The war on patina

Jun 02, 2006 11:30

Yesterday I really fell in love with Berlin again. I saw the Berlin Biennial, an event I thought I'd missed (it's been extended until June 5th). The art was pretty good, but in a sense it was upstaged by the city itself, and by patina. Curators Cattelan, Gioni and Subotnick found all sorts of spaces up and down Mitte's Auguststrasse; a cargo ( Read more... )

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onthemoon June 2 2006, 10:44:20 UTC
True. All materials have a lot of great potential, be they natural or manufactured, old or new. Sadly, though, as you point out, so few architects or developers seem interested in working with the existing landscape. It would be laughable, were it not so disheartening, reading Frank Gehry talk about he and Ratner's plans for the Atlantic Yards in Brooklyn, and how he "carefully considered the existing landscape." Of course it all boils down to ease and ego. Working with the existing landscape, and all the patina it has to offer, means looking outward and actually thinking about the world that will exist beyond their shiny new plot. And of course blending in with, or even complimenting the existing landscape would mean less attention for the new. It would be lovely to see some contemporary architecture focusing on sharing the landscape with the past (it does exist, but, perhaps for reasons just noted, is hard to find).

Another note on the recent boom of modern architecture and high-rise building...I suspect, be it conscious or unconscious, that a good deal of it is in response to seeing the development in East Asian countries (as well as Dubai). America feels the need to be in the lead, as does Europe to a lesser extent; not having the newest, tallest, and flashiest architecture is an admittance of falling behind in the eyes of many, not just in architecture, but all of the things our buildings represent. Of course that starts wading into far deeper conversational waters.

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