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December 2007

December 27, 2007

gone traipsing

Dublin_multi_color
"-Look at him, says he. Breen. He's traipsing all round Dublin with a postcard"
(Ulysses 12.257)
Via Aida Yared's incredible Joyce Images, an illustrated Ulysses using period documents and ephemera.

I leave tomorrow for a Glen Hansard-inspired trip to Dublin, Ireland. I look forward to a Joycean wander around the city punctuated by cups of tea and pints of beer. Surely, there will be a stop at the Guinness Storehouse. Remodeled by RKD Architects in 2002, it boasts an atrium shaped like a pint glass and topped by viewing/drinking deck with the best views of Dublin. Sláinte, indeed.

More reports in January. Happy New Year.

December 26, 2007

civic bodies

24fult3600
Richard Perry for the New York Times.

I am going to lay it out there: Sure it is dodgy and a circus, but I really love Brooklyn’s Futon Street Mall. Sure half the spaces above the ground floor are empty, but it is so integrated into the neighborhood fabric, that its presence is alive, but low-key. Andy Newman’s pre-Christmas article in Sunday’s New York Times, which focused a bit over-sweetly on the gold-toothed Santas, dubious cell phones, and urban patois (checkitoutcheckoutcheckiout), touched on the mall’s redevelopment. Plans are in the works:

The old Albee Square Mall, an enclosed shopping center within this stretch of Fulton Street, closed this year to make way for City Point, a high-rise tower that will house people, businesses and, on the ground floor, major retail tenants along the lines of Target.

“With all the housing stock that we have now and the demographics in the communities that surround Downtown Brooklyn,” said Joseph Chan, president of the Downtown Brooklyn Partnership, an economic development group, “the fact that there’s not a Bed Bath & Beyond, a Pottery Barn, a Pier 1 in the downtown of a city of 2.5 million people is odd.”

Albert Laboz, one of the street’s biggest property owners and chairman of the Fulton Mall Improvement Association, said that deals were in the works with several leading retailers. “I think you’re going to see a nice transition in the next few years,” he said.

A Bath & Beyond, a Pottery Barn, and a Pier 1 are not really what I am looking for in Downtown Brooklyn. Why should that part of the city look like the Upper West Side, or suburban California for that matter? I like the diversity, not just the jumble of small and large stores, or the racial mix, but the range of bodies that such a range represents. The root of my affection lies not in subcultural tourism or nostalgia, but in my own vested interests: retail spaces for women blessed with curves. The Fulton Street Mall has the plus-size chains Lane Bryant and Ashley Stewart as well as multiple independent stores celebrating those girls who have back, and front.

What I’ve learned from my time in Oakland, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and now New York City, the more urban the neighborhood, the more racial diverse, the greater the likelihood that there is a store where I can by a pair of queen-size tights. Bring in the homogenizing Banana Republic or Forever 21 and I can pick up a t-shirt or a pair of earrings, but no tights.

December 20, 2007

program, debriefed

071203_santora05_p465
Faith Church by Brian Finke via The New Yorker

I just came off of sitting on a bunch of final reviews where exhausted architecture students talked a lot about “program” in front of a distinguished jury. Program, program, program. It’s a term that, like the ubiquitous “space,” takes on a mantra-like effect over the course of the afternoon. Some students had detailed, even quirky, agendas for the programmed space in their final projects: mosques, swimming pools, incubator office space conditioned by hanging bags of reclaimed water, parking structures integrated into art museums, student housing. While others languished in abstraction: public space, community or education center, gallery. Vast white spaces undistinguished in plan.

So, when I came across a kind of program brief while browsing an issue of the New Yorker, I my interest was piqued and I continued reading an article on a megachurch in New England. Frances Fitzgerald’s piece, Come One, Come All, centers on the Faith Church in New Milford, Connecticut and offers, among other things and religiosity aside, a look into the complexities of community programming.

Robert Putnam, a professor of public policy at Harvard, who has written extensively on the breakdown of social networks, and Andy Stern, the president of the Service Employees International Union, have both described the megachurch as one of the most successful community-building institutions of modern times. Almost all megachurches have cafes or food courts, bookstores, sport facilities, child care, youth programs, and small groups which can include anything from Bible-study classes to affinity groups for motorcyclists. Most of the larger churches have an array of counseling programs and support groups for those suffering from divorce, depression, addiction, or death of a loved one. Many, including Faith Church, offer classes in how to manage family finances, and many have funds to help church members through financial crises. All have opportunities for community service, and many have drama groups, arts classes, and high-tech recording equipment. In other words, megachurches offer just about everything the newly arrived suburbanite can’t find Wal-Mart or Home Depot.

