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Deconstructivism

Deconstructivism is a postmodern architectural movement which appeared in the 1980s. It gives the impression of the fragmentation of the constructed building, commonly characterised by an absence of obvious harmony, continuity, or symmetry.[1] Its name is a portmanteau of Constructivism and "Deconstruction", a form of semiotic analysis developed by the French philosopher Jacques Derrida. Architects whose work is often described as deconstructivist (though in many cases the architects themselves reject the label) include Zaha Hadid, Peter Eisenman, Frank Gehry, Rem Koolhaas, Daniel Libeskind, Bernard Tschumi, and Coop Himmelb(l)au.[1]

The term does not inherently refer to the style's deconstructed visuals as the English adjective suggests, but instead derives from the movement's foundations in contrast to the Russian Constructivist movement during the First World War that "broke the rules" of classical architecture through the French language.[2]

Besides fragmentation, deconstructivism often manipulates the structure's surface skin and deploys non-rectilinear shapes which appear to distort and dislocate established elements of architecture. The finished visual appearance is characterized by unpredictability and controlled chaos.

History, context and influences edit

Deconstructivism came to public notice with the 1982 Parc de la Villette architectural design competition, in particular the entry from Jacques Derrida and Peter Eisenman[3] and the winning entry by Bernard Tschumi, as well as the Museum of Modern Art’s 1988 Deconstructivist Architecture exhibition in New York, organized by Philip Johnson and Mark Wigley. Tschumi stated that calling the work of these architects a "movement" or a new "style" was out of context and showed a lack of understanding of their ideas, and believed that Deconstructivism was simply a move against the practice of PoMo, which he said involved "making Doric temple forms out of plywood".[4]

Other influential exhibitions include the 1989 opening of the Wexner Center for the Arts in Columbus, designed by Peter Eisenman. The New York exhibition has featured works by Frank Gehry, Daniel Libeskind, Rem Koolhaas, Peter Eisenman, Zaha Hadid, Coop Himmelb(l)au, and Bernard Tschumi. Since their exhibitions, some architects associated with Deconstructivism have distanced themselves from it; nonetheless, the term has stuck and has come to embrace a general trend within Contemporary architecture.

Modernism and postmodernism edit

 
Seattle Central Library by Rem Koolhaas and OMA

The term Deconstructivism in contemporary architecture is opposed to the ordered rationality of Modernism and Postmodernism. Though postmodernist and nascent deconstructivist architects both published in the journal Oppositions (published between 1973 and 1984), that journal's contents mark a decisive break between the two movements. Deconstructivism took a confrontational stance to architectural history, wanting to "disassemble" architecture.[5] While postmodernism returned to embrace the historical references that modernism had shunned, possibly ironically, deconstructivism rejected the postmodern acceptance of such references, as well as the idea of ornament as an after-thought or decoration.[citation needed]

In addition to Oppositions, a defining text for both deconstructivism and postmodernism was Robert Venturi's Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture (1966). It argues against the purity, clarity and simplicity of modernism. With its publication, functionalism and rationalism, the two main branches of modernism, were overturned as paradigms. The reading of the postmodernist Venturi was that ornament and historical allusion added a richness to architecture that modernism had foregone. Some Postmodern architects endeavored to reapply ornament even to economical and minimal buildings, described by Venturi as "the decorated shed". Rationalism of design was dismissed but the functionalism of the building was still somewhat intact. This is close to the thesis of Venturi's next major work,[6] that signs and ornament can be applied to a pragmatic architecture, and instill the philosophic complexities of semiology.[citation needed]

The deconstructivist reading of Complexity and Contradiction is quite different. The basic building was the subject of problematics and intricacies in deconstructivism, with no detachment for ornament. Rather than separating ornament and function, like postmodernists such as Venturi, the functional aspects of buildings were called into question. Geometry was to deconstructivists what ornament was to postmodernists, the subject of complication, and this complication of geometry was in turn, applied to the functional, structural, and spatial aspects of deconstructivist buildings. One example of deconstructivist complexity is Frank Gehry's Vitra Design Museum in Weil-am-Rhein, which takes the typical unadorned white cube of modernist art galleries and deconstructs it, using geometries reminiscent of cubism and abstract expressionism. This subverts the functional aspects of modernist simplicity while taking modernism, particularly the international style, of which its white stucco skin is reminiscent, as a starting point. Another example of the deconstructivist reading of Complexity and Contradiction is Peter Eisenman's Wexner Center for the Arts. The Wexner Center takes the archetypal form of the castle, which it then imbues with complexity in a series of cuts and fragmentations. A three-dimensional grid runs somewhat arbitrarily through the building. The grid, as a reference to modernism, of which it is an accoutrement, collides with the medieval antiquity of a castle. Some of the grid's columns intentionally do not reach the ground, hovering over stairways creating a sense of neurotic unease and contradicting the structural purpose of the column. The Wexner Center deconstructs the archetype of the castle and renders its spaces and structure with conflict and difference.[citation needed]

Deconstructivist philosophy edit

Some Deconstructivist architects were influenced by the French philosopher Jacques Derrida. Eisenman was a friend of Derrida, but even so his approach to architectural design was developed long before he became a Deconstructivist. For him Deconstructivism should be considered an extension of his interest in radical formalism. Some practitioners of deconstructivism were also influenced by the formal experimentation and geometric imbalances of Russian constructivism. There are additional references in deconstructivism to 20th-century movements: the modernism/postmodernism interplay, expressionism, cubism, minimalism and contemporary art. Deconstructivism attempts to move away from the supposedly constricting 'rules' of modernism such as "form follows function", "purity of form", and "truth to materials".[citation needed]

 
Libeskind's Imperial War Museum North in Trafford, Greater Manchester (2002). An archetype of deconstructivist architecture, it comprises three fragmented, intersecting curved volumes, symbolizing the destruction of war.

