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Phallic architecture

Phallic architecture consciously or unconsciously creates a symbolic representation of the human penis.[1] Buildings intentionally or unintentionally resembling the human penis are a source of amusement to locals and tourists in various places around the world. Deliberate phallic imagery is found in ancient cultures and in the links to ancient cultures found in traditional artifacts.

Phallic tombstone

The ancient Greeks and Romans celebrated phallic festivals and built a shrine with an erect phallus to honor Hermes, messenger of the gods. Those figures may be related to the ancient Egyptian deity Min who was depicted holding his erect phallus. Figures of women with a phallus for a head have been found across Greece and Yugoslavia. Phallic symbolism was prevalent in the architectural tradition of ancient Babylon. The Romans, who were deeply superstitious, also often used phallic imagery in their architecture and domestic items. The ancient cultures of many parts of the Far East, including Indonesia, India, Korea and Japan, used the phallus as a symbol of fertility in motifs on their temples and in other areas of everyday life.

Scholars of anthropology, sociology, and feminism have alleged a symbolic nature of phallic architecture, especially large skyscrapers which dominate the landscape, supposedly as symbols of male domination, power and political authority. Towers and other vertical structures may unintentionally or perhaps subconsciously have those connotations. There are many examples of modern architecture that can be interpreted as phallic, but very few for which the architect has specifically cited or admitted that meaning as an intentional aspect of the design.

History and background edit

Antiquity edit

 
Phallic Temple period (3,500 B.C. - 2,500 B.C.) items at the National Museum of Archaeology, Malta[2]
 
A vishapakar and a number of smaller phallic steles at the Metsamor site, Armenia

The worship of the phallus has existed since the Stone Age, and was particularly prevalent during the Neolithic period and the Bronze Age.[citation needed]

Phallic architecture became prominent in ancient Egypt and Greece, where genitalia and human sexuality received a high degree of attention. The ancient Greeks honored the phallus and celebrated phallic festivals.[3] The Greco-Roman deity Priapus was worshiped as a god of fertility, depicted with a giant phallus in numerous public architectural pieces.[citation needed]

The Greeks regularly built a shrine which they called "Herm" at the entrance of major public buildings, homes and along roads to honor Hermes, messenger of the gods.[4] The shrines typically "took the form of a vertical pillar topped by the bearded head of a man and from the surface of the pillar below the head, an erect phallus protruded".[3] It is believed that they sought their inspiration from the ancient Egyptians and their phallic image of Min, the valley god, who was similarly "depicted as a standing bearded king with simplified body, one arm raised, the other hand holding his erect phallus."[3]

Herodotus, the ancient Greek historian, documented women carrying large phallic shaped monuments and ornaments the size of a human body in villages in ancient Dionysia.[5] On the island of Delos a pillar supports a colossal phallus, the symbol of Dionysus. Phallus reliefs on buildings on such sites are also believed to have been apotropaic devices to ward off evil.[6] The elaborate use of phallic architecture and sculpture in ancient Greek society can also be seen in sites such as Nea Nikomedeia in northern Greece. Archaeologists excavating the ancient town discovered clay sculptures of plump women with phallic heads and folded arms.[7]

Similar figurines of women with phallus heads from the Neolithic period have been found across Greece, Macedonia and parts of old Yugoslavia. The vast majority of the figurines of the Hamangia culture have cylindrical phallus-shaped heads without facial features, although some, particularly of the Aegean culture, had phallic sculptural pieces with phallic heads with a pinched nose and slitty eyes.[7] In these parts of the ancient world, obelisk like structures resembling the human penis were built, often with phallic symbols, representing human fertility and asserting male sexuality and orgasm.[1] Phallic symbolism was prevalent in the architecture of ancient Babylonia, and in Khametian iconography, the obelisk was considered to be symbolic of the phallus of the masculine earth.[8] The obelisks of ancient Egypt themselves had several functions, existing both as a reference to the cultus of the sun and of the phallus, representing fertility and power.[citation needed]

 
 
Left: The well-endowed Priapus, the Greco-Roman god of fertility. He was the subject of many architectural works in the ancient world. Right: A phallic column in Delos

Although phallic architecture as individual pieces was not prevalent in ancient Rome as it was in ancient Greece or Egypt, the Romans were deeply superstitious and often introduced phallus-related components as architectural pieces and domestic items. Archaeologists unearthing a site in Pompei discovered many vases, ornaments and sculptures unearthed revealing the preoccupation with the phallus,[9] also unearthing an 18-inch terracotta phallus protruding from what was believed to have been a bakery with the inscription, "Hic habitat felicitas" (here dwells happiness), and many Romans wore phallus amulets to ward off the evil-eye.[10][11]

Priapic worship amongst the women of Sicily continued into the 18th century; worshiping phallic votive objects and kissing such offerings before placing them upon the altar in the churches.[9] Fetishism with the phallus architecturally and in smaller implements was also exhibited by certain gnostic sects in medieval times, such as the Manichaeans, and was connected with masochism and sadism, a form of religious flagellantism.[5] Smaller phallic shaped monuments in the form of idols, even vases, rings, drinking vessels and jewellery have been well-documented and could be found within medieval churches of Ireland.[5]

 
 
Left: The pyramid of Candi Sukuh of East Java, Indonesia. Right: A graphic depiction of a phallus entering a vulva at the temple, one of many.

In Hinduism, the Hindu trimurthi represents Brahma, the creator, Vishnu, the preserver and Shiva, the destroyer. Shiva, the main deity in India, is both destroyer and is stated to also include his role of creation; this creation role is represented by the phallic symbol, known as lingam in which form he is worshiped or in the form of male trinity of penis and two testicles.[12] The linga, or phallus, is a common feature of Hindu temples across India, engrained as reliefs or other forms. The Brihadeeswarar Temple of Tanjore in Tamil Nadu, built during the Chola Dynasty, is dedicated to Shiva, and features lingam between the cells; it is especially renowned for its "Hall of One Thousand Lingas".[13]

In Indonesia, the phallic lingga and feminine yoni, remain common symbols of harmony. The Sultan's Palace of Kasepuhan, in West Java, has a number of lingga-yoni carvings along its walls. According to the Indonesian chronicles of the Babad Tanah Jawi, Prince Puger gained the kingly power from God, by ingesting sperm from the phallus of the already-dead Sultan Amangkurat II of Mataram.[14][15]

Candi Sukuh temple of Ngancar, East Java, was built in the 10th century and is dedicated to Shiva. The temple has numerous reliefs graphically depicting sexuality and fertility including several stone depictions of a copulating penis and vulva.[16] It consists of a pyramid with reliefs and statues at the front. Among them is a male statue clutching his penis, with three tortoises with flattened shells.[16] The temple once had a striking 1.82 metre (5'11.5 ft) representation of lingga with four testicles; this is now housed in the National Museum of Indonesia. Phallic references were also made in Khmer architecture in Cambodia, and several Khmer temples depict the phallus in reliefs.

In Africa, Ancient Malians, particularly the royals of Djenne, decorated their palaces with phallus like piers and columns at the entrance of their palaces and decorated the walls with phallus motifs.[17] Similar features can be seen on the pillars of many temples across Africa, often interpreted by western scholars to be phallic symbols, but may often be more subtle and subject to varying interpretations.[18] Like the ancient Egyptian pharaohs, Aksumite kings built temples with phallic pillars in ancient Ethiopian cities such as Konsu, and monolithic pillars with phallic representation have also been discovered in Madagascar.[19] In ancient Maya, phallic architecture was rare but Uxmal in particular has a considerable number of phallus-like architectural pieces. It contains a temple known as the Temple of the Phallis and phallic sculptures and motifs.[20]

Modern edit

 
The Dionysus Theatre of Athens. Phallic columns of the ruined Ancient Greek theatre can still be seen.

Claude Nicholas Ledoux was a major exponent of architectural development in the 17th century which "articulated across the tensions of form and ornament, symbol, and allegory, dogma, and fantasy", at a time when western society was oppressive and particularly sensitive to public displays of sexuality; blatant and graphic phallic architecture would have been considered an embarrassment and a shameful act.[9] In his initial draft for the House of Pleasure in Chaux (a proposed ideal city, near the Forest of Chaux), Ledoux drew upon allegorical ideas in his design with the union of man and woman, a physiological interpretation of intercourse and penetration. Private bedrooms were designed to "thrust out from the circular ring of the building, metaphorically representing penetration, the circular ring representing the vaginal passage and womb of the female.[9]

The second revised design is said to "subliminate both elevated site and female gender" with a "lonely phallus", without the original planned animated circular ring representing the female reproductive organs.[9] Ledoux drew upon phallic and sexually charged inspiration in other buildings which he designed. His design of Besançon Theatre for instance was fueled by the exigencies of prostitution and ancient sexual ritual.[9] However, in comparison to the likes of Jean-Jacques Lequeu, who gained notoriety for his pornographic architectural concoctions, Ledoux's architectural inspiration was relatively mild, and he is said to have omitted towers from his designs on occasion as he was aware that they would be frowned upon shamefully by general society as a too obvious representation of the phallus; Ledoux's "missing erection" is explained to this effect in Jacques Lecan's Significance of the Missing Phalus.[9]

