Archive for the ‘03 Reviews’ Category

Politics and Prejudices

Tuesday, October 3rd, 2006

I brought politics with me to the Biennale, and so shouldn’t have been surprised to find them there. Of course there’s always going to be an element of Nationalism, or of self-promotion from some countries – it’s inherent in the structure of pavilions, all competing for attention, column inches, and a crowd at their openings. Some countries transcended this – Hungary, for example, wittily explored an issue that Europe and the US urgently need to address, the often-ignored influence, through immigration and commerce, of East Asian culture; meanwhile South Africa had tourist brochures available, belying the impact of some of their exhibition with glossy testaments to the country’s achievements.

You could see the relative successes of the publicity games over the opening weekend in the bags on people’s shoulders. Rotterdam 2007 was a big hit, and so were Denmark and Great Britain. And even after all the other shoulder bags had been handed out, Israel couldn’t have given them away. I wasn’t anxious for an Israeli bag, even before I had seen the content of their pavilion, but it was to the United States pavilion that I brought my real prejudices.

I walked around Building on Higher Ground crossly. Asking myself with what hypocrisy could the US present responses to the devastation wreaked by Hurricane Katrina, when the actual response had been so negligent? Where were the panels addressing the displaced poor? Where were the admissions that the Government had ‘messed up’? And it was only later, after I had visited, been engrossed in, and generally applauded the presentations in the Irish pavilion that I realised how unfair I was being. SubUrban to SuperRural showed the responses of nine Irish architectural practices to Ireland’s growing urban and suburban sprawl. Some of the presentations were sensible, some fantastical, some extremely clever and some thought-provoking. So where was my sense of disgust at the Irish Government? Their historical corruption, which has led to a blighted countryside, and appalling problems for suburban commuter families, is currently being investigated by a Tribunal of Enquiry. While government support is generally necessary to bring an exhibition to the Biennale, I have to remember to try to look at the ideas in the presentation, not the politics of the country. In this, of course, Israel failed on both counts.

‘Starchitects’ travel the world, bringing their visions and solutions across the divisions that the national boundaries (exemplified by the pavilions) create. Commerce also transcends national boundaries, and it seemed to me as I thought about how unfair I was being to the US, that as national political influence loses ground to international trends and multinational finance, political Nationalism grows ever stronger.

As a separate conclusion, I was also struck (yet again) by the misleading (and sometimes downright mendacious) exhibition strategies architects and developers employ. The worst and most brutally disproportionate towers and buildings are usually modelled in gleaming (and sometimes illuminated) perspex. The word ‘podium’ conjures bandstands, but usually means a cement block with a car park underneath. The skies are always blue and nothing is ever ever dirty. This thought came to me in Singapore (the pavilion, not the country), and again while flicking through the Arup book that was handed out to people drunkenly leaving the party at the Gaggiandre. Pages and pages of images of beautiful meadows and blissfully peaceful wildlife seemed rather incompatible with the development the book was intending to promote. Perhaps I’m being unfair, I can’t check back as the book was too much to carry home, along with lots of other bits of paper and books (so many also from pavilions promoting ’sustainability’) that I left it behind in my hotel.

The Dark Side

Monday, September 25th, 2006

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In addition to the immediacy of this Superblog - which is a fantastic idea - I thought The Architectural Review, Urban Splash, and White Partners Dark Side discussions (see image) held at the Palazzo Contarini was a fantastic idea. It brought together architects-to young to be included in the biennale- late every evening (from 11:00-1:00) to present new work and hear from a group of distinguished jury of peers. The hosts Robert White and Paul Finch were able to tie these projects into a larger discussion of Cities, Architecture and Society. It engaged a wide array of disparate but critical voices – exactly what was missing from the official positions on view at the Arsenale.