The main channel from deconstructivist philosophy to architectural theory was through the philosopher Jacques Derrida's influence with Peter Eisenman. Eisenman drew some philosophical bases from the literary movement Deconstruction, and collaborated directly with Derrida on projects including an entry for the Parc de la Villette competition, documented in Chora l Works. Both Derrida and Eisenman, as well as Daniel Libeskind[7] were concerned with the "metaphysics of presence", and this is the main subject of deconstructivist philosophy in architecture theory. The presupposition is that architecture is a language capable of communicating meaning and of receiving treatments by methods of linguistic philosophy.[8] The dialectic of presence and absence, or solid and void occurs in much of Eisenman's projects, both built and unbuilt. Both Derrida and Eisenman believe that the locus, or place of presence, is architecture, and the same dialectic of presence and absence is found in construction and deconstructivism.[9]

According to Derrida, readings of texts are best carried out when working with classical narrative structures. Any architectural deconstructivism requires the existence of a particular archetypal construction, a strongly-established conventional expectation to play flexibly against.[10] The design of Frank Gehry’s own Santa Monica residence, (from 1978), has been cited as a prototypical deconstructivist building. His starting point was a prototypical suburban house embodied with a typical set of intended social meanings. Gehry altered its massing, spatial envelopes, planes and other expectations in a playful subversion, an act of "de"construction"[11]

In addition to Derrida's concepts of the metaphysics of presence and deconstructivism, his notions of trace and erasure, embodied in his philosophy of writing and arche-writing[12] found their way into deconstructivist memorials. Daniel Libeskind envisioned many of his early projects as a form of writing or discourse on writing and often works with a form of concrete poetry. He made architectural sculptures out of books and often coated the models in texts, openly making his architecture refer to writing. The notions of trace and erasure were taken up by Libeskind in essays and in his project for the Jewish Museum Berlin. The museum is conceived as a trace of the erasure of the Holocaust, intended to make its subject legible and poignant. Memorials such as Maya Lin's Vietnam Veterans Memorial and Peter Eisenman's Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe are also said to reflect themes of trace and erasure.

Constructivism and Russian Futurism edit

Another major current in deconstructivist architecture takes inspiration from the Constructivist and Russian Futurist movements of the early twentieth century, both in their graphics and in their visionary architecture, little of which was actually constructed.

Artists Naum Gabo, El Lissitzky, Kazimir Malevich, and Alexander Rodchenko, have influenced the graphic sense of geometric forms of deconstructivist architects such as Zaha Hadid and Coop Himmelb(l)au. Both Deconstructivism and Constructivism have been concerned with the tectonics of making an abstract assemblage. Both were concerned with the radical simplicity of geometric forms as the primary artistic content, expressed in graphics, sculpture and architecture. The Constructivist tendency toward purism, though, is absent in Deconstructivism: form is often deformed when construction is deconstructed. Also lessened or absent is the advocacy of socialist and collectivist causes.

The primary graphic motifs of constructivism were the rectangular bar and the triangular wedge, others were the more basic geometries of the square and the circle. In his series Prouns, El Lizzitzky assembled collections of geometries at various angles floating free in space. They evoke basic structural units such as bars of steel or sawn lumber loosely attached, piled, or scattered. They were also often drafted and share aspects with technical drawing and engineering drawing. Similar in composition is the deconstructivist series Micromegas by Daniel Libeskind.

The symbolic breakdown of the wall effected by introducing the Constructivist motifs of tilted and crossed bars sets up a subversion of the walls that define the bar itself. ... This apparent chaos actually constructs the walls that define the bar; it is the structure. The internal disorder produces the bar while splitting it even as gashes open up along its length.

— Phillip Johnson and Mark Wigley, Deconstructive Architecture, p. 34

Contemporary art edit

Two strains of modern art, minimalism and cubism, have had an influence on deconstructivism. Analytical cubism had a sure effect on deconstructivism, as forms and content are dissected and viewed from different perspectives simultaneously. A synchronicity of disjoined space is evident in many of the works of Frank Gehry and Bernard Tschumi. Synthetic cubism, with its application of found object art, is not as great an influence on deconstructivism as Analytical cubism, but is still found in the earlier and more vernacular works of Frank Gehry. Deconstructivism also shares with minimalism a disconnection from cultural references.

With its tendency toward deformation and dislocation, there is also an aspect of expressionism and expressionist architecture associated with deconstructivism. At times deconstructivism mirrors varieties of expressionism, neo-expressionism, and abstract expressionism as well. The angular forms of the Ufa Cinema Center by Coop Himmelb(l)au recall the abstract geometries of the numbered paintings of Franz Kline, in their unadorned masses. The UFA Cinema Center also would make a likely setting for the angular figures depicted in urban German street scenes by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner. The work of Wassily Kandinsky also bears similarities to deconstructivist architecture. His movement into abstract expressionism and away from figurative work,[13] is in the same spirit as the deconstructivist rejection of ornament for geometries.