According to Oscar Reutersvärd, the interest in neoclassical architecture in the 18th century was synonymous with and motivated by a similar interest in masculine virility.[9] Works such as Francesco Colonna's Hypnerotomachia Poliphili (1467) and Giovanni Battista Piranesi's Campo Marzio (1762) show profoundly the ancient influence of phallic architecture in design and worship, and contain numerous illustrations of Priapic temples and architecture.[9] Piranesi in particular is said to have offered a "prototype for the mysterious architecture of phallic worship that more closely resembles the houses of pleasure" in his etchings.[9]

He located two designs for the Bustum Caesaris Augusti, concluding that they were based upon sexual ritual, with "two phallic plans penetrating the semicircular cubicula". Piranesi believed that the purpose of the phallic designs were to celebrate virility and male regenerative power.[9] Other commentators such as Carl August Ehrensvärd also provided illustrations and analysis of Priapic temples and the meaning of phallic architecture.[9] A work of note to this effect is Neoclassical Temple of Virility and the Buildings with a Phallic Shaped Plan (1977) of the Institute for Art History of the University of Lund, Sweden.[9]

In America, especially in Chicago and New York, and numerous other global cities, high rise skyscrapers of phallic shape grew up in the 20th century. Le Corbusier, the famous architect, propagated it in Europe in place of traditional decorative architecture. Similar futuristic developments took place in Italy with the initiative of Sant’Elia, symbolizing the triumph of man. Yet unlike those of ancient times which were blatant architectural representations of the phallus, in the West in modern times "shrines to the phallus" are more subtle, and may often be subject to interpretation as such; very few architects have specifically admitted the human phallus as a source for their architectural creation.[21] The Italian Fascists were cited as having an obsession with phallic architecture which was rigid and impermeable.[22] In the last few decades the high-rise phallic skyscraper has been a symbol of government quest for economic power in China, Hong Kong and South Korea and the other ASEAN/Pacific Rim nations. China fuels billions of dollars annually into high-rise office and residential buildings with the aim of increasing GDP, at a rate far greater than they can be occupied.[23]

Symbolism edit

 
 
Left: Vendome Column, Paris. Right: One of the many penis statues of Haesindang Park (Penis Park), South Korea.

In art and architecture, acutely vertical buildings are often seen as a symbol of masculinity and horizontal buildings are seen as more feminine.[24][25] The terms "phallic verticality", "phallic erectility" and "phallic brutality" have been referred to by architectural theorists, including the likes of French sociologist Henri Lefebvre, who argued that buildings of phallic architectural type metaphorically symbolize "force, male fertility, masculine violence".[24][26] Phallic erectility "bestows a special status on the perpendicular, proclaiming phallocracy as the orientation of space" while phallic brutality "does not remain abstract, for it is the brutality of political power."[26]

Lefebvre conducted considerable research into the meaning of high-rise buildings.[24] He said "The arrogant verticality of skyscrapers, and especially of public and state buildings, introduces a phallic or more precisely a phallocratic element into the visual realm; the purpose of this display, of this need to impress, is to convey an impression of authority to each spectator. Verticality and great height have ever been the spatial expression of potentially violent power."[24] Sigmund Freud metaphorically drew a comparison between "high achievement and the acquisition of wealth as building monuments to our penises."[27]

In the 19th century, Thomas Mical argues that surrealists "capitalized on the phallic symbolism of monuments such as the ancient Egyptian obelisk from Luxor in the Place de la Concorde or the Vendome Column" by "supplementing these phallic structures with female counterparts".[28] Jules Breton for example suggested moving the obelisk to La Villette abattoir and designing a large gloved hand of a woman holding the obelisk in a suggestive manner, and adapting the Vendome into a factory chimney with a nude woman climbing it.[28] Auguste Bartholdi's 1870 monument Defense of Paris for instance, a commemoration of Leon Gambetta's escape from Paris in balloon during the Franco-Prussian War, was also subject to debate amongst Parisian artists of the late 19th century as they believed it resembled a testicle.[28] Arthur Harfaux proposed turning the monument into "an enormous sex, the balloon forming a testicle and the phallus being horizontal", while Breton proposed turning it into copulating genitals, adding a twin balloon to form two testicles.[28]

 
Jules Breton (1827–1906), a French realist artist who was keen to advocate phallic architecture in late 19th century Paris.

Contemporary scholars in architectural criticism have investigated the relationship between architecture and the body, sexuality, sex, power, and place.[29] Feminists in particular, such as Margrit Kennedy, perceive high-rise phallic-like buildings on the urban landscape as "phallic symbols of male domination, power and rational instrumentality."[30] Esther M. K. Cheung believes the form of monumental high-rise building which grew up in 20th century America can "be read as a phallic symbol of power".[31] The present trend symbolises "Science and technology over nature, incorporating all the maleness which that with sci-fi utopias."[32] Elizabeth Grosz, however, offers a counter argument to phallocentrism in urban design theories, saying "not so much the dominance of the phallus as the pervasive unacknowledged use of the male or masculine to represent the human. The problem, then, is not so much to eliminate as to reveal the masculinity inherent in the notion of the universal, the generic human, or the unspecified subject."[29] Marc C. Taylor discusses phallic architecture and what makes a building masculine or feminine in his book Disfiguring: Art, Architecture, Religion.[24]

Symbols and shrines edit

 
Marakan'non Shrine in Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan. The phallic stones besides the shrine are considered symbols of fertility.

During the modern era, many sculptors have created some public phallic works of art, with varying degrees of subtlety. One of these examples may be the statue in honor to the Carnation Revolution on the top of a hill in Lisbon, Portugal by the sculptor João Cutileiro.[33] Perhaps the greatest example of a phallic cemetery is the Khalid Nabi Cemetery in hills of northeastern Iran near the border with Turkmenistan, roughly 40 miles (64 km) northeast of Gonbad-e Kavous.[34] According to a popular belief, the cemetery house the tomb of a pre-Islamic prophet, Khalid Nabi, who was born 40 years prior to the birth of Muhammad, in c. 530.[34] The ancient graveyard contains some 600 tombstones of unknown origin, many of which are clear representations of the phallus; from a distance they resemble stone pegs.[34]

 
 
Left: Chao Mae Tuptim, Bangkok, Thailand. Right: A smaller version of the Kharkarin Rock, near Erdene Zuu Monastery, Mongolia.

Phallic shrines are common in Far East Asia, especially in Buddhist parts of Korea and Japan where they are seen as symbols of fertility or prowess.[35] In Dragon Pool Temple in Jeju City, there is a phallic shrine which is visited by female pilgrims who come to worship it for its perceived fertility blessings. The phallic stone is made from granite, quite small in size and white and was reportedly found in a field nearby by a farmer.[35]

In Thailand, the phallus is also considered to be a symbol of good luck and representative of fertility. There are numerous shrines in the country featuring phallic architecture. Chao Mae Tuptim shrine in Bangkok has over a hundred colored erect wooden penis statues of all shapes and sizes which are said to possess special cosmic powers and endow good fortune and fertility on anybody coming into contact with them.[36][37]

Kharkhorin Rock, located in Övörkhangai Province of Mongolia, is a massive statue of a penis raised on a platform on the steppe near Erdene Zuu Monastery. The statue has dual functions; primarily it is a reminder to the monks to remain celibate, but it is also a symbol of fertility and human life.[38] A smaller statue of a phallus is nearer the monastery. Haesindang Park (also known as "Penis Park") in Gangwon Province of South Korea, located about 20 kilometres (12 mi) south of Samcheok, is a nature park which contains a number of erect statues. A tragic legend shrouds them in that a virgin was once swept out to sea and drowned, unable to be saved by her lover. The townspeople were devastated and helpless, and a curse appeared to have been cast over them, ruining the local fishing industry. One day, a local fisherman relieved himself in the sea and miraculously the fishing industry revived. He discovered that her restless spirit could be appeased in such a manner, so the townsfolk compensated for the woman's inability to consummate beyond the grave by placing sexually potent phallic statues in view of the shore.[39] The statues range in size and styles; some have faces on them and are more animated in appearance and more colorful, but others are exact depictions of the human penis.