So there it is: the program is intricate and is everything. All housed in an architecture similar to a big box store and branded with a cross. More images here.

December 17, 2007

chick factors

Cf10front_2  
from the beloved chickfactor zine.

At the end of October I attended Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation’s conference at MoMA, Women in Modernism: Making Places in Architecture, and then wrote up a short piece for Architect magazine. Because of some snafu the article wasn't posted online until this week. My original draft had a bit more tooth, but this one hangs together. Mostly, I am annoyed that the subject of women in design and architecture still feels like either preaching to the choir or tokenism—especially after last year’s Tokion and 92Y battles. Honestly, I am not sure how to foster a cross-gendered discussion without it seeming like “bitching,” to use Toshiko Mori’s term. (Yep, she sure did drop the B-word in debate with Gwendolyn Wright.)

Here’s the first paragraph, for more go here:

In an era post-Suffragette, post-Women's Lib, and post-Riot Grrrl—or, in architecture terms, post-Julia Morgan, post-Eileen Gray, and post-Zaha Hadid—it is easy to get lulled into thinking there is finally gender equality in the architecture profession. After all, women, who make up 51 percent of the population, represent a generous 43 percent of architecture students, according to data from the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture. Yet the AIA reports that women members constitute a paltry 11 percent. Clearly, there is a disconnect between what we perceive as the status quo and the numbers.

Wim_panel
Babes in black.

December 13, 2007

and visions of networks danced in their heads

Gm4
Grant Miller, Untitled (UA-33), 2006

Friday night the Black and White Gallery in Chelsea opens Constructed Realities, a show by Kansas City-based artist Grant Miller. The work, seen here, certainly is an attempt to depict network culture in a colorful, party-like-it’s-1992 way. The paintings recall Julie Mehretu’s layered, map-like creations, but without the cultural and political critique. (Detroit Art Institute reopened November 23 with Mehretu’s show City Sitings.) Miller’s world is a multihued Tron.

Black_city
Julie Mehretu, Black City, 2007

Networks are all the rage this week. The Living presented The Living City project at the Van Allen Institute. I am still not sure why coolhunter DeeDee Gordon was asked to be part of the conversation, but then I had to leave early. I must have missed that part of the puzzle. (She did look surprisingly sedate with long, dark hair and a black ensemble. I was hoping for some bling.)

More on Friday: The Architecture League launches the Situated Technologies Pamphlet series with Urban Computing and Its Discontents. Adam Greenfield, Mark Shepard, and Eric Paulos will gather for a panel, which hopefully will expand upon ideas brought up in last year’s conference.

December 09, 2007

god status revisited

Mattaclark

In honor of the recent screening of Gordon Matta-Clark’s films by the LA Forum in conjunction with MOCA's exhibition Gordon Matta-Clark: You Are the Measure, I thought I’d take a not nice page out of a loud paper published originally in 1997.

God Status: A User's Guide

Timing is everything, banal but true. Especially if you are looking to become an immortal god, be it rock, art, or architecture. The proof is in the pudding, like a fine French soufflé, timing is everything. This adage is even more essential when death is involved. All the right factors need to be in place: fame - people need to miss you when you are gone, youth old people die all the time, youth is potential and the death of potential is far more tragic than potential realized, talent—added loss, the media goes crazy with this one, documentation - pictures, video, 16mm footage, just make sure your work is acid free for posterity, you never know how much the Getty will pay for you paper napkin sketches.

A slight variance in any of these factors and your god status will never be reached. Right now, I could never achieve immortality. Yeah, I have talent, potential and youth, but no fame and I always forget to take slides of my models. Perhaps a better example is Michael Hutchence, former lead singer of INXS. The poor bloke killed himself at exactly the wrong time.

