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Visionary architecture

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Visionary architecture is a style of building design that can exist only on paper or which has idealistic, impractical or Utopian qualities. Visionary architectural drawings give insight into unique perceptions that are impossible except through the imaginary design environment.[1] In this context, imaginary means unrealistic or impossible, and the ability to deal creatively with an unseen reality.[2]

Criticism of irrational design

There are two different perceptions in relation to the work of the imagination, and visionary architecture. One position is that there are no unbuildable buildings, only unbuilt ones, and the other is the belief that some visionary architectural drawings are impossible to be inhabited by humans. In the absence of a clear grasp of a controlling idea, as an individual, each design is found to be highly arbitrary, and it is this aspect, which results in the designs seeming and looking impossible.

Conceptual architecture, or architecture based on the act of imagination and vision dissociates the physical nature of the architectural design. However, it is the idea and belief that these drawings and images are able to portray the true meaning of architecture and design that connotes the significance of the works of visionary architecture. The complete history of architecture must include both the built and the unbuilt environment.

Tool of scaling

Architects are able to imagine, see and define a distant object that is in fact a building through the process of fabricating models, scaling them up and down, and ascending from the abstract to the concrete. Instead of physically creating the design of a building into its complete scale and form, multiple up and down transitions in scale size of models allow the building design that is on paper to emerge, and become visible, representing the material as being real, bringing the building into existence.[3]

The visionary nature of the eighteenth-century movement did not reside so much in this radical formalism as in the bizarre conceptions in which the architects indulged, and their delight in projects of vast size.[4] These scaled models were considered to be utopian and fantastic in design, where the sense of fantasy is enhanced by symbolic meanings that are achieved by making the whole form of the building speak.[4]

Precedents

Early designers and artists

During the Renaissance period, the differing representations of buildings evolved and grew rapidly through the introduction of perspective.[5] This discovery allowed for experimentation with imaginary architectural scenes. While many architects wrote on the subject, others articulated their concepts and ideas through drawings.

During the sixteenth century, a Dutch painter and architect, Jan Vredeman de Vries,[6] produced numerous engravings that portray new forms of architectural representation. His works were pure fantasy and imagination but were also regarded as avant-garde messages in the depiction of architectural space.

Giovanni Battista Piranesi was one of the greatest printmakers of the eighteenth century. It was through printmaking that he demonstrated his mastery of imagined spaces.[6] However, these drawn spaces would lose their magic and meaning if they were to be physically built in real life, as they would lose their unique forms of detail and intricacy, which is only achieved through drawings. The Prisons (Carceri d'invenzione) or Imaginary Prisons depict labyrinthine, monumental spaces and mysterious machines.

Claude Nicolas Ledoux, who studied under Jacques-François Blondel and Pierre Contant d'Ivry, built a number of projects ranging from private residences to the entire complex of the Royal Saltworks at Arc-et-Senans but is also renowned for his utopian designs. He envisioned an entire town around the Royal Saltworks, which he called Chaux, and developed an entire master plan along with plans, elevations, and sections of various individual buildings in this town. The town of Chaux is a formalized exemplification of his ideas in urban planning, architecture, and society.

Jean-Jacques Lequeu is one of the more eccentric and obscene early visionary architects. He worked as a civil servant, cartographer, surveyor, and draftsman, but owing to the French Revolution his career as an actual architect never came to fruition. He spent most of his career preparing an unpublished treatise entitled Architecture Civile, which comprises ornaments and fragments of architectural drawings followed by a series of his own fanciful architectural designs. These designs are usually an elevation, section, or plan, but rarely an entire design.[7]

The young motion picture industry also created an impact on the architectural scene, represented through the films Metropolis and Just Imagine. The film allowed for elaborate and imaginative architectural sets depicting futuristic scenes. This influenced other significant artists and architects such as Hugh Ferriss.[6]

Late 20th century

Peter Zumthor is another significant figure that adhered to the work of the unbuilt and paper architecture. Writing in his architectural manifesto 'Thinking Architecture,' Zumthor grasps the significance of emotion and experience as measuring tools of the architecture, thus being the before-hand process of the design. His work was greatly unpublished because his philosophical belief of how architecture should be experienced firsthand played a more significant role in his plans. His perception is that designing buildings should relate directly to our emotions.