In some Asian countries such as Bhutan, many have a belief that a phallus brings good luck and drives away evil spirits. Phallus symbols are routinely painted outside walls of the new houses and carved wooden phalluses are hung (sometimes crossed by a design of sword or dagger) outside, on the eves of the new homes, at the four corners.[40] On a road drive from Paro airport to Thimphu explicit paintings of phalluses are a common sight on the white-washed walls of homes, shops and eateries.[40] In the Chimi Lhakhang monastery, the shrine dedicated to Drupka Kinley, several wooden penises are used to bless people who visit the monastery on pilgrimage seeking blessings to bear a child or for welfare of their children. The glaringly displayed phallus in the monastery is a brown wooden piece with a silver handle, a religious relic considered to possess divine powers and hence used for blessing the spiritually oriented people. It is also said to prevent quarrels among family members in the houses which are painted with these symbols.[40]

Buildings and structures edit

Empire State Building edit

The 102-story Empire State Building is a New York City designated landmark,[41] one of the city's most famous sites, and is generally thought of as an American cultural icon. Cited by Valerie Briginshaw as a symbol of American pride and "the ultimate sign of American phallic power",[42] it was inaugurated on 1 May 1931.[43]

Designed in the Art Deco style, it has a roof height of 1,250 feet (380 meters), and with its antenna spire included, it stands a total of 1,454 ft (443 m) high. It stood as the world's tallest building for 40 years, from its completion in 1931 until construction of the World Trade Center's North Tower was completed in 1972. After the World Trade Center was destroyed on September 11, 2001, it remained the tallest building in New York City for 13 years until the One World Trade Center was completed. Numerous people have mentioned its similarities in appearance to the phallus, with its "tall and glinting" towers.[44][45][46]

Leaning Tower of Pisa edit

The Leaning Tower of Pisa in Pisa, Italy, dating from around 1173, has long suffered from structural problems. The tower is eight stories high at 55.86 metres (183.3 ft) and before restoration work from 1990 leaned 5.5 degrees. It currently leans about 4 degrees but due to foundation problems it continues to sink about 1mm annually. The resemblance of the tower to a penis has seen the "Leaning Tower of Pisa" become a sexual slang term for a half erect penis.[47]

Nelson's Column edit

Nelson's Column, a monument to Admiral Horatio Nelson, was erected by a grateful nation between 1840 and 1843 to commemorate Nelson's victory at the Battle of Trafalgar. However the Nelson Memorial Committee ran out of money, having only raised £20,485 in public subscriptions.[48] The column is Corinthian with a granite shaft.[49] In his poem A Ballad of the Good Lord Nelson, Lawrence Durrell included the multiply allusive lines "Now stiff on a pillar with a phallic air/Nelson stylites in Trafalgar Square/Reminds the British what once they were."[50]

Colonna Mediterranea edit

 
Colonna Mediterranea in Luqa, Malta

Colonna Mediterranea is a monumental column in Luqa, Malta. It has been described by its artist Paul Vella Critien as an "Egyptian symbol". However at a glance it could be observed to look similar to a large penile, and therefore was largely described to be a "phallic monument". The monument has managed to attract several international media coverage in specific before and during the visit of Pope Benedict XVI to Malta as the pope mobile, carrying the papacy, had been planned and passed by it. Similarly the same artist has created another monumental column, the Kolonna Eterna, which was also described as being phallic by critics.[51][52][53][54]

Obelisk of Luxor edit

The Obelisk of Luxor, which stands in the Place de la Concorde of Paris, France, was given to the French by the Egyptians in the 1800s. The 23-meter (75-foot) obelisk originally stood at the front of Luxor Temple, honoring Ramses II, pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt. According to Michael D. Garval, the French perceived the obelisk as "prodigiously phallic" from the moment it arrived.[55]

Oriental Pearl TV Tower edit

The Oriental Pearl TV Tower, located in Lujiazui, Pudong district, Shanghai, China, is the world's third tallest TV and radio tower at 468 metres (1,535 ft), the tallest such building in Asia. The tower houses restaurants, theaters, a conference hall, and a hotel and is a significant tourist attraction in the city. The tower has been met a mixed reception, however. The New York Times described it as a "great phallic monster of truly monumental ugliness, a bit like an enormous asparagus with a silver ball on top."[56] The long steel column tower is considered by some to be proof of the city's phallic worship, and that such skyscrapers indicative of wealth are an increasing aphrodisiac of the materialist in Chinese cities.[57]

Doha Tower edit

The Doha Tower, formerly called the Burj Doha or Burj Qatar was designed by French architect Jean Nouvel. In 2004, the project was first called the "High Rise Office Building".[58] Following completion in 2012, it was originally called the "Burj Doha" by its owner, H. E. Sheikh Saud bin Muhammed Al Thani. The public has noted the building's "phallic form",[59][60] suggestive of what Nouvel calls a “fully assumed virility.”[61]

State Capitol, Lincoln edit

The State Capitol building of Lincoln, Nebraska has been cited as the "apex" of phallic architecture.[62] At 15 stories and 400 feet (120 m) tall, it is the second-tallest U.S. statehouse, surpassed only by the 34-story Louisiana State Capitol.[63] It is the tallest building in Lincoln,[64] the third-tallest in the state, and also the heaviest Capitol building in North America. The building was designed by Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue, who drew upon Classical and Gothic architectural traditions.[65] It was constructed between 1922 and 1932, of Indiana limestone, with a golden dome.[65] The building is nicknamed "The Phallus of the Plains" for its phallus-like appearance.[66]

30 St Mary Axe edit

30 St Mary Axe opened in London in April 2004. Designed by Norman Foster, the 180 metres (590 ft) structure, London's first environmentally sustainable tall building using recycled and recyclable materials, has been compared to the phallus and a gherkin, which also is a slang term for "small penis"; its nicknames include Gherkin, the Erotic Gherkin, Towering Innuendo and the Crystal Phallus.[67][68][69] Also likened to a "phallic fat cigar", the building has been cited as a "crude anatomical metaphor", yet has become one of the London's most iconic buildings.[68] Cabinet voted it the "Best Uncircumcised Building in the World".[69]

Torre Agbar edit

 
 

The Torre Agbar is a 38-story skyscraper located in the Plaça de les Glòries Catalanes of the Poblenou neighborhood of Barcelona, Spain. Designed by Jean Nouvel, it is named after its owners, the Agbar Group, a holding company whose interests include the Barcelona water company Aigües de Barcelona. An example of high-tech architecture in the city, its design combines a number of different architectural concepts, resulting in a striking structure built with reinforced concrete, covered with a facade of glass, and over 4,500 window openings cut out of the structural concrete. The building stands out on the skyline of Barcelona; it is the third tallest building in the city, standing at 144.44 m (473.9 ft), with an area of over 50,000 square metres, of which 30,000 are offices. 2,500 LED bulbs cause the tower to change color at night.[70] It was officially opened by the King of Spain on 16 September 2005. Nouvel claims it to be inspired by a geyser and the nearby mountain of Montserrat, although he does note its phallic appearance.[71] Although many draw comparisons with the phallus, locals refer to the structure as el supositorio (the suppository), a drug delivery system that is inserted into the rectum or vagina.[70][72]

Washington Monument edit

The Washington Monument in Washington D.C. is often seen as a prime example of phallic architecture and American masculinity.[73] The towering monument, made of marble, granite, and bluestone gneiss, it is both the world's tallest stone structure and the world's tallest obelisk, standing 555 feet 5+18 inches (169.294 m) according to the National Park Service.[74] Construction of the monument began in 1848, was halted from 1854 to 1877, and was completed in 1884. In a Journal review, dated 17 October 1911, Arnold Bennett said of the monument, "Saw Washington monument. Phallic. Appalling. A national catastrophe – only equalled by the Albert Memorial. Tiny doll-like people waiting to go into it."[75] Dan Burstein says of it, "Speaking of sex symbols, there is no more phallic symbol in existence than the Washington Monument, and the Capitol dome can be viewed as breastlike."[76] James Webb used a metaphor to praise the "uplift[ing]" power of the Washington Monument as a white phallus, "piercing the air like a bayonet".[77] In the futuristic film Hardwired, set in the United States where everything noteworthy is commercialized, the Washington Monument is used as a giant Trojan condoms billboard.

Ypsilanti Water Tower edit

 
Ypsilanti Water Tower in Ypsilanti, Michigan, winner of the "Most Phallic Building contest"

Ypsilanti Water Tower is a historic water tower in Ypsilanti, Michigan, United States, listed as a National Register of Historic Places building in 1981. The tower was designed by William R. Coats and constructed as part of an elaborate city waterworks project that began in 1889.[78] Located on the highest point in Ypsilanti, the tower was completed in 1890 at a cost of $21,435.63. Today the tower is frequently joked about for its phallic shape and has earned the nickname "Brick Dick".[79][80]

It has become a well-known landmark in Ypsilanti, and due to the building's shape and location, the tower is frequently used by residents as a point for providing directions for visitors and residents. Iggy Pop said of it in a 1996 interview, "The most famous thing in Ypsilanti is this water tower made out of brick, about 175 years old. It looks like this big penis."[81]

The World's Most Phallic Building contest was a contest held in 2003 by Cabinet magazine to find the building which most resembled a human phallus.[82] The contest originated when writer Jonathan Ames drew the ire of Slate readers by claiming, in a diary that was later published in his book I Love You More Than You Know,[83] that the Williamsburg Bank Building in Brooklyn, New York City, New York, was the world's most phallic. This led Cabinet magazine to initiate a search of its own to find which building was truly the "world's most phallic".[84] Cities and readers subsequently poured in their views and staked their claims to the magazine's editors. After months of entries and discussion, the Ypsilanti Water Tower was announced as the winner,[85][86] although the winner of a readers' poll was the Florida State Capitol building in Tallahassee.[87] Another notable nominee was the Torre Agbar of Barcelona.[88]

Christian Science Church, Dixon, Illinois edit

The Christian Science Dixon church in Dixon, Illinois strongly resembles a penis when viewed from the air. The church, however, claims it was tastefully designed around an old oak tree and declared that "We didn’t design it to be seen as what they’re seeing. And we didn’t design it to be seen from above."[89]