Promises and Lies

Monday, September 25th, 2006

Odile, bless her, spoke for many when she wondered what had happened to architecture this year. But a break, however brief, from starchitecture was welcome nonetheless, no? The bits of this Biennale that stick in the mind are the promises and the lies (is that too harsh?). France was the initial standout but on the first Monday, after the opening, the stairs of their house were barred… It was like nobody was at home or worse, nobody was welcome anymore. They were on one side of the do-not-pass-the-crime-scene tape, we were on the other. I’ll be back in November and, hopefully, we’ll all be ‘chez France’ again. If it was just that the mosquitoes were getting to them, like they were to me, I’ll understand…

So it’s the oddities, the radicals, that linger most. The nobel, proud, shocking confrontation of the barrios of Venezuela: no help needed, thank you! Russia, with its flooded, barrell-organ city that rains nuclear fallout (or fishfood?) rather than Disney’s snow… and the tiny, poignant glimpse of the lagoon that became a panorama in the cardboard model cell that fronted it. Japan, sensual as you want, breath-taking and tactile (they’ll sell you gorgeous, bagged samples of bamboo, rope made from rice straw and charred cedar with the exhibition catalogues but don’t get caught touching the real thing!). That crazy Korean cartoon about death, burial and living forever through starburst cell phone messages… The RCA’s joyous, riotous London, MIT’s ecstatic, Big Brother Rome and C Magazine’s amazing photographs. And two long, unforgiving walks to the end of the line: Greece’s subtle and confounding intelligence about the archipelago and the poetry of China’s roof-tile square, an unforgettable rumination on the effects of modernisation, both rewarded every footstep and more.

But it is the paradigm shift represented by the Arsenale that is ultimately important. The most telling observation of all was by Christopher Hawthorne in the LA Times, reflecting on the denoument in New York that had Lords Foster and Rogers traversing the Atlantic from Venice to New York and back again during Vernissage: “After a decade in which architects and their clients grew obsessed with image ˜ as digital technology made the stunning two-dimensional rendering as powerful a force in the field as any completed building ˜ the shift is overdue. After all, the lessons seem all too clear at the World Trade Center site, where the participation of the world’s top architects failed to budge developer Larry Silverstein or Port Authority bureaucrats even an inch from entrenched positions. The rebuilding process there ought to be primarily remembered, at least in architecture, as a place where image took on power and was soundly routed.” Hmmm.

From an insular viewpoint: shocked to find Dublin described by our neighbours in the Padiglione Italia as a “shrinking city” (apparently the definition of shrinking cities is a hot topic for discussion in Germany, too, especially in Halle - and is gleefully exploited by the officials of Hamburg, among others) in the year that Ireland’s population reached its highest since 1861 and the capital’s inner city population increased dramatically, largely through immigration; but absolutely terrified by the implications of the European rail-v-air travel share over the next generation as set out in the Arsenale in Ricky’s Europe of Regions (2025) v Europe of Cities (2005) exhibit. In my mind, it moves heneghan.peng.architects’ proposal for a rail link between Ireland and Wales to Ireland’s top-of-the-survival charts. Ireland’s exhibit will come home in the New Year, the basis for a series of national discussions and debates. In an election year and with population growth over the next generation projected at up to 38%, you might say it’s gotta be shit or bust.

The Worst Pavilions

Monday, September 25th, 2006

Switzerland : I didn’t get the humour in it, if there was any.
France : for its affordable “hedonism” and nothing more (le pur plaisir de ne rien inventer).
Finland : one of the nicest pavilions, with well presented (even not too bad) projects. A fatal combination of good potential + irrelevant result.

There are, sadly some even worse pavilions.
With the exception of a few remarkable shows at the Padiglione Italia (Italian Pavilion), I wasn’t thrilled by the Biennale. The generous amount of colourful visuals, playful devices, sculptural rooftops, little huts and pretension has quickly driven me into a state of bored architectural disgust. Maybe it’s just the indigestion effect.

We are all aware of how difficult it is to show architecture but this is not a reason for tiring the visitor with the display of excessive and often meaningless gesticulations or boring him with selections of domestic projects of poor theoretical interest, in an attempt at sobriety.

The anachronistic concept of a national pavilion would become more exciting if transformed in a space/place for hosting trans-national views, experiences and projects.

I was not shocked by the absence of Architecture, but disappointed by the absence of intelligence and by the reluctance of many to keep to the theme, despite its undeniable interest. Some urgent, fundamental questions were raised; I do hope we’ll try to answer them.

The Giardini: the micro tour

Tuesday, September 19th, 2006

Apology and disclaimer: if some reviews seem cursory and superficial, it is because they are.

