Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Reading Comprehension: Six

[1] A common theme of the early twentieth century found in Roth, Harwood, and Massey set the tone for an understanding of styles in architecture and design influenced by fine art. Selecting either Arts + Crafts or Art Nouveau, TRACE the influences of the selected style in more than two nations. In your answer, you should include evidence from the readings and at least two annotated images as support for your analysis of influences.

“Despite its individual manifestations, Art Nouveau design displays some common characteristics. Line, whether curving and sensuous or straight and geometric, is an important principle that designers explore and exploit... Designers reduce traditional and naturalistic forms and motifs to their essence, transforming them and ascribing to them their design intentions in appearance and meaning. Expressions strongly emphasize decoration, particularly surface decoration, which may be linear rather than plastic” (Harwood, p.485).

“To an even greater degree than others before them, Art Nouveau designers see no separation between the fine arts of painting and sculpture and architecture and the decorative arts, such as glass, ceramics, and furniture. They strive for unity in design to create complete expressions, or what they call total works of art” (Harwood, p.485).

While short lived it still managed to dominate the arts in Europe and the United States during the late 1800’s and early 1900’s.  Art Nouveau emerged first in France, and moved to Belgium where Victor Horta, Henry van de Velde, and Gustave Serrurier-Bovy were the leading designers. It can also be traced to Scotland (in some parts), Germany with Bauhaus, Austria, Spain with Arte Modern or Modernismo as it was referred to as, and Italy during this time, and later moved to England and the United States. It makes its way through these countries through the widespread exhibitions.  The United Kingdom to some degree, however rejected it, and was only accepted in some parts such as Glaslow with the practitioners Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Herbert McNair, and sister Margaret and Frances MacDonald. The U.S. was also somewhat apprehensive except in places such as Chicago with the Chicago school.  Tiffany glass was born out of this movement with Louis Comfort Tiffany and Tiffany Studios.

(p.34 Massey) Victor Horta, Tassel House


(p.58 Massey) Charles Rennie Mackintosh Library; Glaslow School of Art

“Art Nouveau lays important groundwork for subsequent modern movements in its attempts to throw off the past, its stress in total works of art, and its emphasis upon new technology and contemporary materials” (Harwood, p. 484).

[2] Originating at the Bauhaus and in the work of LeCorbusier, the so-called Modern movement deeply influenced design and architecture of the twentieth century. The great debate raised by this new approach to design involved the presence of the machine in the design process and final products. SPECULATE about the implications of “machines for living” and the famous dictum “less is more” on design today. Use at least one ARTIFACT, SPACE, or BUILDING in your answer, providing a salient image (cited) and annotation to help bolster your argument.


“Turning away from symbolic allusions and national building traditions, the purely pragmatic and utilitarian approach to design was to let functional requirements and structural solutions determine the result” (Roth, p.520).

LeCorbusier argued that “twentieth-century machines possessed the same elegance of form and function” as the Parthenon (Roth, p.530).  He also “extolled the mechanical perfection of the modern airplane, steamship, and automobile as supreme expressions of the beauty of from determined by absolute response to modern function” (Roth, 530).

With the example of the Citrohan house named after the Citroen, a popular French car he “hoped that such houses, using standardized factory architecture components, would be as easy and cheap to build as low-priced automobiles and, similarly, available to everyone” (Roth, p. 530). This did not quite happen, in that it was much more expensive and unattainable by the masses. The point is that it was the hope, the desire for the new design wave to be affordable, somewhat mass-produced, and available to all to be enjoyed. It was not practical. The same can be said for today. We are currently trying to become sustainable and have been for decades. The problem is that it is not yet mainstream affordable. We have certainly made advances and made certain things available to masses, especially with the given tax breaks when using “green” or “eco-friendly” products or renovations to your home or business. We are still living out this ideal of making new innovations available and inspiring.


(Roth p.530) LeCorbusier, Citrohan House

“The ultimate aim of all visual arts is the complete building…Together let us desire, conceive, and create the new structure of the future, which will embrace architecture and sculpture and painting in one unity and which will one day rise toward heaven from the hands of a million workers like the crystal symbol of a new faith” (Roth, p.523).