Several artists in the 1980s and 1990s contributed work that influenced or took part in deconstructivism. Maya Lin and Rachel Whiteread are two examples. Lin's 1982 project for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, with its granite slabs severing the ground plane, is one. Its shard-like form and reduction of content to a minimalist text influenced deconstructivism, with its sense of fragmentation and emphasis on reading the monument. Lin also contributed work for Eisenman's Wexner Center. Rachel Whiteread's cast architectural spaces are another instance where contemporary art is confluent with architecture. Ghost (1990), an entire living space cast in plaster, solidifying the void, alludes to Derrida's notion of architectural presence. Gordon Matta-Clark's Building cuts were deconstructed sections of buildings exhibited in art galleries.

1988 MoMA exhibition edit

Mark Wigley and Philip Johnson curated the 1988 Museum of Modern Art exhibition Deconstructivist architecture, which crystallized the movement, and brought fame and notoriety to its key practitioners. The architects presented at the exhibition were Peter Eisenman, Frank Gehry, Zaha Hadid, Coop Himmelblau, Rem Koolhaas, Daniel Libeskind, and Bernard Tschumi. Mark Wigley wrote the accompanying essay and tried to show a common thread among the various architects whose work was usually more noted for their differences.

The projects in this exhibition mark a different sensibility, one in which the dream of pure form has been disturbed.

It is the ability to disturb our thinking about form that makes these projects deconstructive.

The show examines an episode, a point of intersection between several architects where each constructs an unsettling building by exploiting the hidden potential of modernism.

— Phillip Johnson and Mark Wigley, excerpt from the MoMA Deconstructivist Architecture catalog

Computer-aided design edit

Computer-aided design is now an essential tool in most aspects of contemporary architecture, but the particular nature of deconstructivism makes the use of computers especially pertinent. Three-dimensional modelling and animation (virtual and physical) assists in the conception of very complicated spaces, while the ability to link computer models to manufacturing jigs (CAM—computer-aided manufacturing) allows the mass production of subtly different modular elements to be achieved at affordable costs. Also, Gehry is noted for producing many physical models as well as computer models as part of his design process. Though the computer has made the designing of complex shapes much easier, not everything that looks odd is "deconstructivist".

Gallery edit

Critical responses edit

Since the publication of Kenneth Frampton's Modern Architecture: A Critical History (first edition 1980) there has been a keen consciousness of the role of criticism within architectural theory. Whilst referencing Derrida as a philosophical influence, deconstructivism can also be seen as having as much a basis in critical theory as the other major offshoot of postmodernism, critical regionalism. The two aspects of critical theory, urgency and analysis, are found in deconstructivism. There is a tendency to re-examine and critique other works or precedents in deconstructivism, and also a tendency to set aesthetic issues in the foreground. An example of this is the Wexner Center. Critical Theory, however, had at its core a critique of capitalism and its excess, and from that respect many of the works of the Deconstructivists would fail in that regard if only they are made for an elite and are, as objects, highly expensive, despite whatever critique they may claim to impart on the conventions of design.

The difference between criticality in deconstructivism and criticality in critical regionalism is that critical regionalism reduces the overall level of complexity involved and maintains a clearer analysis while attempting to reconcile modernist architecture with local differences. In effect, this leads to a modernist "vernacular". Critical regionalism displays a lack of self-criticism and a utopianism of place. Deconstructivism, meanwhile, maintains a level of self-criticism and a dystopianism of place, as well as external criticism and tends towards maintaining a level of complexity. Some architects identified with the movement, notably Frank Gehry, have actively rejected the classification of their work as deconstructivist.[14]

Critics of deconstructivism see it as a purely formal exercise with little social significance. Kenneth Frampton finds it "elitist and detached".[15] Nikos Salingaros calls deconstructivism a "viral expression" that invades design thinking in order to build destroyed forms; while curiously similar to both Derrida's and Philip Johnson's descriptions, this is meant as a harsh condemnation of the entire movement.[16] Other criticisms are similar to those of deconstructivist philosophy—that since the act of deconstructivism is not an empirical process, it can result in whatever an architect wishes, and it thus suffers from a lack of consistency. Today there is a sense that the philosophical underpinnings of the beginning of the movement have been lost, and all that is left is the aesthetic of deconstructivism.[17] Other criticisms reject the premise that architecture is a language capable of being the subject of linguistic philosophy, or, if it was a language in the past, critics claim it is no longer.[8] Others question the wisdom and impact on future generations of an architecture that rejects the past and presents no clear values as replacements and which often pursues strategies that are intentionally aggressive to human senses.[8]