 
 
Left: Hyde Park Obelisk, Sydney. Right: Giant condom covering the Obelisk in November 2014

Hyde Park, Hyde, Greater Manchester edit

In 2012, a beehive metal sculpture by Thompson Dagnall in Hyde, Greater Manchester, was criticized by the council for its phallic appearance, having been installed adjacent to the children's play area in Hyde Park. Although Dagnall was paid £3,500 a week for his efforts, council workers modified the structure by stumping it and moved it to another part of the park.[90]

People's Daily Tower edit

A new headquarters for the People's Daily newspaper has been under construction since 2013 and is slated for completion in 2014. In May 2013, China attempted to censor jokes about its phallic shape.[91][92][93]

Hyde Park Obelisk, Sydney edit

The 22-metre (72 ft) high Hyde Park Obelisk, located in Hyde Park, Sydney Australia at the intersection of Elizabeth Street and Bathurst Street, is both a former sewer ventshaft and a notable landmark in the Sydney CBD.[94] Its phallic appearance was emphasised on 7 November 2014, when the AIDS Council of NSW (ACON) temporarily installed a giant condom over the Obelisk as part of a HIV awareness campaign. The installation generated a lot of media interest—including many phallic innuendos[95][96][97]—and drew the ire of the Australian Christian Lobby.[98]

Burj Dubai/Khalifa edit

 
Burj Khalifa in Dubai

The Burj Khalifa also known as Burj Dubai was inaugurated in 2010. It is an example of phallic architecture.[99][100][101]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Sagina, Claudia (2015), The Archeology of Malta, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9781107006690, p. 104.
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  4. ^ Westmoreland, Perry L. (30 June 2007). Ancient Greek Beliefs. Lee And Vance Publishing Co. p. 627. ISBN 978-0-9793248-1-9. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
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External links edit

