conventionalists want to suppress and eliminate the subjective, in order to preclude a continual stream of new, other, individualistic influences. In Kollhoff's words: "We must get rid of the myth of the architect who sits at his desk and invents something. It is this attitude that is responsible for all the catastrophes of the 20th century." The aim here is to exclude the individual from the planning process by reverting to an alleged tradition. Kollhoff repeatedly cites the architectural canons from which structure and design more or less automatically flow, the stereotyped 'conventions' of base, roof join, corner treatment, entrance etc. that dictate the form. In contrast to the classical modernists, who in their conception of space strove for a continuity of flow between interior and exterior as well as private and public areas, the minimalists favour a clear division. This separation is a logical consequence of the self-sufficiency of the objects, their removal from context, the radical reductionism of the architecture and the fetishization of the material along with concealment of use. The result is a radical division between exterior appearance and what is happening inside (use). The facade becomes an autonomous object by virtue of its imagery and its monolithic appearance. By means of its opacity it serves to veil the interior. Behind this seamless skin the building is hermetically sealed from its environment. Such buildings are introverted, referring back to themselves. The Pfaffenholz sports complex in St Louis by Herzog & DeMeuron is a good example. The building is windowless, completely detached from the nature around it. All sporting activity takes place inside. The "Kunstkiste", a similar project by the same architects, is a new museum in the urban centre of Bonn. Totally removed from its urban context it is entirely introverted. From outside it is almost impossible to even guess what uses the facade conceals. Formlessness in present-day architecture does not constitute a new aesthetic or formal agenda, but is instead on the one hand a programmatic starting point (the featurelessness of programmes, the devaluation of forms) and on the other hand a method of avoiding formalism and of establishing alternative agendas to the pursuit of any one style or form. It articulates the paradox of the simultaneous impossibility and necessity of form. Formlessness does not yet provide a satisfactory answer as to agenda or ambition of a project or architectural work. The strategies that we have touched upon are intended as examples of employing formlessness as a generative force for the creation of a new architecture. |
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Anna Klingmann & Philipp Oswalt published in : Arch+ 139 | Aachen | 1998 Location : http://www.oswalt.de/en/text/txt/formlos_p.html |
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