[3] From the assigned pages in Roth, Harwood, and Massey, SELECT an image that you believe explodes the notion that Modern interiors and objects were black and white. Fully RENDER your own design exploration of that image through color, material, and light and appropriately annotate and cite the image to prove this point. [5 POINTS POSSIBLE]



(Harwood p.604) Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Tugendhat House

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Reflections Summary

Raul Garcia tied many of the elements from the unit together, and in most cases spoke eloquently on the subject but faltered with minor grammatical errors in areas. By drawing many correlations he made the subject matter relatable, and drew better connections.



Jasmine Collins spoke very clearly and distinctly about individual forms of architecture, and related them each to the other. She had excellent transitions, vivid descriptions, and supported her points with rich quotes.






Jenni Ham chose a beautiful image to tie her piece together. She has great usage of cultural context. I have not seen this in other’s writings, she brings a new level of understanding to the material/subject matter. I appreciate the difference in her writing as compared to other's.




Through the exploration of each post I gained better understanding of the unit, or was reminded of information that I had forgotten. This exercise of critiquing our peers work was helpful in bringing about different points of view and discussions for us each to gain another perspective and understanding.

Alternatives Summary

 Kacie Leisure draws interesting, well composed links between subject matter and examples of architecture.  The image she chose works well for unit taking from previous technology/design and revolutionizing it, changing it to suit cultural needs.
www.kacieleisure.blogspot.com


Kathernine McCain has excellent points and observations. She makes connections across the entire semester bringing things together and more tangible.
http://fullcircledesignblog.blogspot.com/


Weston Willard point is eloquently written. He provided excellent examples and correlations. I didn’t fully feel the same way about the image chosen, however. But over all he broke down different the elements successfully.
http://wweston.blogspot.com/



Each had a different focus and understanding of the material, but each helped me to piece together elements of the unit, and take on a different perspective. It's interesting to explore the different writing styles, and realize how different the information is processed individually. 

Monday, November 8, 2010

Counterpoint: Clock

This counterpoint took place during the reflections unit. I chose the Hall of Mirrors in Versailles. I demonstrated reflection through the use of a mirror also showing materiality of the actual structure. The mirror reflected the symbolism of the sun god and the fact the King Louis thought of himself as the current sun god. He brought elements into Versailles to reflect this with the gilding, the mirrors reflect the windows also reflecting the sun. I implemented that into my 3d model as well. 

3D-Space
Nature- Sun reflecting from windows, and the clouds in the image being reflected.
People- Scale figures walking through space.
Material- Glass/Mirror, flooring
Symbol- Sun God









Sunday, November 7, 2010

Point: Reflections

“It's just a jump to the left, and a step to the right...Let's do the Time Warp again!!!” Patrick quipped in class about doing the Time Warp. After recently see Rocky Horror Picture show over the weekend at the Carolina Theater I realized how perfect his statement truly was for this unit. This unit was all about looking to the past and recreating, modifying, and even revolutionizing.

Patrick provided a slide in his lecture a couple weeks back drawing a comparison throughout many of the design cycles. It was depicted as a pinwheel of sorts with “Revolution” at the center and various terms with subcategories off shooting from the center. Those included Renaissance: the revival of learning and culture, further described as rebirth, transition, and changeover. Revival: coming again into activity, renewal, reclamation, and rehabilitation.  Rotation: uniform variation in sequence, circumvolution, rhythm, and flow. Cycle: a recurring series of events, series, sequence, and phase. Reform: a change for the better, straighten, regenerate, correct abuses.

This to me was exceptionally helpful in understanding how everything responds to the previous, and continues to build upon itself. Few things have truly broken free from past precedents; in fact it may be argued that nothing is truly ever new.  We continue to work out the kinks or problems of previous works. Although I believe once we made it into the more modern style period we were no longer recreating the past per say in a 1:1 form with exception of what we saw in Chicago with the city built meant to pay homage to Columbus, but instead we were reacting to the past and improving it. We improved our technology with the emergence of the railways which brought with it new materials to build with (iron and glass). This revolutionized the face of architecture, or rather the bone structure for lack of a better term.  While this was happening however we still had Victorian, and Arts and Crafts speaking. Homesteads still looked to the past as commerce and buildings associated it with it were looking to the future.
It became clear during this unit that it is difficult to define modern and modernism.  The free online dictionary defines modern architecture as a “new architectural style that emerged in many Western countries in the decade after World War I. It was based on the "rational" use of modern materials, the principles of functionalist planning, and the rejection of historical precedent and ornament”(http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/modern+architecture). I do not believe you can truly define it, it is always changing, always reacting to the current culture.


http://www.southbayshipping.com/2005Modernarchitecture53.html



Again, going back to the time warp statement…the image I chose represents time shifting, being mixed together, coming together to create one image. The image reflects modern architecture being swirled around. To me this represents the idea of many ideas or languages coming together, the lines of separation blurring, responding to what is happening around them taking components from each to unite them into one composition creating a new genre.