  • Guardian article on phallic architecture, May 2013

phallic, architecture, consciously, unconsciously, creates, symbolic, representation, human, penis, buildings, intentionally, unintentionally, resembling, human, penis, source, amusement, locals, tourists, various, places, around, world, deliberate, phallic, i. Phallic architecture consciously or unconsciously creates a symbolic representation of the human penis 1 Buildings intentionally or unintentionally resembling the human penis are a source of amusement to locals and tourists in various places around the world Deliberate phallic imagery is found in ancient cultures and in the links to ancient cultures found in traditional artifacts Phallic tombstone The ancient Greeks and Romans celebrated phallic festivals and built a shrine with an erect phallus to honor Hermes messenger of the gods Those figures may be related to the ancient Egyptian deity Min who was depicted holding his erect phallus Figures of women with a phallus for a head have been found across Greece and Yugoslavia Phallic symbolism was prevalent in the architectural tradition of ancient Babylon The Romans who were deeply superstitious also often used phallic imagery in their architecture and domestic items The ancient cultures of many parts of the Far East including Indonesia India Korea and Japan used the phallus as a symbol of fertility in motifs on their temples and in other areas of everyday life Scholars of anthropology sociology and feminism have alleged a symbolic nature of phallic architecture especially large skyscrapers which dominate the landscape supposedly as symbols of male domination power and political authority Towers and other vertical structures may unintentionally or perhaps subconsciously have those connotations There are many examples of modern architecture that can be interpreted as phallic but very few for which the architect has specifically cited or admitted that meaning as an intentional aspect of the design Contents 1 History and background 1 1 Antiquity 1 2 Modern 2 Symbolism 2 1 Symbols and shrines 3 Buildings and structures 3 1 Empire State Building 3 2 Leaning Tower of Pisa 3 3 Nelson s Column 3 4 Colonna Mediterranea 3 5 Obelisk of Luxor 3 6 Oriental Pearl TV Tower 3 7 Doha Tower 3 8 State Capitol Lincoln 3 9 30 St Mary Axe 3 10 Torre Agbar 3 11 Washington Monument 3 12 Ypsilanti Water Tower 3 13 Christian Science Church Dixon Illinois 3 14 Hyde Park Hyde Greater Manchester 3 15 People s Daily Tower 3 16 Hyde Park Obelisk Sydney 3 17 Burj Dubai Khalifa 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory and background editAntiquity edit nbsp Phallic Temple period 3 500 B C 2 500 B C items at the National Museum of Archaeology Malta 2 nbsp A vishapakar and a number of smaller phallic steles at the Metsamor site Armenia The worship of the phallus has existed since the Stone Age and was particularly prevalent during the Neolithic period and the Bronze Age citation needed Phallic architecture became prominent in ancient Egypt and Greece where genitalia and human sexuality received a high degree of attention The ancient Greeks honored the phallus and celebrated phallic festivals 3 The Greco Roman deity Priapus was worshiped as a god of fertility depicted with a giant phallus in numerous public architectural pieces citation needed The Greeks regularly built a shrine which they called Herm at the entrance of major public buildings homes and along roads to honor Hermes messenger of the gods 4 The shrines typically took the form of a vertical pillar topped by the bearded head of a man and from the surface of the pillar below the head an erect phallus protruded 3 It is believed that they sought their inspiration from the ancient Egyptians and their phallic image of Min the valley god who was similarly depicted as a standing bearded king with simplified body one arm raised the other hand holding his erect phallus 3 Herodotus the ancient Greek historian documented women carrying large phallic shaped monuments and ornaments the size of a human body in villages in ancient Dionysia 5 On the island of Delos a pillar supports a colossal phallus the symbol of Dionysus Phallus reliefs on buildings on such sites are also believed to have been apotropaic devices to ward off evil 6 The elaborate use of phallic architecture and sculpture in ancient Greek society can also be seen in sites such as Nea Nikomedeia in northern Greece Archaeologists excavating the ancient town discovered clay sculptures of plump women with phallic heads and folded arms 7 Similar figurines of women with phallus heads from the Neolithic period have been found across Greece Macedonia and parts of old Yugoslavia The vast majority of the figurines of the Hamangia culture have cylindrical phallus shaped heads without facial features although some particularly of the Aegean culture had phallic sculptural pieces with phallic heads with a pinched nose and slitty eyes 7 In these parts of the ancient world obelisk like structures resembling the human penis were built often with phallic symbols representing human fertility and asserting male sexuality and orgasm 1 Phallic symbolism was prevalent in the architecture of ancient Babylonia and in Khametian iconography the obelisk was considered to be symbolic of the phallus of the masculine earth 8 The obelisks of ancient Egypt themselves had several functions existing both as a reference to the cultus of the sun and of the phallus representing fertility and power citation needed nbsp nbsp Left The well endowed Priapus the Greco Roman god of fertility He was the subject of many architectural works in the ancient world Right A phallic column in Delos Although phallic architecture as individual pieces was not prevalent in ancient Rome as it was in ancient Greece or Egypt the Romans were deeply superstitious and often introduced phallus related components as architectural pieces and domestic items Archaeologists unearthing a site in Pompei discovered many vases ornaments and sculptures unearthed revealing the preoccupation with the phallus 9 also unearthing an 18 inch terracotta phallus protruding from what was believed to have been a bakery with the inscription Hic habitat felicitas here dwells happiness and many Romans wore phallus amulets to ward off the evil eye 10 11 Priapic worship amongst the women of Sicily continued into the 18th century worshiping phallic votive objects and kissing such offerings before placing them upon the altar in the churches 9 Fetishism with the phallus architecturally and in smaller implements was also exhibited by certain gnostic sects in medieval times such as the Manichaeans and was connected with masochism and sadism a form of religious flagellantism 5 Smaller phallic shaped monuments in the form of idols even vases rings drinking vessels and jewellery have been well documented and could be found within medieval churches of Ireland 5 nbsp nbsp Left The pyramid of Candi Sukuh of East Java Indonesia Right A graphic depiction of a phallus entering a vulva at the temple one of many In Hinduism the Hindu trimurthi represents Brahma the creator Vishnu the preserver and Shiva the destroyer Shiva the main deity in India is both destroyer and is stated to also include his role of creation this creation role is represented by the phallic symbol known as lingam in which form he is worshiped or in the form of male trinity of penis and two testicles 12 The linga or phallus is a common feature of Hindu temples across India engrained as reliefs or other forms The Brihadeeswarar Temple of Tanjore in Tamil Nadu built during the Chola Dynasty is dedicated to Shiva and features lingam between the cells it is especially renowned for its Hall of One Thousand Lingas 13 In Indonesia the phallic lingga and feminine yoni remain common symbols of harmony The Sultan s Palace of Kasepuhan in West Java has a number of lingga yoni carvings along its walls According to the Indonesian chronicles of the Babad Tanah Jawi Prince Puger gained the kingly power from God by ingesting sperm from the phallus of the already dead Sultan Amangkurat II of Mataram 14 15 Candi Sukuh temple of Ngancar East Java was built in the 10th century and is dedicated to Shiva The temple has numerous reliefs graphically depicting sexuality and fertility including several stone depictions of a copulating penis and vulva 16 It consists of a pyramid with reliefs and statues at the front Among them is a male statue clutching his penis with three tortoises with flattened shells 16 The temple once had a striking 1 82 metre 5 11 5 ft representation of lingga with four testicles this is now housed in the National Museum of Indonesia Phallic references were also made in Khmer architecture in Cambodia and several Khmer temples depict the phallus in reliefs In Africa Ancient Malians particularly the royals of Djenne decorated their palaces with phallus like piers and columns at the entrance of their palaces and decorated the walls with phallus motifs 17 Similar features can be seen on the pillars of many temples across Africa often interpreted by western scholars to be phallic symbols but may often be more subtle and subject to varying interpretations 18 Like the ancient Egyptian pharaohs Aksumite kings built temples with phallic pillars in ancient Ethiopian cities such as Konsu and monolithic pillars with phallic representation have also been discovered in Madagascar 19 In ancient Maya phallic architecture was rare but Uxmal in particular has a considerable number of phallus like architectural pieces It contains a temple known as the Temple of the Phallis and phallic sculptures and motifs 20 Modern edit nbsp The Dionysus Theatre of Athens Phallic columns of the ruined Ancient Greek theatre can still be seen Claude Nicholas Ledoux was a major exponent of architectural development in the 17th century which articulated across the tensions of form and ornament symbol and allegory dogma and fantasy at a time when western society was oppressive and particularly sensitive to public displays of sexuality blatant and graphic phallic architecture would have been considered an embarrassment and a shameful act 9 In his initial draft for the House of Pleasure in Chaux a proposed ideal city near the Forest of Chaux Ledoux drew upon allegorical ideas in his design with the union of man and woman a physiological interpretation of intercourse and penetration Private bedrooms were designed to thrust out from the circular ring of the building metaphorically representing penetration the circular ring representing the vaginal passage and womb of the female 9 The second revised design is said to subliminate both elevated site and female gender with a lonely phallus without the original planned animated circular ring representing the female reproductive organs 9 Ledoux drew upon phallic and sexually charged inspiration in other buildings which he designed His design of Besancon Theatre for instance was fueled by the exigencies of prostitution and ancient sexual ritual 9 However in comparison to the likes of Jean Jacques Lequeu who gained notoriety for his pornographic architectural concoctions Ledoux s architectural inspiration was relatively mild and he is said to have omitted towers from his designs on occasion as he was aware that they would be frowned upon shamefully by general society as a too obvious representation of the phallus Ledoux s missing erection is explained to this effect in Jacques Lecan s Significance of the Missing Phalus 9 According to Oscar Reutersvard the interest in neoclassical architecture in the 18th century was synonymous with and motivated by a similar interest in masculine virility 9 Works such as Francesco Colonna s Hypnerotomachia Poliphili 1467 and Giovanni Battista Piranesi s Campo Marzio 1762 show profoundly the ancient influence of phallic architecture in design and worship and contain numerous illustrations of Priapic temples and architecture 9 Piranesi in particular is said to have offered a prototype for the mysterious architecture of phallic worship that more closely resembles the houses of pleasure in his etchings 9 He located two designs for the Bustum Caesaris Augusti concluding that they were based upon sexual ritual with two phallic plans penetrating the semicircular cubicula Piranesi