France

Some good looking people live in an atomised house, its elements spread about the pavilion, including a sauna on the roof. Not 100% original but put a smile on the face. ****

Germany

Decided like the French to expand onto the roof , in this case to make a point about adapting cities. One hates to confirm national stereotypes but the German roof has more efficient circulation than the French, and less joie de vivre. ***

Britain

Steel town of Sheffield gets the Calvino treatment. Nice try but a little too friendly. Music at the opening by the electrifying Long Blondes. ***

Canada

Exercise bicycles powering movies. Something to do with the environment. I’m afraid I just didn’t get this. **

South Korea

Tongue-in-cheek celebration of residential real estate. ***1/2

Japan

Fujimori and friends show how to save the world by building in charcoal, thatch etc. Appealing, and a nicely reflective atmosphere in the din of the Biennale, but perhaps a little too cute. Hello Kitty goes eco. And conservative. ****

Russia

Went into ground floor. Saw a lugubrious film about a project. Went no further. My apologies. Unfair to rate.

Venezuela

Most resonant and inspiring statement in the Giardini. “Understand this: our cities are born from a different society. We cannot imitate them. Ours (the third world) is different. It has different roots and another fate. Your recipes, which are the recipes of entertainment, are useless to us. Let us mend our errors our way, and the consequences your outrage. Do not judge us without understanding us. In the future we may even be able to teach you something.” Aerial photos of Barrios (see also Sara Muzio’s film in the Biennale). Venice is crackers about Caracas this year. ***1/2

Denmark

Projects by young Danes for developing China in a sustainable way. Serious. Are the Chinese listening? ****

Nordic pavilion

Svere Fehn’s pavilion, an exercise in sophisticated tree-hugging, on its own makes it worth coming here every two years. The exhibit was about very northern and cold cities and looked thorough and thoughtful, but it was one of those that should have been a book. **1/2

Switzerland

Dominican Republic + history of slavery and sugar planting + Bernard Tschumi = “elliptical” city. I’m sorry, I didn’t get it. **

Czech Republic

Work of students hung on scaffolding. Not sure what the message was. *1/2

Australia

Responses to Australian urban/suburban conditions. Some projects nice enough. Not gripping. **

Spain

Women speaking about cities out of pristine glass boxes: Almodovar meets Clinique display. The technology made it hard to find out what they were all saying. ***

Belgium

The Beige Badge of Boringness or, Sing if You’re Glad to be Ordinary: a celebration of Belgian neutrality. The whole country laid out in a single photograph, which is impressive, and intriguing labyrinthine installation, plus a film of wilful tedium: glass office blocks with nothing happening etc. ***1/2

Netherlands

Dutch visions of future cities since early last century. Nice to have a little of the perspective of history, but I didn’t understand the many timber slats of the installation. ***1/2

Finland

Some fairly interesting residential projects, straightforwardly presented. Not much to do with the Biennale theme, and oblivious to the prevailing mood of looking beyond the architectural object.
**

Hungary

Colourful installations resembling artificial flora that sing when touched. Apparently something to do with China. But very, very baffling, and a little kitsch, like a weird variant on the Venetian mask/glass/paper shop.
**1/2

Israel

The biennale’s most controversial pavilion, probably inadvertently. A study of Israeli memorial architecture which has upset some by failing to acknowledge that others suffer too, including Palestinians (see Charles Jencks Superblog interview). Complexity, they say, is denied. The critics quite possibly have a point, but these superficial and cursory reviews are not the place to rush to judgement on issue such as this, so no rating.

Brazil

Another variation on the dominant Biennale idea of showing cities as case studies, using the formula of data + films of City Life = architecture. In this case Sao Paulo. **1/2

Austria

Takes on the city by Kiesler, Hollein and Gregor Eichinger. As with the Dutch Pavilion, it’s nice to go into the past, but a bit terse and short on explanation. ***1/2

Serbia

A big nearly empty space with quite a lot of noise and some average projects. It might have been easier to fill this room when it represented the whole of Yugoslavia. *

Egypt

Doors locked. The only permanent pavilion representing either Africa or the Arab world was unable, for whatever reason, to exhibit.

