Space Architecture

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essay on space architecture

  • Klaudiusz Fross 16 &
  • Maria Bielak-Zasadzka 16  

Part of the book series: Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing ((AISC,volume 788))

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We find ourselves at a moment where it is quite realistic to develop space tourism and hotels, e.g. on the Moon. Is an architect needed in space? Is the unavailability of the terrain and difficult conditions justifying the container placement in a free manner, without thinking about the landscape, about aesthetics. As is currently the case in Antarctica. Without the application of developed principles of architectural planning, urban planning and spatial planning. The authors hope that, with the development of space engineering, astronauts-architects will fly into space. At the Faculty of Architecture of the Silesian University of Technology in 2017, the “Space Architecture Research Program” was inaugurated. The program aims to support scientific work and design concepts in the field of space architecture and cooperation in the field of virtual reality. The article will present two MA theses: “City on Mars” and “Spaceport Abu-Dhabi”.

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Its red color comes from the fact that there is a lot of iron oxide contained in minerals such as “which can be found on the surface or deep underground. Mars has two natural satelites - Phobos and Deimos. At present, there are three artificial satelites circulating Mars: 2001 Mars Odyssey, Mars Express and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Mars is visible from plant Earth. There is a large number of impact craters, canions, valleys, deserts and polar icecaps. Mars features the highest mountain in the Solar System - Olympus Mons and the largest canyon - Valles Marineris.

Source: http://www.gizmag.com/martianarchitecture/28999 .

Source: Andreas Vogler. “Moon Capital” – Life on the Moon 100 Years after Apollo.

Source: www.mars-one.com/mission/roadmap .

Source: WWW.eleven-magazine.com/?entrants=test-lab-ec2323 .

Fross, K., Sempruch, A.: The qualitative research for the architectural design and evaluation of completed buildings – part 1 – basic principles and methodology. ACEE Archit. Civil Eng. Environ. 8 (3), 13–19 (2015). Silesian University of Technology

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Fross, K., Sempruch, A.: The qualitative research for the architectural design and evaluation of completed buildings – part 2 – examples of accomplished research. ACEE Archit. Civil Eng. Environ. 8 (3), 21–28 (2015). Silesian University of Technology

Fross, K., Winnicka-Jasłowska, D., Gumińska, A., Masły, D., Sitek, M.: Use of qualitative research in architectural design and evaluation of the built environment. In: Ahram, T., Karwowski, W., Schmorrow, D. (eds.) Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics 2015 and the Affiliated Conferences, AHFE 2015, Las Vegas, USA, 26–30 July 2015, pp. 1625–1632. Elsevier (2015)

Tymkiewicz, J., Winnicka-Jasłowska, D., Jastrzębska, M.: Pre-design studies on the example of modernization project of geotechnical laboratories. ACEE Archit. Civ. Eng. Environ. 10 (2), 43–52 (2017)

Tymkiewicz, J., Winnicka-Jasłowska, D., Jastrzębska, M.: Ergonomics of laboratory rooms - case studies based on the geotechnical laboratories at the Silesian University of Technology. ACEE Archit. Civ. Eng. Environ. 10 (2), 35–41 (2017)

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Fross, K., Bielak-Zasadzka, M. (2019). Space Architecture. In: Charytonowicz, J., Falcão, C. (eds) Advances in Human Factors, Sustainable Urban Planning and Infrastructure. AHFE 2018. Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, vol 788. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-94199-8_33

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Googie: Architecture of the Space Age

The futurist design movement that divided critics and and swept the nation with space age coffee shops

Matt Novak

Before I moved to Los Angeles (almost 2 years ago now) I had never heard the word Googie . In fact, when a friend — a native Californian — used the term I initially thought it must have something to do with Google. I didn’t know the word, but I definitely knew the style. And I suspect you might too.

Googie is a modern (ultramodern, even) architectural style that helps us understand post-WWII American futurism — an era thought of as a “golden age” of futurist design for many here in the year 2012. It’s a style built on exaggeration; on dramatic angles; on plastic and steel and neon and wide-eyed technological optimism. It draws inspiration from Space Age ideals and rocketship dreams. We find Googie at the 1964 New York World’s Fair , the Space Needle in Seattle, the mid-century design of Disneyland’s Tomorrowland , in Arthur Radebaugh ‘s postwar illustrations, and in countless coffee shops and motels across the U.S.

Googie is an odd word; a funny word; a word that feels like it’s doing a few vowel-drenched laps around your tongue before finally flopping out of your mouth. Oddly enough, Googie was used as a deragatory term almost from the start — born in Southern California and named for a West Hollywood coffee shop designed in 1949 by John Lautner , a student of Frank Lloyd Wright. Architecture critic Douglas Haskell was the first to use “Googie” to describe the architectural movement, after driving by the West Hollywood coffee shop and finally feeling like he had found a name for this style that was flourishing in the postwar era.

But Haskell was no fan of Googie and wrote a scathing (by architecture critic standards) satire of the style in the February 1952 issue of House and Home magazine. The New York-based Haskell wrote part of his article, “Googie Architecture,” in the voice of a fictional Professor Thrugg, whose over-the-top praise was an indictment of Googie’s popular appeal. Haskell was an advocate of modernism, but a modernism constrained by his ideas of taste and refinement. Haskell, writing sarcastically as Professor Thrugg:

“You underestimate the seriousness of Googie. Think of it! — Googie is produced by architects, not by ambitious mechanics, and some of these architects starve for it. After all, they are working in Hollywood, and Hollywood has let them know what it expects of them.”

Haskell’s disdain for Googie was clearly rooted in his hatred for the flourishes and perceived tackiness of Hollywood.

Googies coffee shop menu (circa 1958)

Perhaps no one has studied Googie and its relationship to mid-20th century futurism more closely than Alan Hess : an architect, historian and the author of Googie Redux: Ultramodern Roadside Architecture (2004) and Googie: Fifties Coffee Shop Architecture (1985). I spoke with Mr. Hess by phone at his home in Irvine, California.

“Googie started after WWII as a definable style and it caught on fire in the culture and lasted for a good 25 years or so,” Hess says.

Googie is undeniably the super-aesthetic of 1950s and ’60s American retro-futurism — a time when America was flush with cash and ready to deliver the technological possibilities that had been promised during WWII . “I really feel that Googie made the future accessible to everyone,” Hess says. As he explains it, Googie was an unpretentious aesthetic meant to appeal to the average, middle-class American: ”One of the key things about Googie architecture was that it wasn’t custom houses for wealthy people — it was for coffee shops, gas stations, car washes, banks… the average buildings of everyday life that people of that period used and lived in. And it brought that spirit of the modern age to their daily lives.”

Ship’s on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles (1958)

Hess insists that Googie was a realization of the future rather than simply a promise of things to come. “Since the 19th century and Jules Verne — coming up into the 1920s and 1930s — there had been these future-oriented movies and novels and so forth which looked to the future with great promise,” Hess says. “But after WWII, a lot of that promise was actually fulfilled not only in the buildings but also the automobiles that the average American used during that time. I really feel it did not only capture the future, but it brought it in a meaningful way to people. And you see this interest in these futuristic ideas not only in architecture or car design but in cartoons like The Jetsons and places like amusements parks like Disneyland’s Tomorrowland — in advertisements, in magazines, and so forth, certainly in the movies as well. So this interest, this intrigue, this appeal of living in the future just went all across the culture.”

Design for the interior of Huddle’s Cloverfield in Santa Monica, California (1955)

Googie was born in southern California and much like the billboard scene here, owes some of its popularity to something very practical: driving in a car causes you to miss a lot of commercial activity. Which is to say, businesses want your attention, so they need to stand out through increased size and a certain degree of weirdness. As Philip Langdon notes in his 1986 book Orange Roofs, Golden Arches: The Architecture of American Chain Restaurants , the laissez-faire expanse of California freeways contributed to the rise of Googie:

California, unlike eastern and midwestern states, did not build toll roads and make travelers captive to restaurants that had been commissioned to operate at designated rest stops. California was the land of the freeway, with the choice to eat at competing restaurants at one interchange after another, so the restaurants’ need for a conspicuous profile was especially intense. The question confronting restaurant operators by the late fifties was: What would catch the eye of fast-moving motorists?

Hess elaborates on the experimental spirit of postwar Los Angeles: “Yes, it really did start in Southern California, though it was a national phenomenon. Texas, Florida, New Jersey, Michigan, all of these areas also had Googie architecture. But Los Angeles — because it was one of the fastest growing cities at that time — had a tradition of experimental modern architecture. So the seeds of it were in Los Angeles.”

A Googie-inspired home of the future

The 1962-63 version of The Jetsons was so dripping with Googie that you could argue Hanna-Barbera didn’t really exaggerate the style — they copied it. Googie at its most flamboyant and cartoonish is almost beyond parody. And it’s pretty clear that the artists behind The Jetsons were inspired by the style that surrounded them in Southern California.

The artists and animators working on The Jetsons really didn’t need to drive too far to become inspired by the Googie of Los Angeles. The Hanna-Barbera Studio was in Hollywood at 3400 Cahuenga Blvd (I think it’s the site of an LA Fitness now) and buildings all across Los Angeles in the late 1950s and early 1960s screamed Googie. The Los Angeles International Airport had (and still has) the Googie-tastic Theme Building , featured in the October 19 1962 issue of Life magazine — a special issue devoted completely to Americans’ mid-century fascination with California. Ship’s coffee shop opened in 1958 at 10877 Wilshire Blvd, just south of UCLA. Pann’s , my personal favorite breakfast spot in L.A. (try the biscuits and gravy, seriously), is at 6710 La Tijera Boulevard. Hanna-Barbera was also just a short drive from Anaheim, where you could see the Monsanto House of the Future at Disneyland, which opened in 1957. And of course there was the streamlined, Space Age version of Disneyland’s early-’60s Tomorrowland .

Sign for Pann’s restaurant in Los Angeles, built in 1958 (Matt Novak, 2011)

The future had arrived for those in Southern California and it was a symbol of even greater things to come. From Hess’s 1985 book Googie: Fifties Coffee Shop Architecture :

Los Angeles in the 1950s was a modern city. The opportunities of the postwar boom in the freedom of Los Angeles allowed architects ranging from John Lautner to Richard Neutra full rein in a new phase of Modernism. The optimistic exploration of materials and structures for the new age continued. But as widely publicized as were Lautner’s Silvertop, or the series of Case Study houses sponsored by Arts and Architecture magazine, or other high art buildings, they were only a fraction of the architecture that filled tracts and lined commercial strips. The roadside buildings gave anyone driving Los Angeles streets the sense that this was indeed a new era, that the long-promised future of benevolent technology and prosperity had at last arrived to deliver the good life to all.

Armet & Davis sketch for Lyon’s Coffee Shop in San Bruno, California (1962)

But by 1970, Hess says the architectural culture had changed. ”The interest in the future, the gee-whiz factor about plastics and nuclear power and space flight, travel to the moon, all of these things that had been new and exciting in the 1950s had become more mundane — we landed on the moon in 1969 and then it was over. And also at that time new ideas came in — specifically the ecology movement which began to say that we do have limits on how we can use our resources. And an interest in more lower-scale, residential, traditional, architecture came into fashion. You see this transition in tastes in popular culture I think most vividly in the change of the McDonald’s prototype. In 1953 the prototype was Googie all the way — it was bright, shiny, bold colors, big arches, very dynamic upswept roof, neon, etc…”

Googie-style McDonald’s in Downey, California (1953)

“But in the late-1960s,” Hess says, “McDonald’s introduced a new prototype which used brick as its walls and a mansard roof — a very traditional form. McDonald’s felt that it would appeal to their customers at this time, and it did. Those are some of the reasons why Googie eventually faded as a popular style. But then of course it’s ressurected as a popular style in the last 20 years or so.”

Mansard-roofed McDonald’s in Corning, New York (1985)

The style known as Googie, in fact, has many names. It’s sometimes known as Populuxe, and in some circles is just considered modern architecture. But it seems to me most fitting to call the style by the term used by its most famous detractor. Googie is both the future we long for and the future we never asked for.

So we tip our hats to the believers and non-believers alike — both Lautner and Haskell and all the other weirdos of the mid-20th century, jostling for their own vision of our American landscape. These beautiful, bizarre competing visions of our future — or our future that never was.