believed that the purpose of the phallic designs were to celebrate virility and male regenerative power 9 Other commentators such as Carl August Ehrensvard also provided illustrations and analysis of Priapic temples and the meaning of phallic architecture 9 A work of note to this effect is Neoclassical Temple of Virility and the Buildings with a Phallic Shaped Plan 1977 of the Institute for Art History of the University of Lund Sweden 9 In America especially in Chicago and New York and numerous other global cities high rise skyscrapers of phallic shape grew up in the 20th century Le Corbusier the famous architect propagated it in Europe in place of traditional decorative architecture Similar futuristic developments took place in Italy with the initiative of Sant Elia symbolizing the triumph of man Yet unlike those of ancient times which were blatant architectural representations of the phallus in the West in modern times shrines to the phallus are more subtle and may often be subject to interpretation as such very few architects have specifically admitted the human phallus as a source for their architectural creation 21 The Italian Fascists were cited as having an obsession with phallic architecture which was rigid and impermeable 22 In the last few decades the high rise phallic skyscraper has been a symbol of government quest for economic power in China Hong Kong and South Korea and the other ASEAN Pacific Rim nations China fuels billions of dollars annually into high rise office and residential buildings with the aim of increasing GDP at a rate far greater than they can be occupied 23 Symbolism edit nbsp nbsp Left Vendome Column Paris Right One of the many penis statues of Haesindang Park Penis Park South Korea In art and architecture acutely vertical buildings are often seen as a symbol of masculinity and horizontal buildings are seen as more feminine 24 25 The terms phallic verticality phallic erectility and phallic brutality have been referred to by architectural theorists including the likes of French sociologist Henri Lefebvre who argued that buildings of phallic architectural type metaphorically symbolize force male fertility masculine violence 24 26 Phallic erectility bestows a special status on the perpendicular proclaiming phallocracy as the orientation of space while phallic brutality does not remain abstract for it is the brutality of political power 26 Lefebvre conducted considerable research into the meaning of high rise buildings 24 He said The arrogant verticality of skyscrapers and especially of public and state buildings introduces a phallic or more precisely a phallocratic element into the visual realm the purpose of this display of this need to impress is to convey an impression of authority to each spectator Verticality and great height have ever been the spatial expression of potentially violent power 24 Sigmund Freud metaphorically drew a comparison between high achievement and the acquisition of wealth as building monuments to our penises 27 In the 19th century Thomas Mical argues that surrealists capitalized on the phallic symbolism of monuments such as the ancient Egyptian obelisk from Luxor in the Place de la Concorde or the Vendome Column by supplementing these phallic structures with female counterparts 28 Jules Breton for example suggested moving the obelisk to La Villette abattoir and designing a large gloved hand of a woman holding the obelisk in a suggestive manner and adapting the Vendome into a factory chimney with a nude woman climbing it 28 Auguste Bartholdi s 1870 monument Defense of Paris for instance a commemoration of Leon Gambetta s escape from Paris in balloon during the Franco Prussian War was also subject to debate amongst Parisian artists of the late 19th century as they believed it resembled a testicle 28 Arthur Harfaux proposed turning the monument into an enormous sex the balloon forming a testicle and the phallus being horizontal while Breton proposed turning it into copulating genitals adding a twin balloon to form two testicles 28 nbsp Jules Breton 1827 1906 a French realist artist who was keen to advocate phallic architecture in late 19th century Paris Contemporary scholars in architectural criticism have investigated the relationship between architecture and the body sexuality sex power and place 29 Feminists in particular such as Margrit Kennedy perceive high rise phallic like buildings on the urban landscape as phallic symbols of male domination power and rational instrumentality 30 Esther M K Cheung believes the form of monumental high rise building which grew up in 20th century America can be read as a phallic symbol of power 31 The present trend symbolises Science and technology over nature incorporating all the maleness which that with sci fi utopias 32 Elizabeth Grosz however offers a counter argument to phallocentrism in urban design theories saying not so much the dominance of the phallus as the pervasive unacknowledged use of the male or masculine to represent the human The problem then is not so much to eliminate as to reveal the masculinity inherent in the notion of the universal the generic human or the unspecified subject 29 Marc C Taylor discusses phallic architecture and what makes a building masculine or feminine in his book Disfiguring Art Architecture Religion 24 Symbols and shrines edit nbsp Marakan non Shrine in Yamaguchi Prefecture Japan The phallic stones besides the shrine are considered symbols of fertility During the modern era many sculptors have created some public phallic works of art with varying degrees of subtlety One of these examples may be the statue in honor to the Carnation Revolution on the top of a hill in Lisbon Portugal by the sculptor Joao Cutileiro 33 Perhaps the greatest example of a phallic cemetery is the Khalid Nabi Cemetery in hills of northeastern Iran near the border with Turkmenistan roughly 40 miles 64 km northeast of Gonbad e Kavous 34 According to a popular belief the cemetery house the tomb of a pre Islamic prophet Khalid Nabi who was born 40 years prior to the birth of Muhammad in c 530 34 The ancient graveyard contains some 600 tombstones of unknown origin many of which are clear representations of the phallus from a distance they resemble stone pegs 34 nbsp nbsp Left Chao Mae Tuptim Bangkok Thailand Right A smaller version of the Kharkarin Rock near Erdene Zuu Monastery Mongolia Phallic shrines are common in Far East Asia especially in Buddhist parts of Korea and Japan where they are seen as symbols of fertility or prowess 35 In Dragon Pool Temple in Jeju City there is a phallic shrine which is visited by female pilgrims who come to worship it for its perceived fertility blessings The phallic stone is made from granite quite small in size and white and was reportedly found in a field nearby by a farmer 35 In Thailand the phallus is also considered to be a symbol of good luck and representative of fertility There are numerous shrines in the country featuring phallic architecture Chao Mae Tuptim shrine in Bangkok has over a hundred colored erect wooden penis statues of all shapes and sizes which are said to possess special cosmic powers and endow good fortune and fertility on anybody coming into contact with them 36 37 Kharkhorin Rock located in Ovorkhangai Province of Mongolia is a massive statue of a penis raised on a platform on the steppe near Erdene Zuu Monastery The statue has dual functions primarily it is a reminder to the monks to remain celibate but it is also a symbol of fertility and human life 38 A smaller statue of a phallus is nearer the monastery Haesindang Park also known as Penis Park in Gangwon Province of South Korea located about 20 kilometres 12 mi south of Samcheok is a nature park which contains a number of erect statues A tragic legend shrouds them in that a virgin was once swept out to sea and drowned unable to be saved by her lover The townspeople were devastated and helpless and a curse appeared to have been cast over them ruining the local fishing industry One day a local fisherman relieved himself in the sea and miraculously the fishing industry revived He discovered that her restless spirit could be appeased in such a manner so the townsfolk compensated for the woman s inability to consummate beyond the grave by placing sexually potent phallic statues in view of the shore 39 The statues range in size and styles some have faces on them and are more animated in appearance and more colorful but others are exact depictions of the human penis In some Asian countries such as Bhutan many have a belief that a phallus brings good luck and drives away evil spirits Phallus symbols are routinely painted outside walls of the new houses and carved wooden phalluses are hung sometimes crossed by a design of sword or dagger outside on the eves of the new homes at the four corners 40 On a road drive from Paro airport to Thimphu explicit paintings of phalluses are a common sight on the white washed walls of homes shops and eateries 40 In the Chimi Lhakhang monastery the shrine dedicated to Drupka Kinley several wooden penises are used to bless people who visit the monastery on pilgrimage seeking blessings to bear a child or for welfare of their children The glaringly displayed phallus in the monastery is a brown wooden piece with a silver handle a religious relic considered to possess divine powers and hence used for blessing the spiritually oriented people It is also said to prevent quarrels among family members in the houses which are painted with these symbols 40 Buildings and structures edit nbsp nbsp Left Empire State Building New York City Right The Leaning Tower of Pisa Empire State Building edit The 102 story Empire State Building is a New York City designated landmark 41 one of the city s most famous sites and is generally thought of as an American cultural icon Cited by Valerie Briginshaw as a symbol of American pride and the ultimate sign of American phallic power 42 it was inaugurated on 1 May 1931 43 Designed in the Art Deco style it has a roof height of 1 250 feet 380 meters and with its antenna spire included it stands a total of 1 454 ft 443 m high It stood as the world s tallest building for 40 years from its completion in 1931 until construction of the World Trade Center s North Tower was completed in 1972 After the World Trade Center was destroyed on September 11 2001 it remained the tallest building in New York City for 13 years until the One World Trade Center was completed Numerous people have mentioned its similarities in appearance to the phallus with its tall and glinting towers 44 45 46 Leaning Tower of Pisa edit The Leaning Tower of Pisa in Pisa Italy dating from around 1173 has long suffered from structural problems The tower is eight stories high at 55 86 metres 183 3 ft and before restoration work from 1990 leaned 5 5 degrees It currently leans about 4 degrees but due to foundation problems it continues to sink about 1mm annually The resemblance of the tower to a penis has seen the Leaning Tower of Pisa become a sexual slang term for a half erect penis 47 Nelson s Column edit Nelson s Column a monument to Admiral Horatio Nelson was erected by a grateful nation between 1840 and 1843 to commemorate Nelson s victory at the Battle of Trafalgar However the Nelson Memorial Committee ran out of money having only raised 20 485 in public subscriptions 48 The column is Corinthian with a granite shaft 49 In his poem A Ballad of the Good Lord Nelson Lawrence Durrell included the multiply allusive lines Now stiff on a pillar with a phallic air Nelson stylites in Trafalgar Square Reminds the British what once they were 50 Colonna Mediterranea edit nbsp Colonna Mediterranea in Luqa Malta Colonna Mediterranea is a monumental column in Luqa Malta It has been described by its artist Paul Vella Critien as an Egyptian symbol However at a glance it could be observed to look similar to a large penile and therefore was largely described to be a phallic monument The monument has managed to attract several international media coverage in specific before and during the visit of Pope Benedict XVI to Malta as the pope mobile carrying the papacy had been planned and passed by it Similarly the same artist has created another monumental column the Kolonna Eterna which was also described as being phallic