Poland

A film of Warsaw in which an imaginary elevated glass tube takes pedestrians and cyclists through the city in hygienic serenity. Would this actually be nice? Or a bit chilling?
***1/2

Romania

Make your own city using large dice-like objects. ***

Greece

The Aegean Islands as a case study in places made by tourism, seasonal fluctuation and the movement
of people. Thought provoking, but too many words: another one that is too book-like. ***

MAXXI (not a country)

Rome’s new Hadid-designed museum of contemporary art combines photos of its construction with other Roman projects under construction. Nicely presented. ***

USA

Katrina. How shocking it was. Some suggestions (how plausible?) about what to do about it. Question: if you were being rehoused after a flood, would you want your home to be a commentary on the flood, or just a home?
***

Italian Pavilion

The best part of the Biennale, where different institutions pick up the Cities theme and play with it. Highlights include:

Domus magazine’s study of Pyongyang, North Korea, culminating in proposals for the 1000-foot high, pyramidal, never-completed Ryugyong hotel, the concrete shell of which is the city’s most conspicuous and embarrassing landmark. Brilliant, witty and serious. Real research and real discovery for the viewer, which is not often to be had in the Biennale. Teeters on the edge of being too ironic and stylish in relation to the extremely grim subject of North Korea, but stays on the right side. Communicates, through projected images, in 3-D and with few words, which is what you want in the Biennale. *****

Ireland

A study of the Super Rural, or how to create urbanism in the countryside. ***1/2

Royal College of Art

Humming, gaudy, multimedia study of London that is an antidote to the statistics in the Arsenale. The city as lived and made, with the capacity to exhilarate and terrify. ****1/2 and ***** for the wonderful video Driving with the Joneses.

C-Photo

Super-charged photography glitteringly displayed. Close at times to straying into catastrophe chic. ****

OMA/AMO on the Gulf States

Rem’s two offspring do their now familiar operation of treating spectacular but derided phenomena with respect. Facts, especially perverse ones, are assembled. Deadpan provocations are made. Bien pensant assumptions are challenged. Your perception of the world is shifted. Does Rem like this stuff or not? As always, he won’t say. ****

Wake up call

Friday, September 15th, 2006

Back in the UK a lot of people seem to be whining about not enough architecture; was the Arsenale show just a book writ large? Where were all the ideas? Blah, blah, blah

By chance I needed to refer today to a copy of Buckminster Fuller’s World Design Science Decade manual which he launched in London way back in 1961. Fuller, genius engineer and philosopher understood about global warming and resources depletion before anybody else, coining the title “Spaceship Earth” to explain the sensitivity and circularity of the world’s eco system. Fuller called on the architectural profession to take note of his concerns, to join in a ten-year research project to help make the world work better. Fuller understood the impact that architects and planners were having on the sustainability of the planet. But the architectural profession ignored him, perhaps there was too much writing

If architects had accepted Bucky’s invitation then we would be in less of a mess than we are now.

The issues raised by Richard Burdett in the Arsenale are equally significant for the profession. Richard Sennett described the show as “architecture’s wake up call”. Architects have slept through one crisis; let’s hope they don’t ignore this one.

The problem with Venice is not Burdett’s display in the Arsenale, or his curation of the Italian pavilion which had some excellent contributions – it is the feeble effort of many of the national pavilions to provide a creative response to the biennale’s theme. The Danes and Irish did, the Japanese elegantly ignored it; the Dutch lazily trawled through their drawings collection; the Israelis made a political statement. Even the much lauded ‘Big Brother’ French Pavilion was a bit of a cop out. In contrast Nigel Coates and the RCA in their Baby-Lon don brilliantly illustrated how creative thinking and not a little humour can be brought to bear on urban issues. How refreshing after Rem Koolhaas’s laissez faire take on Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

I do hope that the 2006 Biennale will prove to be influential, that creative professionals will heed Sennett’s wake up call; because cities are too important to be left to the engineers, the politicians and the economists.

ICONS OF THE BIENNALE

Friday, September 15th, 2006

Download f_pav_justin_mcguirk.MOV

Download f_pav_marcus_fairs.MOV

Your Black Horizon

Tuesday, September 12th, 2006

I managed to miss the boat to catch the first part of this talk, but arriving at the Island of San Lazzaro degli Armeni (Venice’s graveyard island) and sitting on the grass listening to the panel’s discussion, as the sun slowly set over Venice, was one of the most enjoyable moments of the Biennale.

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The subject of this discussion was the David Adjaye pavilion that was commissioned by the Thyssen Bornemisza Art Contemporary foundation to house the Olafur Eliasson work ‘Your black horizon’ – a work that previously existed, in a slightly different form, within the foundation’s collection, and that was adapted in this collaborative project between architect and artist, to create something that is inspired by both disciplines yet can be relegated to neither.