Googies coffee shop, downtown Los Angeles (1955)

Update: A transcription error originally quoted Hess describing a “mansford” roof rather than a mansard roof.

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Matt Novak is the author of the Paleofuture blog, which can now be found on Gizmodo.

Architecture Essay Examples

Nova A.

20 Must-Read Architecture Essay Examples for Students

Published on: May 5, 2023

Last updated on: Jan 30, 2024

Architecture Essay Examples

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Are you a student struggling with writing an architecture essay? Perhaps you are looking for inspiration, or maybe you need guidance on how to develop your argument. 

Whatever the reason may be, you have come to the right place!

In this blog, we provide a range of architecture essay examples covering different styles, time periods, and topics. From modernist to postmodernist architecture, we offer examples that will help you gain a deeper understanding of the subject.

So, let's take a journey through the world of architecture essay examples together!

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What Is Architecture Essay 

An architecture essay is a type of academic writing that explores the design, construction, and history of buildings, structures, and spaces.  It requires technical knowledge and creative thinking to analyze and interpret architectural theories, and practices.

Let’s take a look at a short essay on architecture:

Architecture College Essay Examples 

Let's take a look at some examples of compelling architecture college essays that demonstrate creativity and critical thinking skills.

The Influence of Cultural Heritage on Architectural Design

The Importance of Aesthetics in Architecture

Scholarship Essay Examples For Architecture

These scholarship essay examples for architecture demonstrate the writers' devotion to excellence and creativity. Let’s check them out!

From Blueprint to Reality: The Importance of Detail in Architecture

The Intersection of Technology and Artistry in Architecture

Common Architecture Essay Examples

Let's take a look at some common architecture essay pdf examples that students often encounter in their academic writing.

History of Architecture Essay Examples

The Evolution of Egyptian Architecture

The Influence of Islamic Architecture

Gothic Architecture Essay Examples 

The Key Characteristics of Gothic Style Architecture

The Role of Gothic Architecture in Medieval Europe

Modern Architecture Essay Examples 

The Development of Modernist Architecture

The Influence of Postmodern Architecture

Cornell Architecture Essay Examples 

The Legacy of Cornell Architecture

Innovative Design Approaches in Cornell Architecture

Types of Architectural Essay 

Here are some potential sample papers for each type of architectural essay:

  • Historical Analysis

The Effect of Ancient Greece Architecture on Contemporary Design

  • Critical Analysis

The Role of Materiality in Herzog and de Meuron's Tate Modern

  • Comparative Analysis

A Comparison of Modernist and Postmodernist Approaches to Design

Additional Architecture Essay Examples

Architecture essays cover a broad range of topics and styles. Here are some additional architecture essay prompts to help you get started.

Essay on Architecture As A Profession

Essay About Architecture As Art

Architecture Essay Question Examples

How To Write An Architecture Essay 

To write a successful architecture essay, follow these steps:

Step#1 Understand the assignment 

Read the assignment prompt carefully to understand what the essay requires.

Step#2 Research 

Conduct thorough research on the topic using reliable sources such as books, journals, and academic databases.

Step#3 Develop a thesis 

Based on your research, develop a clear and concise thesis statement that outlines the main argument of your essay.

Step#4 Outline 

Create an outline to organize your ideas and ensure that your essay flows logically and coherently.

Step#5 Write the essay 

Start writing your essay according to your outline:

Introduction:

  • Begin with a hook that grabs the reader's attention.
  • Provide background information on the topic.
  • End with a clear thesis statement.

Architecture Essay Introduction

  • Use evidence to support your arguments.
  • Organize your ideas logically with clear transitions.
  • Address counterarguments.

Conclusion:

  • Summarize the main points and restate the thesis.
  • Provide final thoughts and consider broader implications.
  • End with a memorable closing statement.

Architecture Essay Conclusion

Step#6 Edit and proofread 

Review your essay for grammar, spelling, and punctuation errors. Make sure that your ideas are expressed clearly and concisely.

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History of Architecture Essay Topics

  • The Impact of Ancient Greek Architecture on Modern Building Design in the United States
  • The Development of Gothic Architecture as an Architectural Movement in Medieval Europe
  • A Case Study of Frank Lloyd Wright's Prairie Style Architecture and its Influence on American Home Design
  • The Rise of Skyscrapers in the United States. A Look at the History and Impact of Tall Buildings on People Living and Working in Cities
  • The Origins of Modernism in Architecture: Tracing the Roots of this Architectural Movement from Europe to the United States
  • A Comparative Analysis of Chinese and Japanese Traditional Architecture: Exploring the Differences and Similarities of These Two Styles Originated from Asia
  • The Influence of Islamic Architecture on the Development of Spanish Colonial Architecture in the United States
  • A Case Study of Le Corbusier's Villa Savoye: Analyzing the Characteristics of This Architectural Movement and Its Influence on Modern Architecture
  • The Evolution of Green Architecture: Examining the History of Sustainable Building Design and Its Impact on People Living and the Environment
  • The Revival of Art Deco Architecture. Tracing the Return of This Style Originated in the 1920s and 1930s in the United States.

In summary!

We hope the examples we've provided have sparked your imagination and given you the inspiration you need to craft your essay. Writing about architecture requires good skills, and your essay is an opportunity to showcase your unique ideas in the field.

Remember, even the greatest architects started somewhere, and the key to success is practice. But if you're feeling stuck and need a little help bringing your vision to life, don't worry! 

At CollegeEssay.org , our expert writers are here to provide you with top-quality essay writing service that will impress even the toughest critics.

Whether you need help finding the right words or want assistance with organizing your ideas, our AI essay generator can guide you every step of the way. 

So why wait? Contact our architecture essay writing service today and take the first step toward building your dream career in architecture!

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essay on space architecture

Publisher

Book Review: Space and Anti-Space

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By Barbara Littenberg and Steven Peterson (ORO Editions, 2020).       

“I regard the revival of the city as far more important than any survival of Modern Architecture [because] the object-building interpreted as a universal proposition represents the demolition of Public Life.” -Colin Rowe

Steven Peterson was a student and later a colleague of Colin Rowe, and Peterson Littenberg’s urban projects are greatly influenced by Rowe’s views on the city. This book is a series of essays on architecture and urban design, culminating in Peterson Littenberg’s proposal for the World Trade Center site in New York City. The theme of Space versus Anti-Space is first directed to the conception of architectural space, comparing the relative plasticity, poché and configurative nature of works of architecture as diverse as Borromini’s San Carlo Alle Quattro Fontane and Louis Kahn’s Erdman Hall, to the relatively unconfigured free plans of Le Corbusier and Mies van der Rohe. (There is an entire chapter dedicated to Mies.)

The authors then address the Space/Anti- Space theme as it applies to the urban fabric. This section starts with a comparison of two similarly configured peninsulas—New York City’s Lower Manhattan and Shanghai’s Pudong. Manhattan has a rich infrastructure of streets and blocks, some dating from the 17th century (Space) while Pudong is a total urbanistic failure with its towers in a largely residual and undifferentiated ground plane (Anti-Space).

essay on space architecture

As one who has felt a thrill in experiencing some of Corb’s free plan buildings but has found the urban design aspirations of Ville Radieuse and Plan Voisin to be anathema, I find the Space/Anti-Space arguments more compelling with respect to the urban fabric. Indeed, the authors state that “the forms of the ‘traditional city’ and ‘contemporary architecture’ are not mutually exclusive. It is false to assume that the context of city form inhibits architectural expression […] urban design is a distinct and important discipline that is both connected to and independent of architecture.”

The book contains richly illustrated documentation of proposals the authors have made for Rome, Paris and New York, but unfortunately excludes their 1990 competition-winning Cité Internationale proposal for Montreal. Their work rightly prioritizes the space between, and that is no more apparent than in their proposal for the World Trade Center site in New York. As one of the original firms invited to make proposals for the rebuilding of the site, they saw it as an opportunity to “restore the lost urban quality of Lower Manhattan at street level and thereby remediate the failings of the Yamasaki super block design.”

Alas, there were those including Herbert Muschamp of the New York Times who thought that these early schemes were boring and that the problem was one of architecture, and in need of star architects to solve. The result of this pressure—as well as pressure from the developer and victims’ families—led to an invitation to the architectural elite to participate in a design competition.

essay on space architecture

Peterson Littenberg was the one holdover from the earlier group to be included in the seven teams selected. Their proposal was all about streets, squares and promenades—the lifeblood of the city—whereas most of the others, including Daniel Libeskind’s winning scheme, were about architectural objects in a continuous, undefined free space without the benefit of base buildings creating street walls. The resulting World Trade Center project, as built with its collection of singular objects, has the characteristics of Pudong or its neighbour to the north—Hudson Yards, which the current New York Times architectural critic Michael Kimmelman in a scathing review described as epitomizing “a skin-deep view of architecture as luxury branding. Each building exists to act as a logo for itself.”

Peterson Littenberg recognizes the spatial and morphological values of the traditional city while accepting the necessity of tall buildings as an urban type. The lodestar for their World Trade Center proposal was Rockefeller Center, perhaps the most accomplished urban space in North America. Like Rockefeller Center, their World Trade Center proposal, unlike most of the others, accommodates tall buildings while also integrating with and extending the urban fabric of the surrounding area.

This book mounts a strong defense of the discipline of urban design at a time when the redemptive power of iconic architecture sometimes gets in the way. In 1956, although it applies equally today, Josep Lluis Sert said, “In a period of a cult to the individual and to genius, with all due respect to genius, it is not to them that we owe our best cities.”

Review by David Sisam

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Editorial: Taking the Podium

2024 RAIC Architectural Practice Award: Dubbeldam Architecture + Design

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Psychology of Space: How Interiors Impact our Behavior?

essay on space architecture

  • Written by Christele Harrouk
  • Published on March 20, 2020

With most of our lives spent indoors, the space we occupy has a major role in our psychological behavior. Environmental psychology or Space psychology is, in fact, the interaction between people and the spaces they inhabit. Lighting, colors, configuration, scale, proportions, acoustics, and materials address the senses of the individual and generate a spectrum of feelings and practices.

From inducing warmth and safety, defining well-being, or creating a positive and efficient working environment, space can have a whole lot of impact on how we act or on what we feel; therefore, design and creative measures should be considered according to the social and psychological needs of the occupants.

essay on space architecture

Psychology of space is in fact “ the study of human relations and behaviors within the context of the built and natural environments ” according to Dave Alan Kopec, a specialist in the field and professor at the New School of Architecture and Design in San Diego. Having a direct impact on your subconscious, contributing to your emotions and perceptions, through that special part of your brain that reacts to the geometry of the space you occupy, interior design became an inherent part of people’s psychology. Though it is not the only factor involved, interior space has big implications, and it is the architect’s responsibility to shape tangible solutions for users and incorporate these ideas into the structure.

essay on space architecture

With the rise of functionality in the last decades, space became a mere reflection of the program it holds. People were stacked in boxes to produce and feed into a consumer-oriented society. In fact, this idea of just cramming individuals in any place started as the industrial revolution brought flux of people into non-equipped cities. The regular house plan was divided to accommodate as many newcomers as it could retain. Homes and jobs were oriented towards fast-paced-production. Usage of space and the psychological understanding behind it came later on in the future.

essay on space architecture

Back to our modern times, in an article published in the Independent tackling the new designs of libraries, Dr. Sergio Altomonte, architect and associate professor in the department of architecture and built environment at the Nottingham university specified that “ buildings and urban spaces should be designed first and foremost around their occupants. The importance of architecture as a trigger to physical, physiological and psychological wellbeing is nowadays becoming a topic of significant relevance.”

essay on space architecture

“ Architectural cues can provide reinforcement to the desired behaviors that we would like to see enacted in specific place types,” says environmental psychologist and interior designer Migette Kaup. In other words, architecture is the physical mean. While key factors, that architects need to pay attention to, include safety, social connectedness, ease of movement, and sensory stimulation; more concrete measures encompass light, colors, art, ventilation, etc. For example, some principles of design comprising balance, proportion, symmetry, and rhythm can introduce a sense of harmony. Colors , on the other hand, have a very simple logic behind them, the warmer the color is, the more compact space becomes. They can also evoke feelings of comfort or stimulate communication. Light depends greatly on the function. A dim light suggests a gloomy space while a bright light defines a bigger animated appearance. Natural light stimulates production and recovery.

essay on space architecture

While some spaces add up to your anxiety, others provoke a sense of serenity, and you can’t seem to know why. In fact, not always evidence-based, environmental psychology focuses more on research, and on people’s interactions with their surroundings. On that, Irving Weiner, AIA , an environmental psychology professor at Massasoit Community College in Middleborough, Mass states that “ some of these environmental influences we cannot see or touch, yet they have a direct influence on our behavior or mood. ” Bottom line, the factors are not easily discernable.

essay on space architecture

Taken into account in the design process, space psychology can lead to better productivity in commercial projects, bigger sales in retail ventures, and accelerated recovery in healthcare developments. Nevertheless, with the absence of explicit guidelines, the translation into architecture is still unclear. It will highly depend on the designer’s sensitivity, creativity, and understanding of the research. “ Part of the problem is that much of the work in the field is very psychological [or] behavioral, and it doesn’t easily translate into specific design recommendations,” says Alan Hedge, a professor at Cornell University’s Department of Design and Environmental Analysis.

essay on space architecture

At the end of the day, design is quite complex, and so are the individuals inhabiting these spaces. “ Does architecture matter? Absolutely. Can it insulate people from the political circumstances around them? No” affirms Adrian Lahoud, Dean of the school of architecture at the Royal College of Art.

