PRECIS /
>HOUSE_HOUSE /
POSTSCRIPT
![]() POUSSIERE LINGUISTIQUE HOUSE_HOUSE "And to destroy all these limits that structure representation, other 'gestures' have to be found and the secret of other 'intonations' [...]" --Jacques Derrida, "To Unsense the Subjectile" [1986], in The Secret Art of Antonin Artaud I / Two houses, apparently separate, but linked (conjoined) below ground, communicating ... Three to three-and-one-half storey seaside villas sharing a common garden (ground) ... The roof tiles and the sea share the same pattern, color, and texture, changing in changeable weather, mimicking one another's mood (mind), similar in spirit to Proust's description of the steeple of the church at Combray, in Remembrance of Things Past. The fenestration of each is similar and dissimilar, cut (carved) from the thick, plastered walls. The asymmetry is 'symmetrical', each secretly mirroring the other by the seemingly random parity of the poché, the suggestive, figural balance and play of planar surface and shadowy recess. ![]() The garden is framed (formed) by a low wall running in a rectilinear fashion around the twin structures, running into the sea beyond, disappearing ... There is but one entrance, at the front (which is also a back), and one exit, at the back (which is also a front), except that the exit is the sea itself. ![]() No one could know, rationally, that these two houses are one house without entering one or the other. The communicating passage, below, is unmarked (unremarkable, unremarked) above ground. The passage links the half-submerged fourth floors, the missing one-half of the three-and-one-half storey elevations, not unlike rumored (apocryphal) underground corridors linking Baroque-era palaces in Prague's Mala Strana. The exterior(s) of the villas resemble the chaste, ur-formalist compositions of the foremost architect of the last 'turning point', Adolf Loos. The irregularity of the fenestration suggests an interior (interiors) 'wrapped/swirling about itself' in the vague territoriality (lackadaisical ambition) of raum plan. Loos' Villa Muller comes to and leaves the mind, as does Villa Karma. Yet these are somehow townhouses without a town. Neither Villa Muller nor Villa Karma is quite right, then, as the analogical spirit of these two houses (one house_house) lies elsewhere in the ravages of the ultra-dialectical struggle between milieux and anti-milieux, the consummate struggle (battleground) of modernist architectural ideology and the quest for the Absolute (the empty sign, master-signifier, of autonomy and 'presence'). Marked, here, the then-troubled syrrhesis of form and anti-form, thing and its Other (milieu), object and its entourage, writ (im)modestly as two-things-into-one-thing, a conceptual sign (perhaps) of the immanent nature of modernity (immodernity) and the present-present as its time. III / ![]() GK (12/10/03) |
Landscape Agency New York - 2003/2005