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Taschen & Taschen 2016, p. 148.
  2. ^ "What is Deconstructivism?". ArchDaily. 2018-08-12. Retrieved 2020-07-19.
  3. ^ Jacques Derrida and Peter Eisenman, Chora L Works (New York: Monacelli Press, 1997)
  4. ^ Rem Koolhaas and Bernard Tschumi in Conversation, 18 May 2001, ETH Zürich.
  5. ^ Tschumi, Architecture and Disjunction
  6. ^ Venturi (1977), Learning From Las Vegas
  7. ^ Libeskind, Daniel. "Imperial War Museum North Earth Time" 2007-10-21 at the Wayback Machine quote "This project develops the realm of the in between, the inter-est.... Pointing to that which is absent". Retrieved April, 2006
  8. ^ a b c Curl, James Stevens (2006). A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (Paperback) (Second ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860678-8.
  9. ^ Eisenman and Derrida, Choral Works
  10. ^ Derrida, Of Grammatology
  11. ^ Holloway, Robert (1994)."Mattaclarking" 2007-05-17 at the Wayback Machine Dissertation Exploring the work of Gordon Matta-Clark. Retrieved April, 2006.
  12. ^ Derrida, Of Grammatology (1967)
  13. ^ Kandinsky, "Point and Line to Plane"
  14. ^ Said Frank Gehry of Eisenman's Aronoff Center, "The best thing about Peter's buildings is the insane spaces he ends up with.... All that other stuff, the philosophy and all, is just bullshit as far as I'm concerned." Quoted in Peter Eisenman, Peter Eisenman: 1990-1997, ed. Richard C. Levene and Fernando Márquez Cecilia (Madrid: El Croquis Editorial, 1997), 46.
  15. ^ Frampton, Kenneth. Modern Architecture: A Critical History. Thames & Hudson, 3rd edition, 1992, p. 313
  16. ^ Salingaros, Nikos. "Anti-Architecture and Deconstruction", Umbau-Verlag, 3rd edition, 2008
  17. ^ Chakraborty, Judhajit; Deconstruction: From Philosophy to Design. Arizona State University, retrieved June 2006. "Today, in the mid 90s the term 'deconstructivism' is used casually to label any work that favours complexity over simplicity and dramatises the formal possibilities of digital production."

General and cited references edit

  • Bony, Anne (2012). L'Architecture Moderne (in French). Larousse. ISBN 978-2-03-587641-6.
  • Derrida, Jacques (1967). Of Grammatology, (hardcover: ISBN 0-8018-1841-9, paperback: ISBN 0-8018-1879-6, corrected edition: ISBN 0-8018-5830-5) trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak. Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Derrida, Jacques & Eisenman, Peter (1997). Chora l Works. Monacelli Press. ISBN 1-885254-40-7.
  • Derrida, Jacques & Husserl, Edmund (1989). Edmund Husserl's Origin of Geometry: An Introduction. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-6580-8
  • Frampton, Kenneth (1992). Modern Architecture, a critical history. Thames & Hudson- Third Edition. ISBN 0-500-20257-5
  • Johnson, Phillip & Wigley, Mark (1988). Deconstructivist Architecture: The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Little Brown and Company. ISBN 0-87070-298-X
  • Hays, K.M. (ed.) (1998). Oppositions Reader. Princeton Architectural Press. ISBN 1-56898-153-8
  • Kandinsky, Wassily. Point and Line to Plane. Dover Publications, New York. ISBN 0-486-23808-3
  • McLeod, Mary, "Architecture and Politics in the Reagan Era: From Postmodernism to Deconstructivism," "Assemblage," 8 (1989), pp. 23–59.
  • Poisson, Michel (2009). 1000 Immeubles et monuments de Paris (in French). Parigramme. ISBN 978-2-84096-539-8.
  • Rickey, George (1995). Constructivism: Origins and Evolution. George Braziller; Revised edition. ISBN 0-8076-1381-9
  • Salingaros, Nikos (2008). "Anti-Architecture and Deconstruction", 3rd edition. Umbau-Verlag, Solingen, Germany. ISBN 978-3-937954-09-7
  • Taschen, Aurelia; Taschen, Balthazar (2016). L'Architecture Moderne de A à Z (in French). Bibliotheca Universalis. ISBN 978-3-8365-5630-9.
  • Tschumi, Bernard (1994). Architecture and Disjunction. The MIT Press. Cambridge. ISBN 0-262-20094-5
  • Van der Straeten, Bart. Retrieved April, 2006.
  • Venturi, Robert (1966). Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture, The Museum of Modern Art Press, New York. ISBN 0-87070-282-3
  • Venturi, Robert (1977). Learning from Las Vegas (with D. Scott Brown and S. Izenour), Cambridge MA, 1972, revised 1977. ISBN 0-262-72006-X
  • Wigley, Mark (1995). The Architecture of Deconstruction: Derrida's Haunt. The MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-73114-2.
  • Vicente Esteban Medina (2003) Forma y composición en la Arquitectura deconstructivista, © Tesis doctoral, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. Registro Propiedad Intellectual Madrid Nº 16/2005/3967. Link de descarga de tesis en pdf: http://oa.upm.es/481/