The discussion touched on several key subjects in the art and architecture worlds today. The Thyssen Bornemisza Art Contemporary foundation plans to commission a series of collaborative pavilions to be placed all over the world. The nature of this idea led the panel to debate the concept of art work as pilgrimage site (for example Robert Smithson’s Spiral Jetty) and how this has become more widespread due to the globalisation of the art world, which in turn can reinforce the work as a commodity. This struck me as important in the context of not only the pavilion in question, but also in relation to the proliferation of art and architecture biennales and art fairs: a global circuit which creates a virtual city and economy of its own, with the same critics, artists, architects, curators, collectors, patrons and general hangers on, travelling around the world, pitching their exclusive, temporary mini-cities, in a self-congratulatory fashion.

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Location was also discussed – if this pavilion was situated in the Mestre, where the rubbish is processed and the surroundings are a stark contrast to the serenity of San Lazzaro, would it, and the work inside it, be interpreted differently by the viewer? Of course they would, this is unavoidable, as meaning and context is partly created through place. Thus, if the pavilion is transported around the world, it will create different new meaning and interpretation in each place it is situated. Whether this is problematic remains undecided – can the work reach beyond the place? Can museum as archipelago be the future as Hans Ulrich Obrist suggested?

The panelists digressed further into discussing whether commissioning and placing pavilions all over the world would become conceptually comparative to museums such as the Guggenheim, who have several spaces in different places, all conforming to the one brand. Olafur Eliasson went on to question the proliferation of curatorial courses that now exist globally and asked how we can train curators to work within institutions, that are subject to their own market and economic forces within the industry they operate in, to be able to produce curatorial work that transcends this, rather that being absorbed by the superficial nature of producing a product. The art work or content must surely be more important than the brand.

After the talk I finally entered the Adjaye pavilion to view Eliasson’s work, which proved to be a stark contrast to the mellow, evening sun. As the title ‘Your black horizon’ suggests, the interior is pitch black and leaves you struggling to find your footsteps as your vision adjusts. Eliasson has created a horizon of light that sharply splits the dark and guides you into the pavilion, eventually fully surrounding you. Your eye becomes fixated by the light as this provides your only awareness of space, which actually heightens your sense of physicality. The light changes every few minutes as it rotates through colours, simulated to recreate those that you would experience on an average day in Venice, as the sun rises and falls. This experience left me with the feeling that considering your own relation to the space your are in, at any one time, is fundamentally important, whether you are in Venice, the middle of Dubai or any other city.

Participants:
David Adjaye Architect, London
Olafur Eliasson Artist, Berlin
Jude Kelly Artistic Director, South Bank Centre, London
Hans-Ulrich Obrist Co-director of Exhibitions and Programmes and Director of International Projects, Serpentine Gallery, London
Andreas Ruby Architectural critic and theorist, Cologne
Francesca von Habsburg Chairman, Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary

Quick Thoughts

Monday, September 11th, 2006

The Biennale is always about cities.  Rationalist cities, remembered cities, whacky cities, theatrical cities, post-modern cities.  Architects love cities, they’re full of buildings.  There’s nothing controversial there. But actually, they’ve always been far more about the trees than the wood. For this one, Ricky Burdett got wood.  Cities are big.  For the first time in our species’ history most of us now live in them.  The countryside’s for cows.

I heard that Ricky’s big idea upset a few architects who thought the show should be more about them (more?), apparently there were too few icons for some.  I can’t ever see too few icons, I was all with Ricky on this one from the beginning.  The problem though is the politics.  Cities are serious. They are corrupt, they seethe with poverty and inequity.  They are venal and visceral, far more machines for living in than ever were Corb’s little cubes.  They are also unknowable, unpredictable, the sites of riots and war, of slums and slaughters.  While I think Burdett has taken the necessary first step in the abandonment of form for form’s sake he seems to have been loath to really bite.  The Arsenale is a good effort, powerful post-Rem stats and graphics, brilliant 3D ECGs of extruded and mapped density, but it remains an attenuated text, overwhelming its underwhelming, rather wishy-washy conclusions.  Cities are big.  Getting bigger.  They are full of buildings, many of which are getting taller.  Some will soon have Olympics in them.  Many have poverty in them.  And public transport could be better. But, as is made perfectly clear in the British Pavilion, ultimately cities are not about buildings they are about people.