Rem Koolhaas moved to New York in 1972, where his years of being situated in Manhattan, expanded his fascination with the city, leading to a close examination of the dynamics, which constructed it. His writing Delirious New York [8] and the theory of Manhattanism are the results of this study depicts his perception on the manifesto of the city, dealing with the city as a subject, where the book itself is a spatial project, while the text explains the structure of the city, using the narrative sequence and typographic layout to mimic the space effectively.[9]

Hermann Finsterlin is considered to be one of the most radical of the Expressionists, and is notably known for having produced fascinating carbuncular studies of the most unbuildable and obscure buildings. Although he never built anything, his visionary drawings focused on perspectives, playing with the forms of unusual, organic shapes. Finsterlin's architectural drawings would require the most devious methods to physically build as they go against their form, beginning with careful dissection and separate molding of each part, only emphasizing and confirming that they are among the purest paper buildings ever developed.[6]

Lebbeus Woods, after working with Eero Saarinen in the 1960s, turned to visionary architecture around 1976, producing a body of drawings and models that reimagine cities like Berlin, Paris, Havana, and Vienna. He also worked extensively in Sarajevo in the 1990s. Until his death in 2012 he was a professor at Cooper Union and other institutions and maintained a personal blog for his ideas and reflections, which is now maintained as an online archive.

Sheila Sri Prakash is the first woman to have started and operated her own architectural firm in India. She is known for her visionary architectural design methodologies where she draws from her ability to visualize and imagine spaces through the practice of classical Indian dance and music. She was regarded as a child prodigy for her talents as a gifted dancer, musician, painter, sculptor, and performing artist and is known for having given her first critically acclaimed Bharatanatyam Arangetram on stage, in Mumbai, at the age of 6. As a prolific designer, she has had well over 1000 completed architectural projects to her credit over an ongoing career that spans 35 years. She is considered the greatest Architect from the Indian sub-continent and is known as a breakthrough thinker for her practice of Indo-centric Reciprocity or Holistic Sustainability through Architecture and Urban Design as a solution to global socio-economic issues. She serves on the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on Design Innovation and the Role of Arts in Society.

In the 1980s a group of Russian architects emerged, united by the paper architecture phenomenon.[10][11] It accounts Yuri Avvakumov, Mikhail Belov, Alexander Brodsky, Mikhail Filippov, and Ilya Utkin. At a time when Soviet architecture, limited by ideological controls and unfavorable economic conditions, had fallen victim to standardized construction, paper architecture offered freedom of expression. Inspired by the works of Piranesi and the Russian avant-garde, these visionary projects were never intended for realization, and were conceived from the start as drawings.

Douglas Darden, after taking a studio class with Stanley Tigerman at Harvard, began his career by teaching and publishing works of paper architecture. He was largely inspired by Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Jean-Jacques Lequeu, and Marcel Duchamp. His visionary designs demonstrated what he referred to as "narrative architecture", as the works were largely inspired by and formed based on various works of literature, such as Moby-Dick, As I Lay Dying, The Drunken Boat, and others. Since his work was often executed by working from anti-theses of architectural principles, as well as social and functional ideologies in design, he used the term underbelly to describe his work.

See also

Additional resources

  • Spiller, Neil. Visionary Architecture: Blueprints of the Modern Imagination. Thames & Hudson, 2008. ISBN 9780500286555

References

  1. ^ Walker, John. "Visionary Architecture". Glossary of Art, Architecture & Design Since 1945, 3rd. ed. G.K. Hall, 1992. ISBN 978-0816105564 Retrieved 19 January 2012. Original retried from Wayback Machine, September 26, 2022.
  2. ^ Sokolina, Anna. "Papierarchitekten und Geheimarchitektur: Planen und Bauen in der Kriese Russlands." [Paper Architects and Secret Architecture: Design and Construction in the Crisis in Russia.] Vortr. 3. In: Ökologische zukunftsweisende Siedlungen [New Sustainable Settlements. Editors R. Holmes, B. Hotze, A. v. Zadow. EAUE Berlin: Vortragsman, 1993.
  3. ^ Yavena, Albena. "Scaling Up and Down: Extraction Trials in Architectural Design." Social Studies of Science, vol. 35, No.6, December 2005
  4. ^ a b The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin; New series, Vol. 26, No. 8, Apr., 1968
  5. ^ Harbison, Robert. The Built, the Unbuilt, and the Unbuildable: In Pursuit of Architectural Meaning. Thames and Hudson, 1991 ISBN 9780262082044
  6. ^ a b c d Burden, Ernest E. Visionary Architecture: Unbuilt Works of the Imagination. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1999. ISBN 978-0070089945
  7. ^ Philippe Duboy. Lequeu: An Architectural Enigma. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. 1986. ISBN 978-0262040860
  8. ^ Theories and Manifestoes of Contemporary Architecture (2nd Ed.); Charles Jenks and Karl Kropf, editor. Chichester: Wiley Academy, 2006, ISBN 978-0470014691
  9. ^ Stoppani, Teresa. Paradigm Islands, Manhattan and Venice: Discourses on Architecture and the City. New York: Routledge, 2011. ISBN 9781138874046
  10. ^ Sokolina, Anna (2001). "Alternative Identities: Conceptual Transformations in Soviet and Post-soviet Architecture". ARTMargins.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Andreychenko, Julia (2017-07-28). "Building Castles in the Sky". web.archive.org. InRussia. Archived from the original on May 24, 2021. Retrieved 2022-09-26. {{cite web}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; July 28, 2017 suggested (help)