External links edit

  • (in German)
  • Vicente Esteban Medina (2003). Forma y composición en la Arquitectura deconstructivista (in Spanish)

deconstructivism, this, article, about, architectural, style, movement, known, deconstructivism, philosophical, idea, deconstruction, other, uses, deconstruction, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve,. This article is about the architectural style or movement known as deconstructivism For the philosophical idea see deconstruction For other uses see deconstruction disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Deconstructivism news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs more complete citations for verification Please help add missing citation information so that sources are clearly identifiable November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Deconstructivism is a postmodern architectural movement which appeared in the 1980s It gives the impression of the fragmentation of the constructed building commonly characterised by an absence of obvious harmony continuity or symmetry 1 Its name is a portmanteau of Constructivism and Deconstruction a form of semiotic analysis developed by the French philosopher Jacques Derrida Architects whose work is often described as deconstructivist though in many cases the architects themselves reject the label include Zaha Hadid Peter Eisenman Frank Gehry Rem Koolhaas Daniel Libeskind Bernard Tschumi and Coop Himmelb l au 1 DeconstructivismWalt Disney Concert Hall by Frank Gehry Los Angeles CaliforniaInfluencesConstructivist architecture Post structuralist philosophyThe term does not inherently refer to the style s deconstructed visuals as the English adjective suggests but instead derives from the movement s foundations in contrast to the Russian Constructivist movement during the First World War that broke the rules of classical architecture through the French language 2 Besides fragmentation deconstructivism often manipulates the structure s surface skin and deploys non rectilinear shapes which appear to distort and dislocate established elements of architecture The finished visual appearance is characterized by unpredictability and controlled chaos Contents 1 History context and influences 1 1 Modernism and postmodernism 1 2 Deconstructivist philosophy 1 3 Constructivism and Russian Futurism 1 4 Contemporary art 1 5 1988 MoMA exhibition 1 6 Computer aided design 2 Gallery 3 Critical responses 4 See also 5 Citations 6 General and cited references 7 External linksHistory context and influences editDeconstructivism came to public notice with the 1982 Parc de la Villette architectural design competition in particular the entry from Jacques Derrida and Peter Eisenman 3 and the winning entry by Bernard Tschumi as well as the Museum of Modern Art s 1988 Deconstructivist Architecture exhibition in New York organized by Philip Johnson and Mark Wigley Tschumi stated that calling the work of these architects a movement or a new style was out of context and showed a lack of understanding of their ideas and believed that Deconstructivism was simply a move against the practice of PoMo which he said involved making Doric temple forms out of plywood 4 Other influential exhibitions include the 1989 opening of the Wexner Center for the Arts in Columbus designed by Peter Eisenman The New York exhibition has featured works by Frank Gehry Daniel Libeskind Rem Koolhaas Peter Eisenman Zaha Hadid Coop Himmelb l au and Bernard Tschumi Since their exhibitions some architects associated with Deconstructivism have distanced themselves from it nonetheless the term has stuck and has come to embrace a general trend within Contemporary architecture Modernism and postmodernism edit nbsp Seattle Central Library by Rem Koolhaas and OMAThe term Deconstructivism in contemporary architecture is opposed to the ordered rationality of Modernism and Postmodernism Though postmodernist and nascent deconstructivist architects both published in the journal Oppositions published between 1973 and 1984 that journal s contents mark a decisive break between the two movements Deconstructivism took a confrontational stance to architectural history wanting to disassemble architecture 5 While postmodernism returned to embrace the historical references that modernism had shunned possibly ironically deconstructivism rejected the postmodern acceptance of such references as well as the idea of ornament as an after thought or decoration citation needed In addition to Oppositions a defining text for both deconstructivism and postmodernism was Robert Venturi s Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture 1966 It argues against the purity clarity and simplicity of modernism With its publication functionalism and rationalism the two main branches of modernism were overturned as paradigms The reading of the postmodernist Venturi was that ornament and historical allusion added a richness to architecture that modernism had foregone Some Postmodern architects endeavored to reapply ornament even to economical and minimal buildings described by Venturi as the decorated shed Rationalism of design was dismissed but the functionalism of the building was still somewhat intact This is close to the thesis of Venturi s next major work 6 that signs and ornament can be applied to a pragmatic architecture and instill the philosophic complexities of semiology citation needed The deconstructivist reading of Complexity and Contradiction is quite different The basic building was the subject of problematics and intricacies in deconstructivism with no detachment for ornament Rather than separating ornament and function like postmodernists such as Venturi the functional aspects of buildings were called into question Geometry was to deconstructivists what ornament was to postmodernists the subject of complication and this complication of geometry was in turn applied to the functional structural and spatial aspects of deconstructivist buildings One example of deconstructivist complexity is Frank Gehry s Vitra Design Museum in Weil am Rhein which takes the typical unadorned white cube of modernist art galleries and deconstructs it using geometries reminiscent of cubism and abstract expressionism This subverts the functional aspects of modernist simplicity while taking modernism particularly the international style of which its white stucco skin is reminiscent as a starting