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  • Updated: October 29, 2023

Writing About Architecture Tips

Effective communication is crucial in any profession, but it is especially important in the field of architecture. Architecture permeates our daily lives, shaping the places where we live, work, and take our ease.

At its best, it can ennoble our existence and convey our highest values across time. Therefore, anyone who makes, produces, promotes, or teaches architecture must depend on accurate analysis and lucid explication to encourage design that makes the world a better place.

However, writing about architecture can be a challenging task.

The subject matter is complex and often requires understanding technical terms and concepts . In addition, architecture is a highly visual field, and writers must find ways to convey the experience of a building or design through language.

These challenges can be particularly daunting for both architects and students, who may not have received formal training in writing and may be more comfortable expressing ideas visually rather than through language.

Despite these challenges, it is essential for architects to be able to write clearly and effectively about their work.

Writing About Architecture

Why is writing an important architectural skill?

There has been a well-documented decline in writing skills among students in recent years. This trend is especially concerning in the field of architecture, where technology and construction methods are becoming increasingly complex.

In a professional environment, poor writing skills can have negative consequences such as misunderstandings or ambiguities in written communication that can have serious implications in the construction industry.

For example, unclear specifications about the environmental impact of a building can have toxic results, and ambiguity about the load-bearing capacity of a structural beam can have fatal consequences. It is essential for architects to be able to clearly and accurately convey technical information in their written communication.

Partners in several of the country’s leading architecture firms have even admitted to spending a significant portion of their time rewriting or correcting what their staff has written. This suggests that writing skills may not be a priority in the field, and that architects are not receiving adequate training in how to effectively communicate their ideas through language.

One veteran practitioner and dean of a leading architecture school even went so far as to say, “Architects who can’t write are professional toast!” This highlights the importance of good writing skills for architects’ professional success and credibility.

In an increasingly complex and technical industry, it is more important than ever for architects to have strong writing skills. Clear and accurate written communication is essential for the smooth functioning of a project and the safety of those involved.

Misunderstandings or ambiguities in written communication can lead to delays, cost overruns, and even accidents on the construction site.

By taking the time to improve their writing skills and effectively convey their ideas through language, architects can make a positive impact on the built environment and enhance the quality of our daily lives.

Writing About Architecture

Resources and strategies for better architectural writing skills

While writing about architecture can be a challenging task, there are many resources available to help architects improve their writing skills and effectively convey their ideas through language.

Some of these resources include books on writing, writing courses and workshops, along with writing groups. Practicing writing and seeking out these resources can help architects develop their skills and become more confident and effective writers.

For example, The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr. and E. B. White is a small classic that provides guidance on the principles of clear and effective writing. On Writing Well by William Zinsser is another helpful resource that offers practical advice on how to write with clarity and simplicity.

…and of course “writing about architecture” by Alexandra Lange, The Built Environment Review provides an excellent breakdown and summary of this book, where they highlight Lange’s ability to explain complex architectural concepts in simple terms, making them accessible to students and beginners.

In addition to these books, there are also writing courses and workshops available that can help architects hone their writing skills. Participating in a writing group or workshop can provide a supportive environment for practicing and improving writing, as well as receiving feedback from peers and instructors.

There are also strategies that architects can use to improve their writing about architecture. One important strategy is to focus on clarity and simplicity. It is important to use concrete language and specific examples to help the reader understand the ideas being presented.

Avoid using jargon or overly technical language that may be confusing or off-putting to the reader. Instead, try to use language that is straightforward and easy to understand.

It is also important to consider the audience and tailor the writing to their level of understanding and interests. For example, a technical specification document for a construction project will likely have a different audience and purpose than an article in an architectural magazine.

Understanding the audience and purpose of the writing can help guide the style and content of the piece.

Examples of successful architectural writing that utilizes these strategies can be found in various sources, such as architectural magazines , journals, and websites . Reading these examples can provide inspiration and guidance for aspiring architectural writers.

Some examples of well-written architectural pieces include Robert Campbell’s Pulitzer Prize-winning architecture criticism for the Boston Globe and Shumon Basar’s writing on the work of OFFICE Kersten Geers David Van Severen in Phaidon’s 10x10_3 book.

These pieces showcase the use of clear and engaging language to convey the ideas and experiences of architecture.

In addition to seeking out resources and implementing effective strategies, it is also valuable for architects to seek feedback and editing from others to improve their writing skills.

Receiving feedback from peers, professors, or professional editors can help architects identify areas for improvement and strengthen their writing abilities.

This can be done through formal writing workshops or by simply asking colleagues or mentors to review a piece of writing and provide constructive feedback.

Writing About Architecture

10 Tips to improve your writing about architecture

Particularly when writing pieces for the public domain, it can be difficult to get those outside of the field to understand the subject, as for many people, researching and familiarizing themselves with architectural terms may not be a priority.

This has led to architects and architectural writers struggling to find ways to convey their ideas about architecture, and face a challenge of how to best and effectively communicate their ideas.

In light of this, we have compiled a list of 10 techniques for architectural writing that will capture the reader’s attention and keep them engaged.

01 – Personal perspective

Use first-person perspective and confront your own biases to bring a unique and personal touch to your writing. This can help to add depth and credibility to your project descriptions and make your writing more engaging for the reader.

Personal perspectives and thoughts on the subject can add a unique and relatable element to your writing. However, it is important to ensure that your thoughts are well-researched and supported by facts, while also being consistent and well-organized throughout the paper to avoid confusion for the reader.

02 – Start with a quote

By opening with a quote from the architect or relevant figure for example, you can immediately provide context and insight into the their thoughts, goals and style, making the writing more engaging and meaningful for readers.

Additionally, it highlights the significance of understanding cultural, social and historical background that can shape an architect’s work, however, this technique should be used sparingly so as not to lose its effectiveness.

03 – Evocative language

Evocative language can create emotive imagery and draw readers into the sensory experience of architecture, and bring the architecture to life in the reader’s imagination. This can help to convey the philosophies and intentions behind the design and create a sense of immersion and connection with the reader.

04 – Imaginative language

Use imaginative language and playful adjectives to add depth and drama to your writing. This can give the architecture human-like qualities, and convey the building’s unique atmosphere and character. Furthermore, playful idioms and alliterations can add a layer of literary flair to your writing, making it more engaging and memorable for the reader.

This is an effective way to convey the drama and tension of a building and make it come alive in the mind of the reader.

05 – Research, research, research

When writing about architecture, it is important to display a thorough understanding of the subject to establish credibility with your audience. Prior to beginning the writing process, conduct extensive research on the topic to gather relevant facts and information that will support your arguments.

It’s also important to make use of deep factual contrasts, which provide comparisons between two things and help to highlight the strengths of your architectural project by contrasting it with others.

By presenting clear and factual information, readers will be able to clearly see your point and understand the unique qualities of your project.

Writing About Architecture

06 – Context

To fully capture the essence of an architectural project, it is important to consider its surrounding context. One effective way to do this is by providing a carefully crafted description of the area in which the building is located.

This creates a clear image in the reader’s mind of the location and provides a contrast to the building’s “material versatility and civic countenance” that he goes on to describe, giving it extra resonance and meaning.

07 – Rhetorical questions

Use rhetorical questions to strengthen arguments and make a point without the need for a direct answer.

The question itself can be a powerful tool for drawing attention to a particular aspect of the architecture or the firm being discussed, and can be used to provide context for the following analysis.

08 – Metaphorical language

Use metaphorical language and comparisons to help readers understand and envision the unique qualities of a building. This kind of language can help to make architecture more relatable and memorable for readers by giving them a tangible image to hold on to.

Furthermore, by connecting the spaces and features of the building to familiar objects or actions, it can be more easily understood and appreciated by a wider audience.

09 – Imagery

To make the built environment accessible to a general audience, imagery is a highly effective writing technique, as it allows readers to visualize and experience what you’re describing through your words alone.

Like other techniques that can aid in understanding architecture, imagery is particularly powerful in evoking vivid mental images of the subject.

An example of effective imagery would be one that focuses on the small, specific details of a scene and makes the reader feel as if they’re right there with you, observing the scene.

To effectively use imagery in your writing, you should strive to elevate your descriptive writing skills and narrate in a dramatic and lyrical style that brings the picture to life.

10 – Personification

We share many commonalities with other humans, and it’s often easier for us to understand something when it is described in human terms. Many writers have used personification to make complex ideas more relatable, and through this writers can improve their skills and more effectively communicate the value and meaning of their work to a wider audience.

Writing About Architecture

FAQ’s about writing about architecture

How do you describe architecture in writing.

Architecture can be described in writing in several ways, depending on the purpose of the writing and the intended audience. Here are a few examples:

  • Descriptive writing : This type of writing focuses on describing the physical features and characteristics of a building or architectural style. It can be used to convey the visual appearance and sensory experience of a structure, such as the materials used, the layout, the lighting, and the overall design aesthetic.
  • Analytical writing : This type of writing involves analyzing and interpreting the design and construction of a building or architectural style. It can be used to discuss the architectural principles , the historical context, the cultural significance, and the functional aspects of a structure.
  • Persuasive writing : This type of writing is used to persuade the reader to adopt a particular viewpoint or take a specific action. It can be used to present a proposal or design, convince a client or funding agency to support a project, or advocate for a particular architectural philosophy or approach.
  • Technical writing : This type of writing is used to provide detailed and accurate information about the technical aspects of building construction and design. It can be used to document building codes, regulations, and standards, provide specifications for materials and systems, and describe construction techniques and methods.

Regardless of the type of writing, it is important to use clear and concise language, providing enough detail to convey your ideas but avoiding overly technical language, which will make it difficult for the audience to understand.

Providing visual aid such as diagrams, blueprints, floor plans and photographs to complement the written work can also be quite helpful in conveying the ideas in an architecture.

It is also a good idea to use active voice and avoid passive voice and use technical terms only when required and when doing so, defining them to make sure it is clear to the audience what the term means.

Writing About Architecture

How do you write an architecture paper?

Writing an architecture essay requires a combination of research, critical thinking, and clear writing skills. Here are a few steps you can follow to write an effective paper on architecture:

  • Define your topic : Choose a specific area of architecture that you want to write about, such as a particular building, architectural style, or design movement. Make sure that the topic is focused and specific enough to be covered in the length of the paper you plan to write.
  • Conduct research : Gather information on your topic from a variety of sources, such as books, articles, online resources, and primary sources like architectural drawings and photographs. Researching the historical context, cultural influences, and design principles of your topic is important, as these will help you to understand and interpret it.
  • Formulate a thesis : State the main idea or argument that you want to make in your paper. The thesis should be specific and clear, and it should guide the structure and content of your writting.
  • Organize your paper : Use a clear structure to organize your paper and make sure that it has a logical flow. The introduction should provide background information on your topic and state your thesis. The body of the writing should be divided into several paragraphs, each of which should focus on a specific aspect of the topic. The conclusion should summarize the main points of your writting and restate your thesis.
  • Use evidence and examples : Use specific examples from your research to support the claims you make in your writing. These examples could be the building or design you’re discussing, the historical context you’ve researched or the design principles you’re arguing about. Use evidence to back up your thesis and make sure that your examples are relevant and clearly linked to your thesis.
  • Use proper formatting : Use proper formatting for your paper , such as clear headings and subheadings, and a consistent font and layout. It’s also important to follow the guidelines provided by your instructor or the publication that you’re submitting the writing to, if any.
  • Proofread and revise : Proofread your paper carefully to ensure that it is free of errors in grammar, spelling, and punctuation. Revise your paper to improve its clarity, coherence, and overall effectiveness.