When I was in high school, that man was it. He had it all, a pair of ripped jeans for every day of the week (acid washed to perfection,) hair to toss, a sexy pout (or was it sexy eyes?) and teenage girls placing lip-gloss kissed TeenBeat photos of him in lockers and on notebooks. He was sex, and he even had a giant chrome pin that said so. It gleamed from his leather jacket as he lunged towards the camera in the "I Need You Tonight" video. Yet, when he died last month, apparently of self-strangulation with his belt, an inadvertent, autoerotic suicide, his Aussie hotel room littered with bottle of speculative prescription drugs, his timing couldn't have been more off. Seven or eight years earlier and the stardom/martyrdom equation would have emblazoned his name next to Kurt, Tupac, or even Buddy Holly—suicide, murder, plane crash. Or if he had waited, his second coming may have catapulted him into the limelight along side John Travolta, whose career boom is a recent example of life after coma. Or is it coma after coma? Whatever the case may be, Michael missed out on the upcoming INXS twenty-city tour. An undertaking that could have brought him to the attention of Quentin Tarantino's Lazarus spotting eye.

Alas, Mr. Hutchence's rhythm was off, thus he is doomed to be the poor soul who pulled the belt a hit too tight, and offed himself when things got sour, not sickly sweet as in the glorified deaths of James (James Dean wore khakis) Dean or Kurt (Courtney's big career move) Cobain. Even Allanis could see the true meaning of irony in the title of the last INXS record, "Elegantly Wasted", for his demise was anything but elegant.

Like Jimmy or Kurt, Gordon Matta-Clark has achieved god status among cults of architects. His early death from cancer in 1978, at the zenith of his career, marked him for immortality. Matta-Clark's split open buildings and other types of de-installations, are undeniably beautiful, dangerous, and a challenge to the rigid confines of architectural form. Yet, the genius myths (and truths that have swirled around his life and death (especially since decon hit the scene) have given him glamour, fame, and deathlessness.

Wielding a chain saw, a hack saw, a crow bar and miles of extension cords, Matta-Clark cut gaping holes into existing buildings, exposing other meanings, other layers and other spaces, as he might have put it. To document his artwork, since the buildings he attacked were usually slated for total demolition, he photographed these dangerous spaces and filmed the anarchitecture (his term). Seduced by the act of Matta-Clark's unbuilding, architects are inspired to make again these spaces. But to attempt to build in this manner is to patently ignore the critical stance towards architecture taken by Matta-Clark. It is to fall into the trap of the temple of Matta-Clark, icon. Yves-Alain Bois writes in Formless, a User's Guide, the book of the month:

"Matta-Clark considered architecture a clownish and pretentious enterprise, and he would have been particularly enraged at having become a model, enraged to see his provisional disruptions of building stylized under the label of "deconstructionism" in the architectural projects of certain of his former professors at Cornell. If the architect takes himself for a sculptor,he masks his own role in capitalist society, which is to build rabbit warrens to the order of real estate developers." (p.191)

Not really interested in bridging any gap between architecture and art, Matta-Clark spurned his Cornell education and the uptight binds of the gentleman's profession. When I was at Cornell in the early 90's Matta-Clark's work was not taught, or even acknowledged, except as a subterranean find, which student after groupiesque student would shuttle home from the library to study as a guide to living out the promise of deconstruction. A Matta-Clark and a Libeskind monograph were as de rigueur as a Sonic Youth CD and a pair of Doc Martins. But Richard Meier, who has now taken to traipsing around the Getty in a Frank Lloyd Wright inspired cape, wasn't subject matter at Cornell either. We students were taken way back to the early cannon of Modernism. Danger came from a chance brush with the members of the historic avant-garde. So when we unearthed Matta-Clark, a folk hero was born. His past was like our present and it had enraged him. He had danger, youth, talent, fame and a future that was cut short just in time for him not to make any crucial mistakes that would hinder his cult status. Most importantly, he made sure to document his work. So it was glory be and all praise.

When the films of Matta-Clark were restored and screened recently at both UCLA and SCI-Arc, I was giddy. Finally, I had the chance to see the punk granddaddy of deconstruction, the Sid Vicious of architecture on the big screen. So I went to watch. I brought along a friend who I was trying to convince that architecture is cool, and I was appalled. He was bored. What those few yards of film revealed was not the spontaneous energy that I had expected. Nor was it the raw wonderment which is found in early CBGB footage or the films of Warhol's Factory, or even, the mainstream psychedelic era movies, made just a few years before Matta-Clark's films, where the actors are so stoned and the camerawork so trippy, that you get a contact high just by pressing play on the VCR. The films by provocateur Gordon Matta-Clark were straight out of the me (not m-m-my) generation school of documentaries and they were boring.