point Another example of the deconstructivist reading of Complexity and Contradiction is Peter Eisenman s Wexner Center for the Arts The Wexner Center takes the archetypal form of the castle which it then imbues with complexity in a series of cuts and fragmentations A three dimensional grid runs somewhat arbitrarily through the building The grid as a reference to modernism of which it is an accoutrement collides with the medieval antiquity of a castle Some of the grid s columns intentionally do not reach the ground hovering over stairways creating a sense of neurotic unease and contradicting the structural purpose of the column The Wexner Center deconstructs the archetype of the castle and renders its spaces and structure with conflict and difference citation needed Deconstructivist philosophy edit Some Deconstructivist architects were influenced by the French philosopher Jacques Derrida Eisenman was a friend of Derrida but even so his approach to architectural design was developed long before he became a Deconstructivist For him Deconstructivism should be considered an extension of his interest in radical formalism Some practitioners of deconstructivism were also influenced by the formal experimentation and geometric imbalances of Russian constructivism There are additional references in deconstructivism to 20th century movements the modernism postmodernism interplay expressionism cubism minimalism and contemporary art Deconstructivism attempts to move away from the supposedly constricting rules of modernism such as form follows function purity of form and truth to materials citation needed nbsp Libeskind s Imperial War Museum North in Trafford Greater Manchester 2002 An archetype of deconstructivist architecture it comprises three fragmented intersecting curved volumes symbolizing the destruction of war The main channel from deconstructivist philosophy to architectural theory was through the philosopher Jacques Derrida s influence with Peter Eisenman Eisenman drew some philosophical bases from the literary movement Deconstruction and collaborated directly with Derrida on projects including an entry for the Parc de la Villette competition documented in Chora l Works Both Derrida and Eisenman as well as Daniel Libeskind 7 were concerned with the metaphysics of presence and this is the main subject of deconstructivist philosophy in architecture theory The presupposition is that architecture is a language capable of communicating meaning and of receiving treatments by methods of linguistic philosophy 8 The dialectic of presence and absence or solid and void occurs in much of Eisenman s projects both built and unbuilt Both Derrida and Eisenman believe that the locus or place of presence is architecture and the same dialectic of presence and absence is found in construction and deconstructivism 9 According to Derrida readings of texts are best carried out when working with classical narrative structures Any architectural deconstructivism requires the existence of a particular archetypal construction a strongly established conventional expectation to play flexibly against 10 The design of Frank Gehry s own Santa Monica residence from 1978 has been cited as a prototypical deconstructivist building His starting point was a prototypical suburban house embodied with a typical set of intended social meanings Gehry altered its massing spatial envelopes planes and other expectations in a playful subversion an act of de construction 11 In addition to Derrida s concepts of the metaphysics of presence and deconstructivism his notions of trace and erasure embodied in his philosophy of writing and arche writing 12 found their way into deconstructivist memorials Daniel Libeskind envisioned many of his early projects as a form of writing or discourse on writing and often works with a form of concrete poetry He made architectural sculptures out of books and often coated the models in texts openly making his architecture refer to writing The notions of trace and erasure were taken up by Libeskind in essays and in his project for the Jewish Museum Berlin The museum is conceived as a trace of the erasure of the Holocaust intended to make its subject legible and poignant Memorials such as Maya Lin s Vietnam Veterans Memorial and Peter Eisenman s Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe are also said to reflect themes of trace and erasure Constructivism and Russian Futurism edit Another major current in deconstructivist architecture takes inspiration from the Constructivist and Russian Futurist movements of the early twentieth century both in their graphics and in their visionary architecture little of which was actually constructed Artists Naum Gabo El Lissitzky Kazimir Malevich and Alexander Rodchenko have influenced the graphic sense of geometric forms of deconstructivist architects such as Zaha Hadid and Coop Himmelb l au Both Deconstructivism and Constructivism have been concerned with the tectonics of making an abstract assemblage Both were concerned with the radical simplicity of geometric forms as the primary artistic content expressed in graphics sculpture and architecture The Constructivist tendency toward purism though is absent in Deconstructivism form is often deformed when construction is deconstructed Also lessened or absent is the advocacy of socialist and collectivist causes The primary graphic motifs of constructivism were the rectangular bar and the triangular wedge others were the more basic geometries of the square and the circle In his series Prouns El Lizzitzky assembled collections of geometries at various angles floating free in space They evoke basic structural units such as bars of steel or sawn lumber loosely attached piled or scattered They were also often drafted and share aspects with technical drawing and engineering drawing Similar in composition is the deconstructivist series Micromegas by Daniel Libeskind The symbolic breakdown of the wall effected by introducing the Constructivist motifs of tilted and crossed bars sets up a subversion of the walls that define the bar itself This apparent chaos actually constructs the walls that define the bar it is the structure The internal disorder produces the bar while splitting it even as gashes open up along its length Phillip Johnson and Mark Wigley Deconstructive Architecture p 34 Contemporary art edit Two strains of modern art minimalism and cubism have