It’s also important to think about your audience and how they will be approaching the paper . This will help you to choose the right tone and language to use. If the paper is a formal academic paper, using technical terms and being more formal would be better, if it’s a piece for a general audience, it’s better to use simpler language and avoid technical terms that the audience might not understand.

Lastly, it is important to remember that writing is a process and it requires time and effort. It is okay to need multiple revisions and to reach out to others such as professors or colleagues to get feedback on your work.Regenerate response

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Space and Transformation: The Struggle for Architecture in Post Apartheid South Africa

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Afrika Focus

The title and this essay, ‘Space and Transformation – the struggle for architecture in post-apartheid South Africa’ derive from the 2nd Annual Nelson Mandela Lecture delivered in Ghent in 2015. Its source as my topic is located in the intersection of three interrelated trajectories. The most obvious is the issue of my disciplinary grounding and the locus of intellectual thought, that of architecture and the complexity associated with the production of space, particularly under conditions of change. The other is the life work and philosophical teaching of this extraordinary man Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela and the third is the condition of the world, and South Africa in particular, as we experience it today at what appears to be this unique historic intersectional moment of globalization and expansive tech- nological shift within our nations’ democratic emergence. The essay draws on texts derived from other disciplines, such as literature and philosophy, particularly those that have rel...

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The homogenising influence of the ‘melting pot’ aesthetic of an American ideal – experienced as much in South Africa as it is globally –would insist that our constructed spaces become, essentially, a-historical. Meanwhile, the criteria for ‘what makes a good building’ is further impacted upon by the lauded tradition of European architecture. In renegotiating, and re-imaging, the future role of the humanities in Africa, it becomes imperative that this process looks to renegotiating the very ways in which we create the physical spaces that surround and influence us daily in our lived and felt experiences. With this in mind, this paper emphasises the importance of designing buildings that are valued both for their formal elements in as much as they are for the societal relevance their design reflects, resonating with the diverse and complex South African peoples that will make these spaces their place of living. Hereafter, it argues the need for the implementation of new criteria for buildings in the field of architectural studies that will encourage students to actively participate in the multiplicitous national identit(y/ies) speaking specifically for the South African dynamic, rather than pandering to the prerequisites of form and style that once colonised our sense of home. Though our identity is in the process of re-imagination, there is still a shared (in part) trajectory that has brought all of us, as South Africans, to this particular moment in our country’s history. As such, this alone speaks for the fact that there is a ‘South African experience’, although it will always be nuanced and difficult to articulate. But this is not to discourage us from trying, and in this, architects can seek to ‘articulate’ new post-apartheid spaces for living that operate in dialogue with our country’s re-imagining.

essay on space architecture

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Sharone Tomer

Public spaces had been central to Cape Town’s colonial planning and spatial order, but became marginalised in the twentieth century under modernist planning and apartheid policy. As apartheid came towards its close, architects and planners began to champion public space as a way of addressing the city’s deficiencies. Books, articles, and policy documents were written celebrating public space as a humanist device and vehicle for democracy. The City of Cape Town’s emerging Urban Design Branch instituted a major public space program: the Dignified Places Programme. This paper traces the history of public space as a terrain through which political aspirations, whether of domination or contestation, have been asserted in Cape Town. The paper will argue that at the end of apartheid, a public space turn occurred which reflected the specificities of post-apartheid democracy, in both its aspirations and limitations.

Małgorzata Kądziela , Anna Rynkowska-Sachse

Amy Elizabeth Leibbrandt

This essay does not deny the idea that there is a pattern within architecture, which produces superficial facades driven by consumerism, but attempts to highlights the emerging identity of ‘social’ Architecture, focusing on the South African context. Social architecture as discussed in this essay refers to architecture challenging architectural convention, such as exploring insitu community participation and developing the informal milieu. Anthony Wards states: What is called social architecture is the practice of architecture as an instrument for progressive social change. It foregrounds the moral imperative to increase human dignity and reduce human suffering . . . [architecture] is ‘‘nothing but social’’, yet its social practice has both supported and reinforced existing social hierarchies and has operated mostly as a mechanism of oppression and domination. ‘‘Social architecture’’ . . . challenges structures of domination and, in the process, calls capitalism itself into question’ (Jones & Card, 2011)"

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Tariq Toffa

In the chapter I explore and enunciate on how deeply and inseparably imbricated the built environment disciplines have been, and remain, in their long historical construction as colonial, imperial and ‘western’-centric formations, and why there remains a lack of self-critique of the nature of architectural thinking, practice and agency on a fundamental level. In the South African context, the architectural mainstream typically displays a thinly-stretched emphasis on designed objects, with relatively marginal attention directed toward a deeper understanding of the social and cultural field out of which these emerge, the discourses upon which these are based and the positionality of the authorship which shapes it. Without the intellectual work required to understand (post)apartheid–colonial conditions at a deeper level, and consequently how built environment disciplines may chart ‘an-other’ way, one effect of the marginalisation of more critical scholarship in favour of a notion of design process and product is that both have suffered. In the chapter I argue that disciplinary spaces of education have a responsibility much broader than conventionally understood. New, integrated forms of theory are necessary not only for disciplines to understand the (post)colonial societies in which they exist, but likewise to also understand themselves. This may assist them not only to be more capable of speaking to their society, but also to not continue reproducing the worst of it as falsely-conceived islands of excellence. Architecture like many other disciplines in the academy cannot remain resistant or indifferent to this because they are already implicated – whether this fact is acknowledged or not. What is therefore required of the disciplines is not to shy away from social fissures discretely and incoherently and consign them to a zone of taboos, but rather the reverse: to more deeply understand the ways in which these are sustained and reproduced in other (educational, professional and disciplinary) forms, and to develop ethical and imaginative counter strategies. Little of the above is possible, however, if there is not a parallel process of developing human agency and authorship. In other words, ‘transformation’ (as agency) on the one hand, and ‘decolonisation’ (as knowledge and praxis) on the other, are intrinsically linked though frequently treated separately or as unrelated. Operationalised, such strategic processes (i.e. ‘transformation’ and ‘decolonisation’) unavoidably meet systems of power – and hence inevitable resistance – at virtually every level.

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Best Architecture Essay Examples & Topics

Architecture essays can be challenging, especially if you are still a student and in the process of acquiring information. First of all, you are to choose the right topic – half of your success depends on it. Pick something that interests and excites you if possible. Second of all, structure your paper correctly. Start with an intro, develop a thesis, and outline your body paragraphs and conclusion. Write down all your ideas and thoughts in a logical order, excluding the least convincing ones.

In this article, we’ve combined some tips on how to deliver an excellent paper on the subject. Our team has compiled a list of topics and architecture essay examples you can use for inspiration or practice.

If you’re looking for architecture essay examples for college or university, you’re in the right place. In this article, we’ve collected best architecture essay topics and paper samples together with writing tips. Below you’ll find sample essays on modern architecture, landscape design, and architect’s profession. Go on reading to learn how to write an architecture essay.

Architecture Essay Types

Throughout your academic life, you will encounter the essay types listed below.

Argumentative Architecture Essay

This type uses arguments and facts to support a claim or answer a question. Its purpose is to lay out the information in front of the reader that supports the author’s position. It does not rely on the personal experiences of the writer. For instance, in an argumentative essay about architecture, students can talk about the positive aspects of green construction. You can try to demonstrate with facts and statistics why this type of building is the ultimate future.

Opinion Architecture Essay

This essay requires an opinion or two on the topic. It may try to demonstrate two opposing views, presenting a list of arguments that support them. Remember that the examples that you use have to be relevant. It should be clear which opinion you support. Such an essay for the architecture topic can be a critique of architectural work.

Expository Architecture Essay

This writing shares ideas and opinions as well as provides evidence. The skill that is tested in this essay is the expertise and knowledge of the subject. When you write an expository essay, your main goal is to deliver information. It would be best if you did not assume that your audience knows much about the subject matter. An expository essay about architecture can be dedicated to the importance of sustainable architecture.

Informative Architecture Essay

Such essays do not provide any personal opinions about the topic. It aims to provide as much data as possible and educate the audience about the subject. An excellent example of an informative essay can be a “how-to essay.” For instance, in architecture, you can try to explain how something functions or works.

Descriptive Architecture Essay

It’s an essay that aims to create a particular sentiment in the reader. You want to describe an object, idea, or event so that the reader gets a clear picture. There are several good ways to achieve it: using creative language, including major and minor details, etc. A descriptive essay about architecture can be focused on a building or part of a city. For instance, talk about a casino in Las Vegas.

Narrative Architecture Essay

Here, your goal is to write a story. This paper is about an experience described in a personal and creative way. Each narrative essay should have at least five elements: plot, character, setting, theme, and conflict. When it comes to the structure, it is similar to other essays. A narrative paper about architecture can talk about the day you have visited a monument or other site.

Architecture Essay Topics for 2022

  • The most amazing architecture in the world and the most influential architects of the 21st century.
  • Some pros and cons of vertical housing: vertical landscape in the history of architecture.
  • A peculiar style of modern architecture in China.
  • The style of Frank Lloyd Wright and architecture in his life.
  • New tendencies in rural housing and architecture.
  • Ancient Roman architecture reimagined.
  • The role of architecture in pressing environmental problems in modern cities.
  • Islamic architecture: peculiar features of the style.
  • Earthquake-resistant infrastructure in building houses.
  • How precise is virtual planning?
  • Houses in rural areas and the cities. How similar are they?
  • A theory of deconstruction in postmodern architecture.
  • The influence of Greek architecture on modern architecture.
  • Aspects to consider when building houses for visually impaired people.
  • Disaster-free buildings: challenges and opportunities.
  • European architectural influence on the Islamic world.
  • The architecture of old Russian cities.

In the above section, we’ve given some ideas to help you write an interesting essay about architecture. You can use these topics for your assignment or as inspiration.

Thank you for reading the article. We’ve included a list of architecture essay examples further down. We also hope you found it helpful and valuable. Do not hesitate to share our article with your friends and peers.

413 Best Architecture Essay Examples

Mathematics in ancient greek architecture, the vebjorn sand da vinci project.

  • Words: 3579

The Architecture of Ancient Greece Found in Los Angeles

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An Architectural Guide to the Cube Houses

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The Eiffel Tower as a Form of Art

  • Words: 1361

Islamic Architecture: Al-Masjid Al-Haram, Ka’aba, Makka

  • Words: 1190

Charles Jencks: Language of Post Modern Architecture

  • Words: 2204

Skyscrapers in Dubai: Buildings and Materials

  • Words: 2468

Filippo Brunelleschi and Religious Architecture

  • Words: 2121

Architecture of the Gherkin Building

Comparison of traditional and non-traditional mosques.

  • Words: 1611

Traditional Roman vs. Chinese Courtyard House

  • Words: 4070

Calligraphy Inscription in Islamic Architecture and Art

  • Words: 3269

The Shift From Modernism to Postmodernism

  • Words: 1849

Stonehenge and Its Significance

Context and building in architecture.

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Monumentalism in Architecture

  • Words: 2840

Architecture in Colonialism and Imperialism

  • Words: 2408

Architectural Regionalism Definition

  • Words: 3352

Risks in Construction Projects: Empire State Building

  • Words: 2856

Symbolism and Superstition in Architecture and Design

  • Words: 2252

Modern Architecture: Frank Lloyd Wright and Le Corbusier

  • Words: 3291

“Life in the Metropolis” or “The Culture of Congestion”: Examples of Metropolitan Architecture

Paper church designed by shigeru ban.

