NEO-NEO-MODERNISM "Reality changes; in order to represent it, modes of representation must change."(1) --Bertolt Brecht WHAT IS IT that makes modernists, neo-modernists, and post-modernists clamor to dispel the metaphysical chains (claims) that bind architecture while unwittingly endorsing the very premises of the age-old metaphysical project? Take for example the modernist claim that architecture is not an art, a fine art, or an applied art. Against all claims to the contrary, architecture is -- to such pragmatists -- the art of construction and/or language games. This has been the argument since the first stirrings of the modernist project in architecture and this argument underwrites all of the materialist, structuralist, and nihilist operations of the last century. In the case of constructivism and functionalism this claim was the high-water mark of the deluge initiated in post-World War I Europe and transferred to America by architectural refugees in the run-up to World War II. ![]() Indeed, this feigned timelessness still underwrites authorized readings of modern architecture. The so-called "pure classicism" of high modernist architecture is an always-already useless gesture resorted to by the apologists for the rest of modern architecture. The anti-metaphysical bite of this circular logic is undermined when one takes into account ideology. Architecture has always been a form of built ideology, whether of Empire imperialism or machine-age empiricism. Curious that Karel Teige, bęte noire of late-1920s early functionalism, found some periods of Empire architecture edifying. These examples, in Modern Architecture in Czechoslovakia, seem (to Teige) to foreshadow the pure plasticity of purism and the inspired-elementalism of constructivism.(2) The buildings he valorizes are chosen expressly because they are not neo-classical and not apparently ideological. This is, of course, a selective reading (as all readings, such as Giedion's) and Teige was appropriating these "non-ideological" buildings from the 19th century for purely ideological reasons. Sic transit all appropriations. ![]() To denounce metaphysics requires inquiring into "which" metaphysics. A once-and-for-all bracketing of abstract (a priori) signifiers is essentially a pipe dream. Phenomenology almost always circles back to the dyadic conundrum of absence and presence -- the metaphysical Je ne sais quoi itself. That which can be excised (exorcised) is simply the historical detritus of signifying systems. The precise determination of metaphysical coordinates lies outside structuralist operations. Bourdieu's extraordinary analyses stopped short of analyzing structure itself. Braudel and colleagues simply sailed into the vast sea of archival documentation and economic data (re Baxandall's quixotic and exotic "dancing merchant savants"). Hence, too, Tafuri's lack of interest in Annales-style research. Architecture cannot escape its putative Being-for-the-World characteristics. This is not to say, however, that architecture is without a transcendental aspect (and by "transcendental" is meant the Kantian "transcendental", or the Emersonian, versus anything religious and/or eschatological/teleological). The magic epicycles of architectural formalism -- the on-again-off-again tinkering with the structural dynamics of expressive systems -- are a type of proof that even in the most inward manifestations of architectural science and the art of memory the impress of synchronic, signifying chains may be found. ![]() Chief among these lost figures is the idea of the idea. Chief among the insidious reductions of modern aesthetics to pragmatics is the dishonorable idea that architectonics is nothing more than construction. Architectonics is the articulation of formal ideas through structural (synthetic) innovation. Here is the abject (empty) signifier of neo-functionalism -- indeed of all isms. The noble destruction of pseudo-historicism notwithstanding, the graveyard in which modernism and neo-modernism operate is spectral, haunted territory. Neo-modernism is not precisely the reification of functionalism, but it still retains the signature/mark (the surgical/operational scars) of the brush with nothingness within its conceptual apparatus that distinguishes all forms of mere empiricism. ![]() As I have stated elsewhere, "As long as the object of architecture is the architectural object, I object." Dr. Prof. Ing. I. M. Avenarius (July 2002) ENDNOTES "There exist mute edifices -- constructions and lodgings; and there exist edifices that speak; but there are others still -- and they are the most rare -- which sing." --Massimo Cacciari, "Eupalinos or Architecture" (1980) 1 - Bertolt Brecht, "Against Georg Lukács", trans. Stuart Hood, New Left Review 84 (March-April, 1974), p. 51 2 - Karel Teige, "The End of the Century", trans. Irena Zantovska Murray and David Britt, Modern Architecture in Czechoslovakia, (Los Angeles: Getty Research Institute, 2000), pp. 60-62 ![]() POSTSCRYPT(S) O AUTONOMY !!! - "As it is, art is always already there, addressing the thinker with the silent and scintillating question of its own identity. However, through constant invention -- its metamorphosis -- art dismisses whatever the philosopher has to say concerning its own self." --Alain Badiou, "Art and Philosophy", Lacanian Ink 17 (2000) O PURISME !!! - "Whether it be through such an enlightened fundamentalism [of the Tendenza] or the fundamentalism of a Richard Meier, repeating over and over the linguistic tropes of twenties purism, those responses, for all their good intentions, amount to nothing more than historicism." --Ignasi de Sola-Morales, Differences: Topographies of Contemporary Architecture (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997) ![]() SOME OTHER THINGS NOW UNDER CONSTRUCTION (12/26/04) - "Architectural Loft Residences" ... "Undulating, Provocative, Abstract, Reflective, Iconic, Curvaceous" ... $3,200,000.00 to $12,000,000.00 - "Sculpture for Living" / Gwathmey Siegel & Associates - Astor Place (445 Lafayette St.), New York, New York, New York - To visit, cliquez ici ... For the mostly pathological, half-hearted gestures of neo-modernist architectures (in Berlin, in the 1990s), see Raoul Eshelman, Performatism in Architecture: On Framing and the Spatial Realization of Ostensivity, Anthropoetics 7, No. 2 (Fall 2001 / Winter 2002) ![]() For printable essays on This + That, see PDFs / RTFs |
Landscape Agency New York - 2002/2004