had an influence on deconstructivism Analytical cubism had a sure effect on deconstructivism as forms and content are dissected and viewed from different perspectives simultaneously A synchronicity of disjoined space is evident in many of the works of Frank Gehry and Bernard Tschumi Synthetic cubism with its application of found object art is not as great an influence on deconstructivism as Analytical cubism but is still found in the earlier and more vernacular works of Frank Gehry Deconstructivism also shares with minimalism a disconnection from cultural references With its tendency toward deformation and dislocation there is also an aspect of expressionism and expressionist architecture associated with deconstructivism At times deconstructivism mirrors varieties of expressionism neo expressionism and abstract expressionism as well The angular forms of the Ufa Cinema Center by Coop Himmelb l au recall the abstract geometries of the numbered paintings of Franz Kline in their unadorned masses The UFA Cinema Center also would make a likely setting for the angular figures depicted in urban German street scenes by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner The work of Wassily Kandinsky also bears similarities to deconstructivist architecture His movement into abstract expressionism and away from figurative work 13 is in the same spirit as the deconstructivist rejection of ornament for geometries Several artists in the 1980s and 1990s contributed work that influenced or took part in deconstructivism Maya Lin and Rachel Whiteread are two examples Lin s 1982 project for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial with its granite slabs severing the ground plane is one Its shard like form and reduction of content to a minimalist text influenced deconstructivism with its sense of fragmentation and emphasis on reading the monument Lin also contributed work for Eisenman s Wexner Center Rachel Whiteread s cast architectural spaces are another instance where contemporary art is confluent with architecture Ghost 1990 an entire living space cast in plaster solidifying the void alludes to Derrida s notion of architectural presence Gordon Matta Clark s Building cuts were deconstructed sections of buildings exhibited in art galleries 1988 MoMA exhibition edit Mark Wigley and Philip Johnson curated the 1988 Museum of Modern Art exhibition Deconstructivist architecture which crystallized the movement and brought fame and notoriety to its key practitioners The architects presented at the exhibition were Peter Eisenman Frank Gehry Zaha Hadid Coop Himmelblau Rem Koolhaas Daniel Libeskind and Bernard Tschumi Mark Wigley wrote the accompanying essay and tried to show a common thread among the various architects whose work was usually more noted for their differences The projects in this exhibition mark a different sensibility one in which the dream of pure form has been disturbed It is the ability to disturb our thinking about form that makes these projects deconstructive The show examines an episode a point of intersection between several architects where each constructs an unsettling building by exploiting the hidden potential of modernism Phillip Johnson and Mark Wigley excerpt from the MoMA Deconstructivist Architecture catalog Computer aided design edit Computer aided design is now an essential tool in most aspects of contemporary architecture but the particular nature of deconstructivism makes the use of computers especially pertinent Three dimensional modelling and animation virtual and physical assists in the conception of very complicated spaces while the ability to link computer models to manufacturing jigs CAM computer aided manufacturing allows the mass production of subtly different modular elements to be achieved at affordable costs Also Gehry is noted for producing many physical models as well as computer models as part of his design process Though the computer has made the designing of complex shapes much easier not everything that looks odd is deconstructivist Gallery edit nbsp Jewish Museum Berlin Germany nbsp Alpine Deconstructivism in Kitzbuhel Austria by Christine amp Horst Lechner nbsp Gunter Domenig s Steinhaus at Lake Ossiach Austria nbsp Vitra Design Museum by Frank Gehry Weil am Rhein Germany nbsp Dancing House by Vlado Milunic and Frank Gehry Prague Czech Republic nbsp City of Capitals in Moscow IBC Russia nbsp UFA Palast in Dresden Dresden Germany by Coop Himmelb l au nbsp Walt Disney Concert Hall by Frank Gehry Los Angeles California nbsp The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao by Frank Gehry in Bilbao Spain nbsp Paseo de Gracia Station Barcelona 1991 by Daniel Navas Neus Sole Arch nbsp The Gymnasium by Josef Kiszka and Barbara Potysz in Orlova Czech Republic nbsp Hotel Porta Fira left in Barcelona Spain by Toyo Ito nbsp The McCormick Tribune Campus Center at Chicago s IIT Campus by Rem Koolhaas completed 2003 nbsp Puente de la Mujer Argentina by Santiago Calatrava nbsp New synagogue in Mainz by Manuel HerzCritical responses editSince the publication of Kenneth Frampton s Modern Architecture A Critical History first edition 1980 there has been a keen consciousness of the role of criticism within architectural theory Whilst referencing Derrida as a philosophical influence deconstructivism can also be seen as having as much a basis in critical theory as the other major offshoot of postmodernism critical regionalism The two aspects of critical theory urgency and analysis are found in deconstructivism There is a tendency to re examine and critique other works or precedents in deconstructivism and also a tendency to set aesthetic issues in the foreground An example of this is the Wexner Center Critical Theory however had at its core a critique of capitalism and its excess and from that respect many of the works of the Deconstructivists would fail in that regard if only they are made for an elite and are as objects highly expensive despite whatever critique they may claim to impart on the conventions of design The difference between criticality in deconstructivism and criticality in critical regionalism is that critical regionalism reduces the overall level of complexity involved and maintains a clearer analysis while attempting to reconcile modernist architecture with local differences In effect this leads to a modernist vernacular Critical regionalism displays a lack of self