by critics 51 52 53 54 Obelisk of Luxor edit The Obelisk of Luxor which stands in the Place de la Concorde of Paris France was given to the French by the Egyptians in the 1800s The 23 meter 75 foot obelisk originally stood at the front of Luxor Temple honoring Ramses II pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt According to Michael D Garval the French perceived the obelisk as prodigiously phallic from the moment it arrived 55 Oriental Pearl TV Tower edit The Oriental Pearl TV Tower located in Lujiazui Pudong district Shanghai China is the world s third tallest TV and radio tower at 468 metres 1 535 ft the tallest such building in Asia The tower houses restaurants theaters a conference hall and a hotel and is a significant tourist attraction in the city The tower has been met a mixed reception however The New York Times described it as a great phallic monster of truly monumental ugliness a bit like an enormous asparagus with a silver ball on top 56 The long steel column tower is considered by some to be proof of the city s phallic worship and that such skyscrapers indicative of wealth are an increasing aphrodisiac of the materialist in Chinese cities 57 Doha Tower edit The Doha Tower formerly called the Burj Doha or Burj Qatar was designed by French architect Jean Nouvel In 2004 the project was first called the High Rise Office Building 58 Following completion in 2012 it was originally called the Burj Doha by its owner H E Sheikh Saud bin Muhammed Al Thani The public has noted the building s phallic form 59 60 suggestive of what Nouvel calls a fully assumed virility 61 State Capitol Lincoln edit The State Capitol building of Lincoln Nebraska has been cited as the apex of phallic architecture 62 At 15 stories and 400 feet 120 m tall it is the second tallest U S statehouse surpassed only by the 34 story Louisiana State Capitol 63 It is the tallest building in Lincoln 64 the third tallest in the state and also the heaviest Capitol building in North America The building was designed by Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue who drew upon Classical and Gothic architectural traditions 65 It was constructed between 1922 and 1932 of Indiana limestone with a golden dome 65 The building is nicknamed The Phallus of the Plains for its phallus like appearance 66 30 St Mary Axe edit 30 St Mary Axe opened in London in April 2004 Designed by Norman Foster the 180 metres 590 ft structure London s first environmentally sustainable tall building using recycled and recyclable materials has been compared to the phallus and a gherkin which also is a slang term for small penis its nicknames include Gherkin the Erotic Gherkin Towering Innuendo and the Crystal Phallus 67 68 69 Also likened to a phallic fat cigar the building has been cited as a crude anatomical metaphor yet has become one of the London s most iconic buildings 68 Cabinet voted it the Best Uncircumcised Building in the World 69 Torre Agbar edit nbsp nbsp Left Torre Agbar Barcelona Spain Right Washington Monument Washington D C United States The Torre Agbar is a 38 story skyscraper located in the Placa de les Glories Catalanes of the Poblenou neighborhood of Barcelona Spain Designed by Jean Nouvel it is named after its owners the Agbar Group a holding company whose interests include the Barcelona water company Aigues de Barcelona An example of high tech architecture in the city its design combines a number of different architectural concepts resulting in a striking structure built with reinforced concrete covered with a facade of glass and over 4 500 window openings cut out of the structural concrete The building stands out on the skyline of Barcelona it is the third tallest building in the city standing at 144 44 m 473 9 ft with an area of over 50 000 square metres of which 30 000 are offices 2 500 LED bulbs cause the tower to change color at night 70 It was officially opened by the King of Spain on 16 September 2005 Nouvel claims it to be inspired by a geyser and the nearby mountain of Montserrat although he does note its phallic appearance 71 Although many draw comparisons with the phallus locals refer to the structure as el supositorio the suppository a drug delivery system that is inserted into the rectum or vagina 70 72 Washington Monument edit The Washington Monument in Washington D C is often seen as a prime example of phallic architecture and American masculinity 73 The towering monument made of marble granite and bluestone gneiss it is both the world s tallest stone structure and the world s tallest obelisk standing 555 feet 5 1 8 inches 169 294 m according to the National Park Service 74 Construction of the monument began in 1848 was halted from 1854 to 1877 and was completed in 1884 In a Journal review dated 17 October 1911 Arnold Bennett said of the monument Saw Washington monument Phallic Appalling A national catastrophe only equalled by the Albert Memorial Tiny doll like people waiting to go into it 75 Dan Burstein says of it Speaking of sex symbols there is no more phallic symbol in existence than the Washington Monument and the Capitol dome can be viewed as breastlike 76 James Webb used a metaphor to praise the uplift ing power of the Washington Monument as a white phallus piercing the air like a bayonet 77 In the futuristic film Hardwired set in the United States where everything noteworthy is commercialized the Washington Monument is used as a giant Trojan condoms billboard Ypsilanti Water Tower edit nbsp Ypsilanti Water Tower in Ypsilanti Michigan winner of the Most Phallic Building contest Ypsilanti Water Tower is a historic water tower in Ypsilanti Michigan United States listed as a National Register of Historic Places building in 1981 The tower was designed by William R Coats and constructed as part of an elaborate city waterworks project that began in 1889 78 Located on the highest point in Ypsilanti the tower was completed in 1890 at a cost of 21 435 63 Today the tower is frequently joked about for its phallic shape and has earned the nickname Brick Dick 79 80 It has become a well known landmark in Ypsilanti and due to the building s shape and location the tower is frequently used by residents as a point for providing directions for visitors and residents Iggy Pop said of it in a 1996 interview The most famous thing in Ypsilanti is this water tower made out of brick about 175 years old It looks like this big penis 81 The World s Most Phallic Building contest was a contest held in 2003 by Cabinet magazine to find the building which most resembled a human phallus 82 The contest originated when writer Jonathan Ames drew the ire of Slate readers by claiming in a diary that was later published in his book I Love You More Than You Know 83 that the Williamsburg Bank Building in Brooklyn New York City New York was the world s most phallic This led Cabinet magazine to initiate a search of its own to find which building was truly the world s most phallic 84 Cities and readers subsequently poured in their views and staked their claims to the magazine s editors After months of entries and discussion the Ypsilanti Water Tower was announced as the winner 85 86 although the winner of a readers poll was the Florida State Capitol building in Tallahassee 87 Another notable nominee was the Torre Agbar of Barcelona 88 Christian Science Church Dixon Illinois edit The Christian Science Dixon church in Dixon Illinois strongly resembles a penis when viewed from the air The church however claims it was tastefully designed around an old oak tree and declared that We didn t design it to be seen as what they re seeing And we didn t design it to be seen from above 89 nbsp nbsp Left Hyde Park Obelisk Sydney Right Giant condom covering the Obelisk in November 2014 Hyde Park Hyde Greater Manchester edit In 2012 a beehive metal sculpture by Thompson Dagnall in Hyde Greater Manchester was criticized by the council for its phallic appearance having been installed adjacent to the children s play area in Hyde Park Although Dagnall was paid 3 500 a week for his efforts council workers modified the structure by stumping it and moved it to another part of the park 90 People s Daily Tower edit A new headquarters for the People s Daily newspaper has been under construction since 2013 update and is slated for completion in 2014 In May 2013 China attempted to censor jokes about its phallic shape 91 92 93 Hyde Park Obelisk Sydney edit The 22 metre 72 ft high Hyde Park Obelisk located in Hyde Park Sydney Australia at the intersection of Elizabeth Street and Bathurst Street is both a former sewer ventshaft and a notable landmark in the Sydney CBD 94 Its phallic appearance was emphasised on 7 November 2014 when the AIDS Council of NSW ACON temporarily installed a giant condom over the Obelisk as part of a HIV awareness campaign The installation generated a lot of media interest including many phallic innuendos 95 96 97 and drew the ire of the Australian Christian Lobby 98 Burj Dubai Khalifa edit nbsp Burj Khalifa in Dubai The Burj Khalifa also known as Burj Dubai was inaugurated in 2010 It is an example of phallic architecture 99 100 101 See also edit nbsp Architecture portal Phallic processions Phallus paintings in BhutanReferences edit a b Ambrose Gavin Harris Paul Stone Sally 1 February 2008 The Visual Dictionary of Architecture Lausanne Switzerland New York N Y AVA Publishing SA Distributed in the USA amp Canada by Watson Guptill Publications p 199 ISBN 978 2 940373 54 3 Retrieved 12 September 2012 Sagina Claudia 2015 The Archeology of Malta Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107006690 p 104 a b c Grether Bruce P Kramer Joseph Johnson Toby 30 March 2012 The Secret of the Golden Phallus Male Erotic Alchemy for the 21st Century Lethe Press p 114 ISBN 978 1 59021 118 2 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Westmoreland Perry L 30 June 2007 Ancient Greek Beliefs Lee And Vance Publishing Co p 627 ISBN 978 0 9793248 1 9 Retrieved 16 September 2012 a b c Bloch Iwan 1 March 2003 Anthropological Studies in the Strange Sexual Practices of All Races in All Ages Kessinger Publishing p 119 ISBN 978 0 7661 3382 2 Retrieved 12 September 2012 Glazebrook Allison Henry Madeleine M 6 January 2011 Greek Prostitutes in the ancient Mediterranean 800 BCE 200 CE Univ of Wisconsin Press p 160 ISBN 978 0 299 23564 2 Retrieved 16 September 2012 a b Gimbutas Marija Alseikaite 1974 The Gods and Goddesses of Old Europe 7000 to 3500 BC Myths Legends and Cult Images University of California Press p 153 ISBN 978 0 520 01995 9 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Hannay James Ballantyne 1 August 1991 Sex Symbolism in Religion Health Research Books p 522 ISBN 978 0 7873 0367 9 Retrieved 12 September 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Singley Paulette 1993 The Anamorphic Phallus within Ledoux s Dismembered Plan of Chaux Journal of Architectural Education 46 3 176 188 doi 10 2307 1425159 JSTOR 1425159 Harris Judith 15 June 2007 Pompeii Awakened A Story of Rediscovery I B Tauris p 120 ISBN 978 1 84511 241 7 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Guiley Rosemary 1 January 2008 The Encyclopedia of Witches Witchcraft and Wicca Infobase Publishing p 115 ISBN 978 1 4381 2684 5 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Wall Otto Augustus 1920 Sex and Sex Worship phallic Worship A Scientific Treatise on Sex Its Nature and Function and Its Influence on Art Science Architecture and Religion with Special Reference to Sex Worship and Symbolism C V Mosby Company ISBN 9780710310637 Phallic architecture in India Noble William A 1981 The Architecture and Organization of Kerala Style Hindu Temples Anthropos 76 1 2 1 24 JSTOR 40460291 Moertono Soemarsaid 2009 State and Statecraft in Old Java A Study of the Later Mataram Period 16th to 19th Century Equinoc Publishing p 68 ISBN 9786028397438 Darmaputera Eka 1988 Pancasila and the search for identity and modernity in Indonesian society a cultural and ethical analysis BRILL pp 108 9 ISBN 9789004084223 a b Kinney Ann R Klokke Marijke J Kieven Lydia 2003 Worshiping Siva and Buddha The Temple Art of East Java University of Hawaii Press p 268 ISBN 978 0 8248 2779 3 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Bloom Jonathan Blair Sheila 23 March 2009 The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art