  • Words: 1665

Empire State Building Structural Analysis With Comparisons

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Saint Sernin and Chartres Cathedral

  • Words: 1196

The History of Architecture and It Changes

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The Guggenheim Museum by Frank Lloyd Wright

  • Words: 3374

Frank Lloyd Wright and his Contribution to Architecture

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Islamic Architectural Design

  • Words: 1407

History of Architecture: English Baroque Architecture

  • Words: 3073

Influential Architecture: Summer Place in China

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Form and Function in Architecture

  • Words: 3377

V. Horta’s Tassel Hotel and the Pavilion for Japanese Art by B. Goff

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The Question of Ornament in Architectural Design

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Columns and Walls of Mies Van der Rohe’s Barcelona Pavilion

  • Words: 1518

Architecture and the Environment

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Materialism and World System Theory Comparison

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Postmodern Architecture vs. International Modernism

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Modern Patio House Architecture

The evolution future architecture.

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Ronchamp Chapel From Le Corbusier

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Kidosaki House by Tadao Ando

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Perspective Drawing Used by Renaissance Architects

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Ancient Chinese Architecture

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The Getty Center in Los Angeles

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Architecture as Facility Management Principle

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The Parthenon and the Pantheon in Their Cultural Context

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Alhambra Palace – History and Physical Description

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Ayasofya Building: Enriching Istanbul’s Culture

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Architecture as an Academic Discipline

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Architecture of Le Corbusier, Gerrit Rietveld and Frank Lloyd Wright

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Green Design Parameters in High-Rise Buildings in Hot-Humid Climate

Architecture: villa savoye by le corbusier, rockefeller center overview.

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S. R. Crown Hall: The Masterpiece of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

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Harvard Graduate Center Building and Its Structure

Architecture history. banham’s “theory and design in the first machine age”.

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Modern Architecture: Style of Architecture

Personal opinion on the colosseum as an artwork, library architecture as a method of study history and to understand the lives of people.

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Arc de Triomphe. History. Construction

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Gothic Revivalism in the Architecture of Augustus Pugin

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Translation From Drawing to Building

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Architectural Production: Queen Anne

  • Words: 2744

Connections of Steel Frame Buildings in 19th Century

  • Words: 2681

Architecture: Kansai International Airport

  • Words: 3829

Urbanism in Architecture: Definition and Evolution

The first chicago school of architecture, architecture: kings road house.

  • Words: 1117

Pantheon and Arch of Constantine Comparison

The portunus temple: a creation of the ancient times.

  • Words: 1156

Hagia Sophia’s Historical and Architectural Importance

Traditional saudi architecture: hejazi architecture.

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Most African Americans, if given a chance, would have chosen to be “just Americans” ever since the first of us was brought here to Jamestown colony in 1619, a year before the Mayflower landed. But that choice has never been left up to us. 1

–Clarence Page, columnist for the Chicago Tribune , 1996

Here, Will gets off a jump shot that I must admit I had not seen coming. In this last sentence, Will acknowledges the existence of racial and colonial “others”—a fundamental condition of the American experience—while simultaneously initiating a process of “de-othering” black identity.

The essay then proceeds to mention that many of the achievements of blacks along the march toward inclusion in American society involved athletics. These milestones included the March 19, 1966 NCAA basketball championship game in College Park, Maryland, where the University of Texas at El Paso (then Texas Western College) beat the University of Kentucky, 72-65. At the time, there were no black players on any of the teams of the ACC (Atlantic Coast Conference), the SWC (Southwest Conference), or the SEC (Southeast Conference), the last of which included Kentucky. Adolph Rupp—then head coach at the University of Kentucky, whose name now graces Kentucky’s Rupp Arena—was among those who steadfastly resisted the integration of the sport. Angered at being pressured by the University of Kentucky’s president to recruit minority players in 1966, Rupp yelled at an assistant: “That sonofabitch is ordering me to get some niggers in here. What am I going to do?” 4 His team’s loss to Texas Western (TWC) in the NCAA finals made him still further indignant, as TWC was a team that started five black players (and played only two substitutes, both of whom were black). This was a first for an NCAA championship game. Rupp would later comment, “TWC… TWC? What’s that stand for—Two White Coaches?” 5

In a construction of relationships between distinct American cultural forms (baseball, basketball, and jazz) George Will argues that basketball is the most purely American game because it has no evolutionary connections, as baseball and football do, with other nations’ games. As such, it has become a showcase for black talent—as it should be, in Will’s reading, because blacks are “the most purely American Americans.” With subtle irony, he substitutes “American American” for the expected label “African American.” In doing this, Will eliminates the double-consciousness of black identity as well as the signifier of always seeing oneself through the gaze of a white lens. This twist by the conservative columnist propels us toward the center of discussions regarding culture and cultural productions for blacks in America, a collective whose history has long been fraught with pressure for the black American—in the words of W.E.B. Du Bois—“to be both a Negro and an American, without being cursed and spit upon by his fellows, without having the doors of Opportunity closed roughly in his face.” 6 Yet, any investigation of issues of culture and race must recognize that culture operates within the parameters of historical and social contexts. Furthermore, historical and social contexts are inseparable from geography and time, which means that the definition of culture is tantamount to comprehending one’s relationship to a particular place in time. Hence, culture cannot be essentialized to ethnic identity.

Culture is an understanding of one’s internal and external relationships to place (geography) and time (the order in which events occur), as well as an intimacy with one’s own existence (the materiality of presence and self). According to Georg Simmel, culture comes into being through the synthesis of the subjective spirit and the objective intellectual product. 7 However, unlike sports, music, film, art, and design—which are cultural productions defined by representation, patterns of consumption, and in some cases mass production—architecture is neither consumed nor indiscriminately mass produced. Architecture spatializes political, social, and historical relationships as well as instrumentalizes subjectivities. It brackets place, time, and materiality to events in order to produce meanings and discourse. Therefore, architecture can neither be essentialized to race nor racial representations—a process that invariably results in stereotypes, commodification of identity, and a regime of visibility that reifies the dichotomies of otherness (white versus black, us versus them) in American discourse.

George Will concludes his column with a quote from Du Bois:

When African slaves arrived in the American colonies, they were deprived of the cultural artifacts that had identified them in their homelands. They were stripped from their homelands, stripped from their families, stripped from their cultural traditions, stripped from their traditional dress, and sold bare upon the auction blocks of colonial slave markets. African slaves were even stripped of their names and given new names by slaveowners. All visual motifs of identity were stripped as well. Among certain ethnic groups in Africa, one’s body was marked or face scarred with certain symbols that mapped that individual’s position and identity within the social geography of the group. This was a common practice among the ancient kingdoms of West Africa, such as the Kingdoms of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai, and the practice continues today among certain peoples of Nigeria (a terrain inclusive of over 250 different ethnic groups) as an indication of one’s cultural heritage. Three scars on the left and right cheeks of a man or woman reveal that that person is a descendant of a slave tribe or class. Such customs were suppressed on American soil, and there is no evidence of those practices today among descendants of African slaves.

Yet, while the overt visual symbols and motifs disappeared, intangible traces of identity remained among Americans of African decent. These intangible traces enabled the forging of a new identity, of which American slaves are the ancestral authors and contemporary black Americans are the inheritors. If the tribal markings of ancient kingdoms have disappeared, they have been replaced by indelible markers of American identity in terms of body language, gestures, postures, and movement. The slave body, which originally belonged not to the black American but to the slaveowner, has become, for black Americans, an instrument of social and political commentary and protest, in subtle, elusive, and ambiguous ways. “Black Style,” as it has been called, involves an “evolving semiotics of black self-creation that has been designed from its very outset to impose a degree of individuality on the numbing uniformity bred of slavery, poverty, Jim Crow laws, and white racism.” According to Shane White and Graham White in African American Expressive Culture from Its Beginnings to the Zoot Suit , the politics of “Black Style”—not only its body language and gestures, but also its hairstyles, clothing, and dance moves—are the politics of metaphor. It is a politics that is always ambiguous, yet meant to act subtly against the dominant racial group. 9 However, this politics is not as simple as wearing an Afro, a dashiki, or other afro-centric fashions. In fact, it is not a politics of style that refers to images and representations at all. Rather, it is a politics that refers to spatial praxes and resistance. This is the manner in which blacks occupy and move through space, negotiate spatial relationships, and create alternative spaces for creative expression and daily affirmation of life in American society.

I recall walking down the street alone in the middle of a very hot November day in the Malian capital city of Bamako several years ago when a teenage Malian boy yelled at me from across the street, “Hey! American guy.” I turned and looked around to figure out to whom he was speaking, and when I saw that I was alone on this part of the street, I realized that he was speaking to me. I must admit that I had never really thought of myself as being identifiably American. Perhaps a bit pretentiously, I had always simply considered myself a citizen of the world. And I was surprised that as a dark-skinned man walking in West Africa, in plain clothes without some American slogan or identifiable fashion label across my chest, I could be recognized immediately as American. I wondered, and still wonder to this day—what gave me away?

Within modern cultural production, these aforementioned intangible traits of manner and space-making influenced and in some cases transformed modern dance, music, and visual arts. Although racism was pervasive in the modern dance world in the 1940s and 1950s, the inclusion of black dancers in the Martha Graham Dance Company, and especially the participation of Alvin Ailey and Carmen de Lavallade in the Lester Horton Dancers, led to the development of what is now considered American jazz dance. Alvin Ailey extended Horton’s legacy and founded the American Dance Theater following Horton’s death in 1953, including many of the former members of Horton’s company. The American Dance Theater later became the Alvin Ailey Dance Company. Katherine Dunham—a dancer, choreographer, and anthropologist—directed the Katherine Dunham Troupe and combined African and Caribbean movements, in the process revolutionizing American dance by understanding from an anthropological point of view the roots of black dance, ritual, and spatial movement, and by transforming them into a significant artistic choreography that speaks to audiences regardless of race.

In music, these intangible traces ignited the passions of the blues, whose meters and cadences measured not only the despair of blacks but the triumph of the black spirit. And of course jazz—“America’s classical music,” with a history much too well known and complex to recite here—is the first indigenous American style to affect music in the rest of the world. From ragtime syncopation and driving brass bands to soaring gospel choirs, field hollers, and the deep down growl of the blues, jazz’s many roots are celebrated almost everywhere in the United States. Its rhythms and improvisations are a direct reflection of black spatial relationships to society, culture, and politics. Likewise in the visual arts, the paintings of Jacob Lawrence and the collages of Romare Beardon capture the motion, history, and complexities of black American life. The vivid yet abstract black bodies in Lawrence’s works (such as the sixty panel Migration Series , which depicts the Great Migration of black Americans from the rural South to the urban North) are set in motion relative to each other and relative to their historical and social contexts. Further, Beardon’s collage- like process of layered fragments of colored paper and cut-outs from magazines creates complex spatial relationships of simultaneity, movement, and overlaps of visual foregrounds and cultural backgrounds. These examples escape the traps of essentialism and stereotypes, and suggest that black identity is neither determined by the color of Lawrence’s or Beardon’s abstract figures, nor by the costumes of Ailey’s dancer, nor the skin color of the jazz performer. Rather, black identity is wrapped up in the spatial expression of the black experience that is translated through these modes of productions. How can architectural modes of production, then, resist image and representation to translate the black American experience into spatial forms, and to create alternative spaces for creative expression and affirmation of daily life in American society? How can architecture synthesize the subjective spirit and the objective intellectual product to construct a uniquely “American American” architecture borne of black complexity?