criticism and a utopianism of place Deconstructivism meanwhile maintains a level of self criticism and a dystopianism of place as well as external criticism and tends towards maintaining a level of complexity Some architects identified with the movement notably Frank Gehry have actively rejected the classification of their work as deconstructivist 14 Critics of deconstructivism see it as a purely formal exercise with little social significance Kenneth Frampton finds it elitist and detached 15 Nikos Salingaros calls deconstructivism a viral expression that invades design thinking in order to build destroyed forms while curiously similar to both Derrida s and Philip Johnson s descriptions this is meant as a harsh condemnation of the entire movement 16 Other criticisms are similar to those of deconstructivist philosophy that since the act of deconstructivism is not an empirical process it can result in whatever an architect wishes and it thus suffers from a lack of consistency Today there is a sense that the philosophical underpinnings of the beginning of the movement have been lost and all that is left is the aesthetic of deconstructivism 17 Other criticisms reject the premise that architecture is a language capable of being the subject of linguistic philosophy or if it was a language in the past critics claim it is no longer 8 Others question the wisdom and impact on future generations of an architecture that rejects the past and presents no clear values as replacements and which often pursues strategies that are intentionally aggressive to human senses 8 See also edit nbsp Architecture portalGunter Behnisch Constructivism art Deconstruction fashion Futurism art Khora Thom Mayne Novelty architecture Reconstruction architecture Rooftop Remodeling Falkestrasse Structuralism architecture VorticismCitations edit a b Taschen amp Taschen 2016 p 148 What is Deconstructivism ArchDaily 2018 08 12 Retrieved 2020 07 19 Jacques Derrida and Peter Eisenman Chora L Works New York Monacelli Press 1997 Rem Koolhaas and Bernard Tschumi in Conversation 18 May 2001 ETH Zurich Tschumi Architecture and Disjunction Venturi 1977 Learning From Las Vegas Libeskind Daniel Imperial War Museum North Earth Time Archived 2007 10 21 at the Wayback Machine quote This project develops the realm of the in between the inter est Pointing to that which is absent Retrieved April 2006 a b c Curl James Stevens 2006 A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture Paperback Second ed Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 860678 8 Eisenman and Derrida Choral Works Derrida Of Grammatology Holloway Robert 1994 Mattaclarking Archived 2007 05 17 at the Wayback Machine Dissertation Exploring the work of Gordon Matta Clark Retrieved April 2006 Derrida Of Grammatology 1967 Kandinsky Point and Line to Plane Said Frank Gehry of Eisenman s Aronoff Center The best thing about Peter s buildings is the insane spaces he ends up with All that other stuff the philosophy and all is just bullshit as far as I m concerned Quoted in Peter Eisenman Peter Eisenman 1990 1997 ed Richard C Levene and Fernando Marquez Cecilia Madrid El Croquis Editorial 1997 46 Frampton Kenneth Modern Architecture A Critical History Thames amp Hudson 3rd edition 1992 p 313 Salingaros Nikos Anti Architecture and Deconstruction Umbau Verlag 3rd edition 2008 Chakraborty Judhajit Deconstruction From Philosophy to Design Arizona State University retrieved June 2006 Today in the mid 90s the term deconstructivism is used casually to label any work that favours complexity over simplicity and dramatises the formal possibilities of digital production General and cited references editBony Anne 2012 L Architecture Moderne in French Larousse ISBN 978 2 03 587641 6 Derrida Jacques 1967 Of Grammatology hardcover ISBN 0 8018 1841 9 paperback ISBN 0 8018 1879 6 corrected edition ISBN 0 8018 5830 5 trans Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak Johns Hopkins University Press Derrida Jacques amp Eisenman Peter 1997 Chora l Works Monacelli Press ISBN 1 885254 40 7 Derrida Jacques amp Husserl Edmund 1989 Edmund Husserl s Origin of Geometry An Introduction University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 6580 8 Frampton Kenneth 1992 Modern Architecture a critical history Thames amp Hudson Third Edition ISBN 0 500 20257 5 Johnson Phillip amp Wigley Mark 1988 Deconstructivist Architecture The Museum of Modern Art New York Little Brown and Company ISBN 0 87070 298 X Hays K M ed 1998 Oppositions Reader Princeton Architectural Press ISBN 1 56898 153 8 Kandinsky Wassily Point and Line to Plane Dover Publications New York ISBN 0 486 23808 3 McLeod Mary Architecture and Politics in the Reagan Era From Postmodernism to Deconstructivism Assemblage 8 1989 pp 23 59 Poisson Michel 2009 1000 Immeubles et monuments de Paris in French Parigramme ISBN 978 2 84096 539 8 Rickey George 1995 Constructivism Origins and Evolution George Braziller Revised edition ISBN 0 8076 1381 9 Salingaros Nikos 2008 Anti Architecture and Deconstruction 3rd edition Umbau Verlag Solingen Germany ISBN 978 3 937954 09 7 Taschen Aurelia Taschen Balthazar 2016 L Architecture Moderne de A a Z in French Bibliotheca Universalis ISBN 978 3 8365 5630 9 Tschumi Bernard 1994 Architecture and Disjunction The MIT Press Cambridge ISBN 0 262 20094 5 Van der Straeten Bart Image and Narrative The Uncanny and the architecture of Deconstruction Retrieved April 2006 Venturi Robert 1966 Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture The Museum of Modern Art Press New York ISBN 0 87070 282 3 Venturi Robert 1977 Learning from Las Vegas with D Scott Brown and S Izenour Cambridge MA 1972 revised 1977 ISBN 0 262 72006 X Wigley Mark 1995 The Architecture of Deconstruction Derrida s Haunt The MIT Press ISBN 0 262 73114 2 Vicente Esteban Medina 2003 Forma y composicion en la Arquitectura deconstructivista c Tesis doctoral Universidad Politecnica de Madrid Registro Propiedad Intellectual Madrid Nº 16 2005 3967 Link de descarga de tesis en pdf http oa upm es 481 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Deconstructivism Wiener Postmoderne in German Vicente Esteban Medina 2003 Forma y composicion en la Arquitectura deconstructivista in Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Deconstructivism amp oldid 1192883058, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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