amp Architecture Three volume set Oxford University Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 19 530991 1 Retrieved 12 September 2012 Prussin Labelle 1974 An Introduction to Indigenous African Architecture PDF Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 33 3 183 205 doi 10 2307 988854 JSTOR 988854 Gensheimer Thomas R 2012 Research Notes Monumental Tomb Architecture of the Medieval Swahili Coast Buildings amp Landscapes Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum 19 1 107 114 doi 10 1353 bdl 2012 0002 JSTOR 988854 S2CID 161710461 Sharer Robert 1 November 1994 The Ancient Maya Fifth Edition Stanford University Press p 376 ISBN 978 0 8047 2130 1 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Bakos Susan Crain 1 January 2011 Daily Sex Bible Inspirations and Techniques for the Best Year of Sex Ever Quiver p 51 ISBN 978 1 59233 447 6 Retrieved 16 September 2012 University of Mississippi 1994 Faulkner and Psychology Univ Press of Mississippi p 44 ISBN 978 0 87805 743 6 Retrieved 12 September 2012 Barboza David 20 October 2010 A New Chinese City With Everything but People New York Times a b c d e Lin Xiaoping 1 January 2010 Children of Marx and Coca Cola Chinese Avant Garde Art and Independent Cinema University of Hawaii Press p 46 ISBN 978 0 8248 3336 7 Access date 12 September 2012 Rendell Jane 11 November 1999 Gender Space Architecture An Interdisciplinary Introduction Taylor amp Francis p 229 ISBN 978 0 415 17253 0 Retrieved 12 September 2012 a b Hays K Michael 28 February 2000 Architecture Theory since 1968 MIT Press p 187 ISBN 978 0 262 58188 2 Retrieved 12 September 2012 The Advocate The Advocate The National Gay amp Lesbian Newsmagazine Here Publishing 56 22 August 1995 ISSN 0001 8996 Retrieved 16 September 2012 a b c d Mical Thomas 17 December 2004 Surrealism and Architecture Taylor amp Francis p 200 ISBN 978 0 415 32520 2 Retrieved 12 September 2012 a b Ahrentzen Sherry Anthony Kathryn H 1993 Sex Stars and Studios A Look at Gendered Educational Practices in Architecture PDF Journal of Architectural Education 47 1 11 29 doi 10 2307 1425224 hdl 2142 25089 JSTOR 1425224 Transition Transition Pub 1988 p 41 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Cheung Esther M K 15 August 2009 Fruit Chan s Made in Hong Kong Hong Kong University Press p 110 ISBN 978 962 209 977 7 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Greed Clara H 1994 Women and Planning Creating Gendered Realities Taylor amp Francis pp 119 120 ISBN 9780415079815 Teixeira Jose Escultura publica em Portugal monumentos herois e mitos sec XX Thesis in Portuguese Repositorio da Universidade de Lisboa a b c In Iran tombstones shaped like penises delight tourists Iran GlobalPost 12 November 2010 Retrieved 17 September 2012 a b Nemeth David J 4 September 1987 The Architecture of Ideology Neo Confucian Imprinting on Cheju Island Korea University of California Press p 197 ISBN 978 0 520 09713 1 Retrieved 12 September 2012 Guelden Marlane 1995 Thailand into the Spirit World Times Editions p 75 ISBN 9789812041104 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Hoskin John Invernizzi Luca 1990 Bangkok Times Editions p 88 ISBN 978 1 55650 271 2 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Kohn Michael 1 May 2008 Mongolia Lonely Planet p 123 ISBN 978 1 74104 578 9 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Balasingamchow Yu Mei Richmond Simon Soriano Cesar G Whyte Rob 1 May 2010 Korea Lonely Planet p 194 ISBN 978 1 74104 831 5 Retrieved 17 September 2012 a b c Brown Lindsey Mayhew Bradley Armington Stan Whitecross Richard 2009 Bhutan Penguin pp 13 78 79 144 ISBN 978 1 74059 529 2 Retrieved 12 September 2012 Haberman Clyde 1981 05 20 Panel Creates a Historic District in Manhattan s East 60 s and 70 s The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 05 07 Briginshaw Valerie 12 October 2001 Dance Space and Subjectivity Palgrave Macmillan p 130 ISBN 978 0 333 91973 6 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Stern Robert A M Gilmartin Patrick Mellins Thomas 1987 New York 1930 Architecture and Urbanism Between the Two World Wars New York Rizzoli p 613 ISBN 978 0 8478 3096 1 OCLC 13860977 Douglas George H 2004 Skyscrapers A Social History Of The Very Tall Building In America McFarland p 107 ISBN 978 0 7864 2030 8 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Harris Scott Jordan 15 August 2011 World Film Locations New York Intellect Books p 32 ISBN 978 1 84150 482 7 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Stein Herbert 1 October 2001 Double Feature E reads E rights p 51 ISBN 978 0 7592 3192 4 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Lloyd Shannon June 2010 Rita and the Kids Next Door Olympia Press p 109 ISBN 978 1 60872 284 6 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Hansards Parliamentary Debates Vol CXLIV p 1220 The Selected Design for the Nelson Testimonial The Art Union 1 100 1839 Retrieved 30 May 2011 p 100 Durrell Lawrence 1964 A Ballad of the Good Lord Nelson Selected Poems 1935 1963 Faber p 84 Luqa s monument makes international headlines Times of Malta 2010 Stanglin Douglas 2010 Maltese town demands removal of phallic monument before pope s visit One Dead Line Phallic art sparks row ahead of Pope s Malta visit BBC 2010 Peregin Christian 2010 Don t let Pope Benedict see monument Luqa council Times of Malta Garval Michael D 2004 A Dream of Stone Fame Vision and Monumentality in Nineteenth Century French Literary Culture University of Delaware Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 87413 862 7 Retrieved 16 September 2012 The New York Times magazine The New York Times January 1996 p 110 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Ong Aihwa 28 June 2006 Neoliberalism as Exception Mutations in Citizenship and Sovereignty Duke University Press p 219 ISBN 978 0 8223 3748 5 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Doha 9 High Rise Office Tower Qatar Design Build Network Retrieved 14 March 2013 The Contextualizer By Arthur Lubow NYT April 6 2008 Bridge in the Gulf By Edwin Heathcote Financial Times February 11 2011 Jean Nouvel s Message in a Bottle Archived 2013 04 15 at the Wayback Machine By Julian Sancton Vanity Fair April 28 2008 Campbell Jeff Averbuck Alexis Bao Sandra Bender Andy 30 March 2008 USA Lonely Planet p 673 ISBN 978 1 74104 675 5 Retrieved 12 September 2012 U S Sites and Symbols Capital Weigl Publishers Inc p 21 ISBN 978 1 60596 253 5 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Meyer Diana Lambdin 1 July 2010 Nebraska Off the Beaten Path 7th A Guide to Unique Places Globe Pequot p 10 ISBN 978 0 7627 5732 9 Retrieved 17 September 2012 a b Joan Marter 20 January 2011 The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art Oxford University Press p 355 ISBN 978 0 19 533579 8 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Gilland Wilmot G Woodcock David 1984 Architectural values and world issues proceedings of the 71st Annual Meeting of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture 1983 Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture p 161 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Herrle Peter Wegerhoff Erik 2008 Architecture and Identity LIT Verlag Munster p 213 ISBN 978 3 8258 1088 7 Retrieved 16 September 2012 a b Jarvis Helen 10 June 2009 Cities and Gender Taylor amp Francis p 34 ISBN 978 0 415 41569 9 Retrieved 16 September 2012 a b Best Uncircumcised Building in the World Cabinet Retrieved 16 September 2012 a b Andrew Whittaker 30 July 2008 Spain Be Fluent in Spanish Life and Culture Thorogood Publishing p 173 ISBN 978 1 85418 605 8 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Michelin MFPM 1 January 2011 Spagna Nord MICHELIN p 257 ISBN 978 2 06 715099 7 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Lotus international Industrie Grafiche Editoriali 2004 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Boyle Brenda M 30 October 2009 Masculinity in Vietnam War Narratives A Critical Study of Fiction Films and Nonfiction Writings McFarland p 127 ISBN 978 0 7864 4538 7 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Frequently Asked Questions about the Washington Monument National Park Service Retrieved 16 September 2012 Yapp Peter 1983 The Travellers Dictionary of Quotation Who Said What about Where Routledge pp 970 ISBN 978 0 415 02760 1 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Burstein Dan 20 October 2011 Secrets of the Widow s Son Orion p 69 ISBN 978 0 297 86491 2 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Hagopian Patrick 30 September 2011 The Vietnam War in American Memory Veterans Memorials and the Politics of Healing Univ of Massachusetts Press p 104 ISBN 978 1 55849 902 7 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Ashlee Laura Rose 27 May 2005 Traveling Through Time A Guide to Michigan s Historical Markers University of Michigan Press p 444 ISBN 978 0 472 03066 8 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Buhk Tobin T 7 June 2011 True Crime Michigan The State s Most Notorious Criminal Cases Stackpole Books p 91 ISBN 978 0 8117 0713 8 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Feldman Elliot December 2002 Sitting Shiva A Novel Foxrock Books p 160 ISBN 978 0 9643740 6 5 Retrieved 17 September 2012 SPIN SPIN Media LLC May 1996 p 85 ISSN 0886 3032 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Gutierrez Lisa 29 December 2003 Another claim to fame for Liberty Memorial Kansas City Star Halpin Brendan 21 February 2006 Delightful essays of life s ups downs in I Love You I Love You More Than You Know Los Angeles Times Retrieved 16 September 2012 Williamsburg Bank Forgotten ny com Retrieved 16 September 2012 A the awards the 9 most remarkable things in culture this month man at his best Esquire 1 January 2004 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Cabinet Magazine Winner Cabinet Archived from the original on 2 October 2007 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Harrison Dan 6 November 2003 Site of the week The Age Melbourne Retrieved 16 September 2012 Grawe Christina Schmal Peter Cachola 2007 High Society Contemporary Highrise Architecture and the International Highrise Award 2006 Jovis pp Dust jacket ISBN 978 3 936314 77 9 No plans to change shape of Illinois church that looks like penis from the sky officials say New York Daily News Archived from the original on 12 November 2013 Retrieved 12 November 2013 Beehive sculpture in Hyde park is taken down for being too phallic Manchester Evening News 28 March 2012 Retrieved 5 September 2021 Jennifer Wadsworth China tries fails to censor jokes about penis shaped skyscraper Archived 2013 05 26 at the Wayback Machine SFGate 3 May 2013 Accessed 12 May 2013 Alexander Abad Santos China Is Censoring Jokes About Its Propaganda Machine s Penis Shaped HQ The Atlantic Wire 3 May 2013 Accessed 12 May 2013 Luke Villapaz People s Daily Tower Chinese Newspaper Receives Widespread Criticism For Its Phallic Shaped Building International Business Times 3 May 2013 Accessed 12 May 2013 Heritage detail Sewer Vent The Obelisk Sydney Water 28 February 2014 Retrieved 7 November 2014 Giant pink condom hits Sydney to remind gay men safety comes first The Guardian 7 November 2014 Retrieved 8 November 2014 A giant hot pink condom is currently covering Hyde Park s Obelisk The Vine 7 November 2014 Archived from the original on 7 November 2014 Retrieved 8 November 2014 Giant pink condom lowered onto Sydney s Hyde Park Obelisk to fight AIDS in NSW The Daily Telegraph 7 November 2014 Retrieved 8 November 2014 Wendy Francis on the giant pink condom on Hyde Park Obelisk news com au 7 November 2014 Retrieved 8 November 2014 World s Largest Penis Discovered In Middle East Desert Queerty 2010 01 04 Retrieved 2023 11 28 Leadbeater Chris 2016 04 14 How many phallic symbols does the world really need The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 2023 11 28 Dubai city of excess now has the world s biggest phallus nextcity org Retrieved 2023 11 28 External links editGuardian article on phallic architecture May 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phallic architecture amp oldid 1203997712, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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