Yet the absorption of black cultural production into the larger category of “Made in America” in fact began with the initial introduction of African slaves to the American continent in ways that are not limited to slave labor. This absorption takes the form not only of subtle cultural traces, but includes direct slave knowledge. Noted historian Robert Rosen chronicled the introduction of rice production in the Carolinas during the seventeenth century in A Short History of Charleston . European settlers had little knowledge of how to cultivate rice, since it had not been grown in northern Europe or England. Slave traders and Englishmen noted that rice “forms the chief part of the African’s sustenance” and was abundant on the “Windward Coast” of Africa, an area now known as Ghana. According to Rosen, “the planters obviously knew the value of slaves who knew how to cultivate rice because advertisements for slaves often indicated their origin. One advertisement, for example, read ‘from the Windward Rice Coast.’ ” Hence, black slaves probably taught white planters how to cultivate it since Africans had been cultivating it for centuries. The rice planters of Carolina grew so rich that they became the wealthiest people in the American colonies. 10

James Draper examines the many theories regarding African contributions to architecture in the United States in an essay titled “From Slave Cabins to ‘Shotguns’: Perceptions on Africanisms in American Architecture”:

Furthermore, historian John Michael Vlach identifies the “shotgun house” (a narrow rectangular house no more than twelve feet wide with rooms arranged as an enfilade and doors at each end of the house) as a continuation of an African lifestyle. According to Vlach, the ninety degree rotation of the house from conventional American folk housing is a “formal index of an alternative architectural tradition.” 12

While historians have primarily focused on the tectonics and formal attributes of domestic structures of slaves, and the vernacular structures of black Americans have only recently gained attention, the spatial praxis of these environments holds clearer evidence of the cultural transference from Africa to America. The architect Laverne Wells-Bowie and noted cultural theoretician bell hooks explore black cultural connections to space in Art on My Mind: Visual Politics . Wells-Bowie’s research has examined Gullah architecture and what she calls a “deep structure” in the ways in which all areas of the African Diaspora use and shape space. (Gullah refers to the culture and language that developed in the slave communities of the isolated plantations along coastal South Carolina and Georgia. The Gullah language is a Creole blend of Elizabethan English and African languages, and is still spoken today among the people of John’s Island, South Carolina.) Wells-Bowie and hooks discuss the extension of interior domestic spaces to the exterior space of the yard, and the domestic territorialization of that space to accommodate communal space and domestic rituals like “sweeping the yard.” The fashioning of the yard was and is as crucial as the fashioning of the interior environment. 13 Furthermore, the hand-built vernacular houses of poor Southern blacks exhibit resistance to oppression in the manner by which blacks could have the right to exercise control over space on their own terms—and where imagination and design “would respond to the needs of their lives, their communities, their families.” hooks writes, “No matter how poor you were in the shack, no matter if you owned the shack or not, there you could allow your needs and desires to articulate interior design and exterior surroundings.” 14

Furthermore, black domestic life and labor gave rise to a significant number of inventions borne of arduous tasks and limited resources. These inventions have been absorbed into the broader definition of “Made in America” and are now taken for granted and rarely credited to their black makers. Although the list is too exhaustive to recount, Mitchell Brown’s Index of African American Inventors provides a remarkable look at the scope of industrial and domestic ingenuity that came out of the work of black Americans (including biscuit cutters, folding beds, rotary engines, street sweepers, railway signals, corn and cotton planting devices, ironing boards, lawnmowers, umbrella stands, a carpet beating machine, an automatic fishing device, ice-cream molds, photo embossing, refrigeration apparatuses, variations on the guitar, the golf tee, pencil sharpeners, electromechanical brakes, and a design for an airship). 15 These are inventions that have had significant impacts on the development of American architecture, landscape, and space.

This book returns to the question of architecture and black culture, an interplay that is perhaps caught between the indelible traces of identity and the absorption of spatial and cultural practices into a dominant culture. This intersection of architecture and black American life does not simply express the static conditions of ethnic identity. Rather, as a cultural practice, architecture must interpret and translate the historical, social, and political contexts of a place and how one comes to terms with that place. Such an architecture should reveal meanings, situations, and conditions (both apparent and subliminal) and allow for individual participatory action, the affirmation of “presence” in life, and a recognition of existential meaning and knowledge—the confirmation of that life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness.

  • Clarence Page, Showing My Color: Impolite Essays on Race and Identity (New York: Perennial, 1996), 20.
  • George F. Will, “Homespun Sport,” the Washington Post (19 December 1991), first published in the International Herald Tribune (November 1991).
  • Will, “Homespun Sport.”
  • W.E.B. Du Bois, “The Souls of Black Folk—Of Our Spiritual Strivings,” Writings (New York: Literary Classics of the United States, 1986), 364–65.
  • Georg Simmel, Simmel on Culture: Selected Writings , ed. David Frisby and Mike Featherstone (London: Sage Publications, 1997), 58.
  • See Shane White and Graham White, African American Expressive Culture from Its Beginnings to the Zoot Suit (New York: Cornell University Press, 1998), alongside various pieces of commentary and reviews by Publishers Weekly Review , Library Journal , and Kirkus Reviews .
  • Robert Rosen, A Short History of Charleston (Charleston: Peninsula Press, 1982), 24.
  • James Draper, “From Slave Cabins to ‘Shotguns’: Perceptions on Africanisms in American Architecture,” Historia 10 (Eastern Illinois University, 2001), 82.
  • John Michael Vlach, The Afro-American Tradition in Decorative Arts (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 1990), 123.
  • bell hooks, “Architecture and Black Life: Talking Space with Laverne Wells- Bowie,” Art on My Mind: Spatial Politics (New York: The New Press, 1995), 152–62.
  • hooks, Art on my Mind, 147.
  • Mitchell C. Brown, Index of African American Inventors: Historical , University of California Irvine, online (accessed March 14, 2015), https://webfiles.uci.edu/ mcbrown/display/inventor_list.html.

In the face of systemic oppression, Foucault argues, liberatory practices, spatial and otherwise, remain possible.

For African slaves in the American colonies in the eighteenth century, the possibilities of resistance and liberation were, ironically, often to be found in the religious theology of white dominated society; this embrace of an evangelist theology resulted in their own liberative space-making as they constructed spaces for religious worship and refuge. Carter G. Woodson’s A History of the African American Church (originally published as The History of the Negro Church in 1920) chronicles the proselytizing of Negroes as early as 1695 by a white missionary named Rev. Samuel Thomas of Goose Creek Parish in the colony of South Carolina. As the indoctrination and conversion of African slaves spread throughout the American colonies, blacks were allowed to worship in the same space as whites—not as a matter of religious equality, but rather due to a sense of religious paternalism. According to Woodson, Rev. Jonathan Boucher of the Anglican Church boldly stated,

As the success of indoctrination took hold, a few pioneering Negro preachers emerged, particularly in South Carolina and Georgia. One of these was Andrew Bryan, who was born a slave in 1737 in Goose Creek and was permitted to erect a wood-framed church for his own congregation at Yamacraw (now called Daufuskie Island, South Carolina). However, the congregation was soon dispossessed of the church and forced to hold secret meetings in a nearby swamp in order to evade persecution by the slave master. This, then, is perhaps one of the earliest examples of the subversive space-making of African slaves.

In the 1830s, when all black churches were outlawed following the planning of slave insurrections (led by Gabriel Prosser in Richmond in 1800, Denmark Vesey in Charleston in 1821, and Nat Turner in Southampton County in 1831), the black church went underground and would again have to carve out space in what were called “bush arbors” or “bush harbors”, which also denoted a place of security or refuge. These were simple, one room structures, often constructed in the forest out of “brush” or bush tied together with rope or vines in the form of an arbor, underneath which Negro preachers creatively appropriated biblical stories and the religious theology of their slave masters to preach liberation to their fellow slaves. The Works Progress Administration in 1936 documented an account of the bush arbor from Mrs. Amanda Johnson, a former slave born in Glascock, Georgia:

Recalling the trope of the Abbé Laugier’s “primitive hut—one of the foundational myths of the Western classical tradition in architecture—these structures, figuratively and literally carved out of the natural landscape, were physical and cultural spaces where blacks not only assembled for worship but also for the purposes of social justice, political action, and identity formation, set apart and in secret from the patriarchal structures of slavery, white oppression, and everyday white-dominated society. Hence, the early black church exploited the condition of “otherness” and constructed an “other” space as well as the foundation for an “other” theology that would speak to ontological questions related their experience, subjectivity, and identity.

The role of the black church as a space of liberation later translated into the liberative promises of social and political justice of the Civil Rights Movement and in particular Black Liberation Theology, which posits that liberation is the fundamental content of theology. Defined by James H. Cone in A Black Theology of Liberation , black theology emerges out of the need of blacks to liberate themselves from white oppressors. It is a theology of liberation which springs from an identification with the oppression of blacks in America and seeks to interpret religious teachings and biblical history in light of the black condition. 3 Often rejected as racism when it was first published, Cone sets out in A Black Theology of Liberation to create a space within the dominant theological discourse to address the social, economic, and political subjugation of black Americans and to take white theology to task for its failure to recognize the relationships between the black struggle for justice and theological discourse. Cone constructs this space based upon the spatial praxes of black power extending from insurrectionists like Prosser, Turner, and Vesey as well as those slaves worshiping in the bush to defiantly declare, “ I am black because God is black! ” 4 However, black liberation theology is not static but rather an active practice (as when Cone speaks of “doing” theology), one which continually recontextualizes theology in relation to the ongoing issues of black liberation. As such, while not denying deism, Cone states that black theology resembles existentialism in terms of its conviction that existence precedes essence, and that the human subject must be the beginning point of any phenomenological analysis of human existence. Furthermore, the consequences of black liberation theology are inherently spatial and indeed architectural, as it is not only concerned with ontological and existential space but also with the everyday spaces of black life, including community and cultural identity, and social concerns such as poverty, justice, and housing.

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Theories of space, subjectivity, and identity—cultural or otherwise—were never the primary concern of the progressive avant-garde of the modern architectural movement. In “The Rise and Fall of the Avant-Garde,” Kenneth Frampton recalls that the radical avant-garde emerged as a critique of the ancien régime and was invested with full force in the process of modernization in the aftermath of World War I. In the 1920s, this resulted in the positive cultural formations of Purism, Neoplasticism, and Constructivism. In Frampton’s account, “the triumphs of science, medicine, and industry seemed to confirm the liberative promise of the modern project,” while any questions regarding architecture and the liberative promise of space that pertained to race or cultural subjugation were entirely non-existent. 5

For Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier, two leaders of the radical avant-garde, architecture was an instrument for cultural transformation, the reconstruction and formation of a new society, liberation from nineteenth century bourgeois culture, and the renewed spirit of modernization. While architecture was viewed as being at the service of a generalized European cultural transformation, space was viewed as subservient to the two primary constituents of architecture—namely building and concept. Writing in the first two issues of G in 1923, Mies van der Rohe’s polemic makes clear that the “liberation” of modern architecture derives from formalist dogmas:

Diagram

Architecture is the will of an epoch translated into space; living, changing, new. Not yesterday, not tomorrow, only today can be given form. Only this kind of building will be creative.

Create form out of the nature of our tasks with the methods of our time.

This is our task. —From G , no. 1

Essentially our task is to free the practice of building from the control of esthetic speculators and restore it to what it should exclusively be: building. 6 — From G , no. 2

Accordingly, for Mies van der Rohe architecture was the materialization of the conscious and deliberate transformation of society expressed through the process of the physical construction of the state as manifested in building. Hence, the liberative promise of the modern project was a generalized, free (namely, patriarchal) collective production.

For Le Corbusier, on the other hand, architecture was the intellectual pursuit of the mind and the formulation of an idea translated into a visual experience. Towards a New Architecture , Le Corbusier’s great manifesto regarding the new epoch of modernization in the first half of the twentieth century, describes how technology, industrial design, and production lead to a new general state of mind. Le Corbusier praises the aesthetics of engineers and excoriates architects for being bound to customs and traditions that stifle the mind. Architecture, defined by contour and profile, is a pure construction of the mind. Le Corbusier states that architecture

… brings into play the highest faculties by its very abstraction. Architectural abstraction has this about it which is magnificently peculiar to itself, that while it is rooted in hard fact, it spiritualizes it. The naked fact is a medium for an idea only by reason of the “order” that is applied to it.

The plan is the generator. The eye of the spectator finds itself looking at a site composed of streets and houses. It receives the impact of the masses which rise up around it. If these masses are of a

formal kind and have not been spoilt by unseemly variations, if the disposition of their grouping expresses a clean rhythm and not an incoherent agglomeration, if the relationship of mass to space is in just proportion, the eye transmits to the brain coordinated sensations and the mind derives from these satisfactions of a high order: this is architecture. 7

Taken together, the liberative promises of the modern architectural project are tied to the technological and abstract intellectual production of a European patriarchy.