Bless.

I remain grateful not to know what the latest generation of concert halls and architecture centres will look like, how the new digitally generated towers will twist and weave they way into the clouds.  But on the other hand I miss the meaty stuff.  New Orleans is here but where’s Baghdad?  Where’s Beirut?  And the clearances in Zimbabwe, the destruction of the archaeology of the oldest cities in the Euphrates basin, how is terror changing our cities, how is not being able to take a tube of toothpaste onto a plane going to save the world?  What is happening to travel, to borders?

The two pavilions which could best have addressed these issues tackled instead a hurricane and the commemoration of dead Israeli soldiers.   These things, they seem to be saying are all acts of God and we are powerless.  We can only look on in awe and commemorate.  Israel’s pavilion is an offensive disgrace.

As the Art Biennale becomes ever more crowded, ever more unpleasant, ever more celebrity-driven, as it panders increasingly to the richest of the buyers and the richest of galleries, the Architecture Biennale has a real opportunity to transform itself from a self-congratulatory, masturbatory gathering of architects and academics into a thing of real substance which can become to make a real social and economic impact.  Ricky Burdett has made the crucial first step, it would be absurd to criticise him for trying.  But it remains, a first step and the increasingly real danger is that next time we will see the reaction, a return to the wilful and the whacky, the familiar circle-jerk of theory and post-rationalisation of arbitrary form. That is what architecture schools and magazines are for.

I was surprised that the pavilions stayed more or less on message.  I thought architects always questioned the brief.  Some were good, most were disappointing rubbish.  I liked the British pavilion even it the impact of its quirky blend of chippy pop and as-found approach lacked the visceral impact which makes for the most memorable of pavilions.  The French and Germans did OK but I couldn’t really see any point to either.  Tschumi’s Swiss pavilion made me want to go home immediately.  For a country with the best architecture on the planet this was either tragedy or irony.

The Hungarians were superb.  The installations based on cheap tat found in the Chinese fleamarket in Budapest’s cheapest quartier made a sly and real point about the trade deficits between east and west, about consumer culture and about immigration and the changing nature of the centres of cities in the face on (still) increasing suburbanisation.

I liked the Gogolian darkness and absurdity of the Russian pavilion and the exquisite dullness of the Belgians, a self-deprecating and beautiful thesis on the ordinary which seemed to be lacking elsewhere.  I also liked the Venezualan approach of fuck off, don’t preach to us and let us get on with it.  A big DO NOT DISTURB sign with a certain Borgesian obfuscation.  The Far East, with the exception of Japan, remains disappointing.

Burdett’s urban, anti-icon approach did not seem to keep the stars away, any offence they had taken was merely mock-horror.  The event seems to be an increasingly important networking and status-seeking binge, it being important to be seen, yet there was no real dialogue, the discussions were weak, the criticisms were few.  Architecture’s elite have become hugely powerful and everyone seems afraid to offend their peers who may be on juries or committees and standing up against them in the near future.  The atmosphere is over cosy and only the installations which drift closer to art seem to retain the desire to provoke and even these succeed only rarely.

I genuinely enjoyed not seeing the new icons and though Burdett got it fairly right but I worry for the state of international architecture when a real opportunity like this turns out to be so conventional, telling us what we already know rather than what we don’t want to hear, skirting politics and the awful culture of jet-set globalised corporate crap which is homogenising urban centres.  There is also a pervading sense of a lack of context.  Venice is such a dream city, a setting which exists as powerfully in our collective memories as it does in reality, the proto-heritage-theme-park, that it should give us the platform to kick against and instead the pavilions would have been as comfortable in a convention centre as in this surreal setting among the model-pavilion-ciphers for fascist architecture, colonial design and the deadest hand of Deco.  Where Rossi’s theatre of the world used Venice’s absurdity to make a point about archetypes and form, about architecture’s Carnevale tendency, nothing here seemed to reflect on this particular city instead we are given the city as idea, as technocratic construct of stats and aerial views, each seen from a balloon rather than the street.  These are not the cities of Eugene Atget, Richard Wentworth or Borges but of those which appear on the models of corporate architects, those which exist to frame the big, bold, bland new developments which are fucking up their very fabric.

It is a start but it needs more work.

Japanese Pavilion

Sunday, September 10th, 2006

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