Office Baroque (1977), which I watched primarily on fast-forward at the MAK Center for Art and Architecture a couple months after I left the large screen screening, finds Matta-Clark crouched amidst extension cords and ripped up floorboards. He is bare chested and he sports jeans and a jaunty workers cap. In a pose worthy of a Jeff Striker movie, Matta-Clark deftly changes the chain on his saw. His masculinity and roguish edginess are in full command. His glorious voice over, which echoes off the Italian travertine walls of the temples of high art, says that occupying the space of his work is akin to the layers of line in a drawing. A man alone, prying up the floor, hard at work on his anarchitecture, Matta-Clark aims for a complexity that is indecipherable. "An undocumentable documentary" is how he describes his work. From viewing his photographs and even snippets of his films, it seems that he majestically achieves this goal and gets rock god status to boot. A deconstructivist Robert Plant. Who wouldn't be moved by a house split manually in two? He becomes the hero/martyr of the cult of labor; a grungy, manly tribe found in wood shops and scrap yards everywhere. But, unfortunately for us, Matta-Clark's films, when viewed in bulk, undermine his successful stabs at complexity and underline a certain godawful staleness to this supposedly cutting edge work.

Clockshower (1973) features Matta-Clark performing his morning ablutions while suspended from the face of a clocktower. The film wants to call into question the banalities of everyday private, indoor life. It challenges routine spaces by placing the bathroom on the face of the clock in public and on a grand scale. Unfortunately, the real time footage and the unrelenting washing off of shaving cream (such a manly, Dada endeavor) smacks of self indulgent, self important, high art filmmaking. So, even though his work wishes to achieve ruptures in art and life, and to bang hard on the doors of the establishment, Matta-Clark's anarchy becomes part of (and never was really far from) the world he strived to criticize. If anything, his work serves to give conservative architecture students a surly edginess.

The extent to which Matta-Clark's work has been deradicalized can be seen at the exhibition currently on display at the MAK Center. About a dozen or so of his photographs, an artist book, and a video collection of his films are all tastefully framed within Shindler's Kings Road house. All there is are warm wood panels, Japanese cum California styling—no angry young man could withstand the treatment. The photographs are small and pretty much forgettable. In case the images don't engrave themselves on your retina, the MAK has created a catalogue to go along with the exhibition. It is a slim volume, elegantly designed, containing a couple nausea-inducing essays, and tiny, to the point of cute, reproductions of Matta-Clark's work, all bundled in gobs of white space and class.

So the rowdy intellect who thumbed his nose at the establishment of art and architecture, is now absorbed into that culture like one of the original disciples. Just as Cobain's death allowed grunge to jump in and out of mainstream culture, depositing work boots and white male angst into middle America, Matta-Clark's death and subsequent rebirth as the lost Jedi knight of deconstruction freed architects to act out their own Rebel With a Cause fantasies of form. But I wonder how enraged (Bois' term) he would have been by being appropriated by mainstream architects. His brother had committed suicide by jumping out the window of Gordon's studio, so it would seem that he would be familiar with the death timing principle. Perhaps the best timing Matta-Clark should have used (cancer aside) in order to continue to maintain a critical distance would have been to live, and to keep living into boring ripe old age, thus undermining all the factors for god status.

December 05, 2007

dusted

Sofasnow

It’s snowing in Brooklyn today. Apparently I missed the first snow of the season while I was in California. Hence the radio silence. I spent some of my time in Berkeley organizing the loud paper archives. Otherwise known as cleaning up boxes in my parent’s basement. The amazing thing about a print publication is all the stuff that goes along with it: layouts, proofs, back issues, postcards, t-shirts, letters, posters, etc. People, if any grad student wants to do Clip/Stamp/Fold-like research on loud paper, it is all there, tucked under a house located near the Hayward Fault.

Submissions for the Not Nice issue are trickling in, but I want a flood. Please, spill forth your bile. I should clarify that it will be published digitally, right here on the loud paper blog, which opens up what can be submitted. Visuals like video and color photographs are now all fair game.