In Architecture as Space: How to Look at Architecture —first published in Italian in 1948 and published in English in 1957—the Italian architectural historian and critic Bruno Zevi argues that space is the specific property that distinguishes architecture from other forms of art or cultural production. Zevi states that architecture cannot be completely represented in any form, and that it is more than the sum of its two-dimensional representations in the plan or cross-sections of a building, or even in three-dimensional modeling. Architecture, according to Zevi, can only be grasped and felt through direct experience. “To grasp space, to know how to see it, is the key to the understanding of building,” Zevi writes. “Until we have learned not only to understand space theoretically, but also to apply this understanding as a central factor in the criticism of architecture, our history, and thus our enjoyment, of architecture will remain haphazard.” 8 Furthermore, in his essay “Space—Protagonist of Architecture,” Zevi’s personification of space implies that subjectivity is tied to spatial experience. The subject is not merely a viewing subject but one capable of identifying with space and grasping meaning. Zevi rejects the functionalism of Le Corbusier and the avantgarde and in contrast constructs a humanist argument for space that is associated with the desire for individual liberation and freedom: “We shall acquire a feeling for space, a love of space, and a need for freedom in space. For space, though it cannot in itself determine our judgment of lyrical values, expresses all the factors of architecture—the sentimental, moral, social and intellectual—and thus represents the precise analytical moment of architecture that is material for its history.” 9

Although for Le Corbusier intellectual production is related to the individual in the personification of the architect or viewer, the question of the individual as an ontological subject conscious of his or her cultural condition is unconsidered. Le Corbusier’s subject only perceives space and does not experience space or participate in spatial relationships. Furthermore, primacy is given to the architect as author and conceptualizer of the spatial composition from whom all meaning is generated. The lack of consideration to the viewing subject’s agency may be due to the fact that science, technology, and reason (three tenets of the new modernization) presuppose a kind of objectivity; their goals are to establish “truths” that are epistemologically objective.

Reflecting upon the early phase of his career as an apprentice in the office of Peter Behrens, Mies van der Rohe states in the March 1961 issue of Architectural Design that architecture is a question of such truths. (However, what are the truths for subjugated identities and the practice of spatial freedom or liberation?)

It would not be until the late avant-garde of the 1970s and 1980s that these questions of subjectivity and representational space would inform art and architectural criticism through the heterogeneous practices of post-structuralism, giving way to the exploration of a host of discursive spaces (including race, gender, class, and cultural subjugation) in reaction to the dominant European patriarchal narratives of modernism and the early avant-garde.

While cultural subjugation in terms of identity politics or race were not considered during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, issues of space and subjectivity were at work during the late Italian Renaissance and Baroque periods of art and architectural history, and many of the representations of mass oppression as well as individual liberation through a divine subject/object relationship were of biblical stories that African slaves in the American colonies creatively identified with and appropriated in their struggle for freedom. Although African slaves were not aware of these particular works of art, Renaissance drawings and religious paintings as well as the interiors of Italian Renaissance and Baroque churches made specific use of linear perspective techniques in order to construct direct spatial relationships between the viewer (or subject) and theological doctrines; these relationships point to the liberative potentials of theological space. In particular, during the Counter-Reformation of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the Catholic Church sought to restore its predominance and centrality through architecture, painting, and sculpture that reaffirmed the Church’s omniscience and Catholic theology. Borne from the deliberations of the Council of Trent in December 1563, Baroque painting and sculpture focused on the incontrovertible dogma of the Church with the primary figures slightly elevated and at the focal point of the composition in order to reinforce the hierarchy of church doctrine relative to the viewer. Furthermore, the Church commissioned art works that were intended to be direct, compelling, and as understandable to the ordinary viewer as possible. Although the works were intended to contain a new realism, the representation of biblical stories still maintained an authoritative position, with a viewer’s subjectivity subservient to the omniscience of the Church. This is evident in the work of the three Carraccis—brothers Agostino and Annibale and cousin Ludovico. In particular, the 1591 painting by Ludovico Carracci entitled The Holy Family with St. Francis maintains the Renaissance hierarchy of the painting’s central figures: the Virgin and Child in an elevated position on a high throne, St. Francis kneeling at the left, and St. Joseph seated below at the right and gazing up at the Holy Family. [1] However, these spatial relationships are intended to draw the viewer into space of the painting. Ludovico’s figures are deeply engrossed; subtle gestures and glances humanize the central figures and create an empathetic relationship between the subjects in the painting and the viewer. Additionally, the figures are represented with mass and weight that renders their presence, and the close viewpoint breaks down the barrier between the space of the painting and space of the viewing subject. Yet Ludovico’s patterns of light and dark, falling principally upon the Virgin and Child, ensure a sense of mystery and suggest that, despite their presence and apparent nearness, they remain in a world beyond that of the viewer. Rudolf Wittkower, in Art and Architecture in Italy: 1600–1750 , states that “Ludovico’s whole trend in these years is towards the colossal, the passionate, dramatic, and heroic, towards rich movement and surprising and capricious light effects… ” 13

While Ludovico Carracci’s painting moves away from classicism and the mannerist style of the late Renaissance, it is Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio’s paintings after 1606 (when he fled Rome after being charged with manslaughter) that radically challenge the spatial compositions of the late Renaissance as well as the spatial order of Counter-Reformation religious dogma and theology. In his 1609 Raising of Lazarus , Caravaggio liberates the space of the painting by breaking the frame of the canvas to establish a mise-en-scène that captures the dynamic movement of space in a cinematic instant. [2] The primary figures in the scene move across the bottom of the canvas while carrying Lazarus’ limp body, at a diagonal with outstretched arms and legs, implying multiple spatial vectors that refer to the dark, unknown spaces in the painting. Secondly, the figure of Christ is located not at the center but at the left edge of the painting, pointing toward Lazarus. The figures carrying Lazarus appear to be looking past the figure of Christ towards a space outside the frame of the canvas. Additionally, while the scene appears to be compressed at the picture frame of the viewer’s perspective, the vast areas of darkness beyond and above the figures suggest the “unknown” and the questioning of Counter- Reformation theology that intended to re-establish itself as predominant and omniscient. The weight of the areas of darkness in the painting appear to be equal to the dynamic use of light that illuminates Lazarus, the faces of the on-lookers, and the multiple spatial vectors, all while casting the face of Christ in shadow. 14 The spatial composition of the painting points to the special meaning the story of Lazarus holds in the black church as one of hope and liberation (even from death) despite darkness, pain, and suffering. As the dynamic movement in the painting appears to extend beyond the frame and the gazes of the figures look towards an unknown space, the oral tradition of this story from African slaves through to present day black theology recenters subjectivity within the direct spatial and cultural experience of everyday life.

itself, notably in the design of San Carlo Alle Quattro Fontane (1634– 41) and St. Ivo della Sapienza (1642–50) by the architect Francesco Borromini. Borromini not only challenges late Renaissance spatial composition and the subject/object relationship between the viewing subject and the Church, but also reconceptualizes the representation of theology by abandoning the anthropomorphism that had defined spatial composition until then. This created architecture that was not representative of the body but rather that engaged the body in a spatial experience, set in perpetual motion and grounded in sensuality. In describing Borromini’s contemporaries’ assessment of his work and his introduction of “a new and disturbing approach to old problems,” Wittkower states, “When Bernini talked in Paris about Borromini, all agreed, according to the Sieur de Chantelou, that his architecture was extravagant and in striking contrast to normal procedure; whereas the design of a building, it was argued, usually depended on the proportions of the human body, Borromini had broken with this tradition and erected fantastic (‘chimerical’) structures.” 15 The noted Borromini scholar Sir Anthony Blunt declares more forcefully:

As such, Borromini prioritizes the ontological questions of subjectivity, human experience, and understanding over questions of deism, which are taken as matter of fact, thereby creating liberative spatial experiences.

While there is little written evidence from Borromini himself regarding his theories about architecture, the introduction to the Opus Architectonicum , with engravings of Borromini’s Oratory of S. Filippo Neri, provides some insight. According to Blunt, the text was prepared by Virgilio Spada, the Prior of the Oratory when Borromini worked on the design, but it is written in the first person, suggesting that it is actually the architect’s own statement. Taken together with other contemporaneous writings on Borromini’s work, it becomes clear that he was indeed a conscious innovator. Blunt argues that in the Opus Architectonicum , “the architect says that his intention is to produce ‘new things’ and not ‘conventional designs’ but justifies his intention by referring to Michelangelo, who did likewise, and quoting his remark that ‘one who follows others never gets ahead of them.’” 17 Furthermore, Borromini reveals the origins of his unsettling designs in the geometric construction of lines and points in drawings prepared by his own hands. The drawings for both San Carlo and St. Ivo reveal a series of geometrical operations using triangles, circles, and arcs that point out Borromini’s interest in the language of mathematics as it is associated with science, philosophy, and theology, and results in his subversive space-making and reconceptualization of subjectivity.

Widely considered among art historians are the relationships between Borromini’s work and the writings of Galileo, who was suspected of heresy by the Inquisition in 1611 and later forced to live under house arrest for his Copernican views regarding the solar system. Art historian Joseph Connors, in “S. Ivo Alla Sapienza: The First Three Minutes,” surmises that the conduit for the relationship between Borromini and Galileo was Fra Benedetto Castelli, who had given Borromini drawings of San Vitale in Ravenna, but more importantly, had been Galileo’s student in Padua in 1604 and became lifelong friends with him. Castelli, who was also a professor of mathematics at the Sapienza when Borromini designed St. Ivo, exchanged hundreds of letters with Galileo which shed light on the fact that the study of geometry had become quite fashionable in the Barberini court of Pope Urban VIII—who also happened to be Borromini’s patron. Furthermore, Connors points out that Castelli’s successor at the Sapienza in 1643 was another former pupil of Galileo named Gaspare Berti, “who also knew Borromini and once even made a model for the architect.” 18 Finally, art historian John Hatch speculates on the relationship between Borromini’s designs and the writings of Johannes Kepler. Hatch postulates, “It is specifically in the writings of Johannes Kepler that one finds the most consistent explanation for Borromini’s use of geometry in architecture, as well as a source for the unusual cosmological Trinitarian references found at the churches of S. Carlo alle Quattro Fontane and S. Ivo della Sapienza.” 19

Kepler, the German astronomer and mathematician who discovered three major laws of planetary motion including the discovery of the first law in 1605 (that the planets move in elliptical orbits around the Sun), sought the intersection of astronomy, mathematics, and theology in his work. In his Mysterium Cosmographicum of 1596, he posited a model of the universe that not only explained the spacing of the six Copernican planets (at that time still thought to be set in circular orbits), demonstrated by inscribing each orbit within a nested regular polyhedron, but also argued that the entire system inscribed within a sphere symbolized the Christian Trinity. [3] In 1621 he revised the Mysterium Cosmographicum in light of his discoveries regarding planetary motion. Yet the significance of this early work is Kepler’s use of geometry to spatialize the matrix of science, mathematics, and theology. In San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane, Borromini’s complex use of geometry can be read as putting Kepler’s matrix into continuous and dynamic motion, orbiting around the interior volume of the church with a multiplicity of viewpoints rather than a single honorific position of a theological subject/object relationship. The planar geometry of the church consists of two tangential circles whose center points locate the foci of the ellipse which is generally inscribed in the overall plan and which determines the base of the dome of the church. Each circle is in turn inscribed within an equilateral triangle such that the triangles share a common base. However, a more detailed analysis reveals that the triangles are inscribed within a pair of overlapping circles that establish the general depth and thickness of the plan. Hence, it is this pair of circles that sets the space in an elliptical orbit and spatializes Kepler’s first law of planetary motion. [4] Furthermore, Borromini uses a system of secondary arcs to deform the inside surface of the ellipse, thereby making the orbit undulate and intensifying the sense of motion and the direct relationship between the subject and the spatial experience of the church. Horizontal bands along the surface of the interior track movement around the space, and overlapping columns provide a triple metered rhythm with short and long pauses. [5] Decorative motifs in the coffering of the dome diminish in size as the decorations reach the base of the lantern. This accentuates the verticality of the space and suggests a feeling of reaching the cosmos in an apparent swirling motion, resulting from the play of day-lighting emanating from windows at the base of the dome and across the coffering of the hemispherical space. At the exterior of the church, the use of arcs and geometric manipulations undulate the façade, causing a disruption along the urban street wall and acorporeal and cosmic disturbance at the intersection of Via del Quirinale and Via delle Quattro Fontane.