“It's astounding, time is fleeting
Madness takes its toll
But listen closely, not for very much longer
I've got to keep control

I remember doing the Time Warp
Drinking those moments when
The blackness would hit me and the void would be calling
Let's do the time warp again...”

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Reading Comprehension: Five

[1] From the Roth, Harwood, and Massey readings, select an ARTIFACT you believe to represent revolution in design. SPECULATE about the type of revolution this artifact symbolizes. Supplement your answer with a beautifully hand rendered image of the artifact you selected, citing source and page on your image. [10 POINTS POSSIBLE]

I chose a chair on page 26 of the Harwood book. The chair has language of a revolution in design, and ingenuity. It introduces mechanics representative of the machine/industrial age. With the introduction of the railways/trains technology took a new path along side it, riding its way to greater and better things. Prior to this time in history furniture was stationary within itself. With this chair in particular it not only can swivel from side-to-side, but you can also adjust the height of the chair to fit yours. While the chair has four legs, they are not traditional legs, they are modified and have a distinct shape. There are no arms, which is not traditional. Over all I believe the design is forward thinking. It is thinking more about function vs. high style and merely having something in your home to show status, and wealth. These were all new ideas of the time period, no longer looking as much to the past, and therefore revolutionary. 

[2] Using the internet, LOCATE and ANALYZE an image for an ARTIFACT, a SPACE, a BUILDING, and a PLACE, drawing the idea of eastern influences as understood by nineteenth-century minds (China, Japan, India, Middle Eastern) on western design and architecture. Each answer must include an appropriately annotated and cited image in addition to a well-crafted essay to defend your choice of each image and the ways (more than one) that the material item responds to design influences from the east. [20 POINTS POSSIBLE]**


During this time period Europe was borrowing Asian influence from China, Japan, India, and the Middle East. This was when the silk road trade route was established. The Asian cultures' design had refinement, elegance, and long tested forms of art being one of the oldest cultures. The Europeans were now incorporating those ideals into their own.

Artifact








https://www.invitinghome.com/store/product.php?productid=20703

This is an example of Chinoiserie design. The imagery alone depicted on this piece of furniture is of an Asian garden which is a prime example of Asian influence. Also the use of legs elevating the object is a new introduction to European culture from the Orient. Previous items sat directly on the ground, in this time it showed cleanliness, and space with the elevation of the furniture on legs. The gold leafing, and intricate design has not been seen prior to this time either in the manner in which it was executed with this piece.

Space

http://www.sageworks.com/portfolio.htm

The wallpaper combines real elements with fantasy which is a direct influence from the Orient.The floral patterns, and the choice in color is of equal influence. This has not been previously seen until this design period.


Building

http://www.hamiltongardens.co.nz/index.asp?PageID=2145837919

It was now of importance to provide gazebos and pavilions in European garden spaces. They acted as a mixture of romanticism, nature, and fantasy. This one in particular resembles the Chinese palace design type. The coloring no longer depicts the old world of Greece, Rome, or Pompeii, instead they were embracing the old world of the Orient. This in my opinion is bringing about another wave of classicism, just in another form, another culture. Europe was still borrowing ideas and modifying them. I question if we will ever lose the classical language, or design influence, or if we will always be trying to recreate the past in some way.

Place


I believe this structure is marrying classicism with the design elements of the Orient. Sanssouci has gazebos on the grounds as well as expansive gardens. These were new introductions.


This building is called the Dragon House, located on the northern edge of the property of Sanssouci. The designer referenced architectural books on the topic of Chinese buildings when developing plans for this structure among the others. This structure in particular again parallels the Chinese palace design type.

The video link below is by Rufus Wainwright, an artist I've enjoyed for some time now. He sings about the place above..Sanssouci. I thought it would be an interesting addition to this post. Enjoy! =)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QRu6Ck0e3g