While the interior of St. Ivo della Sapienza appears more restrained than San Carlo, the radicality of the interior spatial experience is no less considered. Connors cites as a source for the design a sketch made by Carlo Maderno or Van Zantern in 1612 or 1613 resembling a Gothic ornamentation of triangles-with-apses and truncated corners. 20 Maderno was Borromini’s mentor and master when he arrived in Rome from Milan in 1619. Connors furthermore cites a sketch by Baldassarre Peruzzi as being the closet precedent for St. Ivo: “The triangle in Peruzzi’s drawing provided the basic armature; wall thicknesses were added almost as an afterthought. Two of the angles are cut off by niches with flat faces, while the third angle becomes an entrance with a columnar porch and vestibule like a mini-Pantheon.” 21 Again, a closer inspection of the plan reveals a relationship to Kepler’s model of the universe as a nested polyhedron inscribed within a sphere.

The plan geometry, which is imperceptible to the viewing subject at the interior of the church, consists of two overlapping equilateral triangles centered upon the outline of a circle. [6] Yet the overlapping triangles can also be circumscribed by a circle tangential to and in opposition to the curved façade of the church’s courtyard elevation. This overall geometry is enclosed within the half sphere of the dome. A series of columns define the intersecting points of the triangles and circles and extend the plan geometry to the base of the dome. The lines of force defined by the columns paradoxically emphasize a visually upward movement rather than a downward movement and are translated into the pilasters of the dome. However, a ring of windows in the drum of the lantern creates a halo of light that separates the cupola from the dome and seemingly projects the space into a condition of boundlessness. [7] At the exterior, the upward energy of the interior is translated into a spiral atop the lantern that ignites a flaming laurel crown beneath a floating sphere.

While it cannot be claimed that Borromini engaged in a direct translation of Kepler’s theories, Borromini did radicalize architecture through the reconceptualization of space. He also made the experience of space, and by extension subjectivity, the existential question for the discipline and the making of architecture. Borromini united the conception of space with the perception of space to yield “experienced space.” In a foreshadow to Lefebvre, Borromini transformed the scientific and theological representations of space into representational spaces such that the visceral conditions of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane and St. Ivo della Sapienza liberate the subject from theological dogma and produce new subjectivities related to bodily lived experience. In fact, Borromini may be considered the first “space architect”, a moniker bestowed upon the architect R.M. Schindler by Esther McCoy, noted architectural historian and one-time draftsman in Schindler’s office, in a 1945 article in the leftwing, East Coast art journal Direction . In the article, McCoy describes Schindler’s design process, use of geometry, and his concern for the design of spatial experience over the implementation of formalist dogmas, exemplified in his design for a black Baptist congregation in South Los Angeles in 1944.

In 1933, following the Great Depression and at the beginning of the Second Great Migration—in which many African Americans moved from the South to the western states, Los Angeles, and southern California—a group of 240 congregants organized the Bethlehem Baptist Church in South Los Angeles. At the turn of the century during the original Great Migration, blacks had quietly migrated to Los Angeles from states like Texas, Louisiana, and Georgia in order to escape the racial oppression and subjugation of the South. Given their relatively small population, blacks lived with a sense of free will and were rooted in a much more complex and diverse sense of black identity. As this population increased during the Second Great Migration, with blacks seeking economic opportunities as well as freedom, so did the sense of community. Many newly arriving blacks from the South also brought their theological beliefs, and the Baptist denomination soon significantly outnumbered others in Los Angeles. The historical strength of Baptist theology among blacks can be traced to the fact that the Baptist Church in the South opposed slavery during the eighteenth century. Carter G. Woodson writes, “The Baptists reached their most advanced position as an anti-slavery body in 1789 when they took action to the effect ‘that slavery is a violent depredation of the rights of nature and inconsistent with a republican government, and therefore, recommend it to our brethren, to make use of their local missions to extirpate this horrid evil from the land.’” 22

The Bethlehem Baptist congregation purchased an existing church building, built in 1918, for two thousand dollars, but a fire destroyed the building in 1943 and the church then sought an architect to design a new building on property acquired from a German Methodist congregation at 49th Street and Compton Avenue. The first design for the church was prepared by James Homer Garrott, a licensed black architect who had graduated from Los Angeles Polytechnic High School in 1917, earned his architectural license in 1928 and established his own practice, and later studied architecture at the University of South California in the early 1930s. Garrott’s design was a traditional large sanctuary with a gabled façade, three arched windows, and an attached bell tower through which members entered the church. The church was sited at the corner of the property with a strip of grass surrounding the building. Steve Wallet—whose essay “From South Los Angeles to West Hollywood: James Garrott, Rudolph Schindler, and the Bethlehem Baptist Church” is one of the few to address this little-known building—describes Garrott’s design as a rectangular worship space with a raised pulpit and choir loft opposite the entry to the church at Compton Avenue. 23

It is clear from the description that the design was based upon a typical and un-extraordinary church plan. The latest drawings prepared by Garrott are dated May 22, 1944 and signed by the Reverend C.J. Hall, the young pastor of the church who had only been elected to that position in March of 1944. Rev. Hall arrived in Los Angeles from Atlanta where he had studied at the Gammon Theological Seminary and at Morehouse College during the presidency of Dr. Benjamin E. Mays, the great educator, sociologist, social activist, and mentor to Martin Luther King, Jr. However, by August 31, 1944, R. M. Schindler (a European émigré who was not yet famous at the time) had been hired by the church to develop an entirely new design. This could have been due in part to the church’s limited construction budget of $20,000, or, as Esther McCoy recorded in her unpublished essay, “Bethlehem Baptist Church Story”, the hiring of Schindler could have had more ambitious causes: “… But says the present pastor, the Rev. C.C. Brooks, ‘Some of the congregation had the idea that the church should reach toward the future as well as the past.’” 24

Schindler took a radically different approach from his predecessor, locating the church at the southeast corner of the site away from the intersection of cross streets to establish a diagonal site condition. Additionally, and perhaps more importantly, Schindler bifurcated the traditional subject/ object (Baptist “call and response”) relationship between preacher and congregants and split the relationship open along the diagonal, resulting in two perpendicular (and intersecting axes). [8] The split yields an abstraction and displacement of the traditional cruciform plan iconography and instead places an emphasis on the individual subject’s relationship to the interior spatial experience through the focused sight lines of the resulting bisection. Additionally, this operation produces an opening from the exterior patio to the interior, above which sits a skylight topped with intersecting planes that form a cruciform tower. [9, 10 ] Schindler described the cruciform tower as a departure from the two-dimensional cross, which is a symbol of pain and suffering; instead, the arms of the cruciform tower are outstretched and embracing. Conversely, the split produces a spatial extension from the interior towards the exterior and reach of the church from the site to the community. Schindler stated,

  • Michel Foucault, “Space, Knowledge, and Power,” interview with Paul Rabinow in The Foucault Reader (New York: Pantheon Books, 1984), 245.
  • Federal Writers Project, Georgia Slave Narratives: A Folk History of Slavery in the United States from Interviews with Former Slaves (Native American Book Publishers, 1938), 292.
  • James H. Cone, A Theology of Black Liberation (New York: J.B. Lippincott Company, 1970; reprinted Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Press, 1986), 5.
  • Cone, A Theology of Black Liberation , 80.
  • Kenneth Frampton, “The Rise and Fall of the Avant-Garde,” from “Towards a Critical Regionalism: Six Points for an Architecture of Resistance,” in The Anti- Aesthetic: Essays on Postmodern Culture (New York: Bay Press, 1995), 18.
  • Mies van der Rohe, “1922: Two Glass Skyscrapers,” republished in Philip Johnson’s Mies van der Rohe (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1947), 182.
  • Le Corbusier, Towards a New Architecture (London: J. Rodker, 1931; reprinted New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1986), 47.
  • Bruno Zevi, Architecture as Space: How to Look at Architecture (New York: Horizon Press, 1957), 23.
  • Zevi, Architecture as Space , 242.
  • Peter Carter, “Mies van der Rohe: An Appreciation on the Occasion of his 75th Birthday,” Architectural Design , v. 31, no. 3 (March 1961), 97.
  • Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space , trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith (Oxford: Blackwell, 1992), 39–43.
  • Lefebvre, The Production of Space , 33–34.
  • Rudolf Wittkower, Art and Architecture in Italy 1600–1750 (Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England: Penguin Books Ltd., 1986), 62.
  • Wittkower, Art and Architecture in Italy , 54. In his examination of the ramifications of Caravaggio’s late work, Wittkower states: “The setting of Caravaggio’s pictures is usually outside the realm of daily life. His figures occupy a narrow foreground close to the beholder. Their attitudes and movements, their sudden foreshortenings into an undefined void, heighten the beholder’s suspense by giving a tense sensation of impenetrable space. But despite, or because of, its irrationality, his light has the power to reveal and to conceal.”
  • Wittkower, Art and Architecture in Italy , 197.
  • Anthony Blunt, Borromini (Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1979), 24.
  • Blunt, Borromini , 27.
  • Joseph Connors, “S. Ivo Alla Sapienza: The First Three Minutes,” Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 55 (1996), 52.
  • John G. Hatch, “The Science Behind Francesco Borromini’s Divine Geometry,” Visual Arts Publications , Paper 4 (2002), 127.
  • Connors, “S. Ivo Alla Sapienza: The First Three Minutes,” 46.
  • Connors, “S. Ivo Alla Sapienza: The First Three Minutes,” 47.
  • Woodson, A History of the African American Church , 17.
  • Steve Wallet, “From South Los Angeles to West Hollywood: James Garrott, Rudolph Schindler and the Bethlehem Baptist Church” (June 17, 2014), stevewallet.com.
  • Esther McCoy, “Bethlehem Baptist Church Story” (c.1939, undated and unpublished), Esther McCoy papers, 1876–1990, bulk, 1938–1989, Archives of American Art, Series 6: Architect Files, 1912– 1990, box 24, folder 10, 1, http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/container/ viewer/-Bethlehem-Baptist-Church-Story–343462.
  • McCoy, “Bethlehem Baptist Church Story,” box 24, folder 10, 2.
  • McCoy, “Bethlehem Baptist Church Story,” box 24, folder 10.
  • Esther McCoy, “Schindler, Space Architect,” in Piecing Together Los Angeles: An Esther McCoy Reader (Valencia: East of Borneo, 2012), 72–73.
  • See R.M. Schindler, “Modern Architecture: A Program,” in August Sarnitz, R.M. Schindler, Architect, 1887–1953 (New York: Rizzoli, 1988).

Furthermore, Burger asserts that attempts by neo-avant-garde movements to attain the protest value of the historical avant-garde are flawed from the outset—the techniques of the avant-gardes have lost their shock value, he argues, and the hope that art could be sublimated into everyday life has proven false. “To formulate more pointedly: the neo-avant-garde institutionalizes the avant-garde as art and thus negates genuinely avant-gardist intentions.” 2

While Burger’s argument—including the salient illustration of the degree to which resistance can be co-opted—is not without merit, his analysis misses certain ways in which the art of the neo-avant-gardes still held certain forms of political potency. The genealogy of the work produced by neo-avant-garde artists in the 1970s and 1980s does in fact run from Dada through Duchamp; however, these artists sought to extend the practices of the modernist avant-garde by way of creative analyses, while taking the institutionalization that Burger notes as a site for critique. Artists such as Martha Rosler, Louise Lawler, Sherrie Levine, Jenny Holzer, Barbara Kruger, and even Dan Graham and Richard Prince moved beyond the “transgressive objects” of the historical avant-garde to think instead about strategies, operations, and practices that addressed the seriality of objects and images within commercial capitalism, while also exploring markers of physical presence, material definition, and site (whether physical, social, or linguistic). Additionally, these later artists sought to question art’s mode of address and its audience, thus rethinking the function of aesthetic practices within the institutions of modernism.

These new artistic praxes were meant to address ideological discourses outside of institutional frameworks—rather than being subsumed within them—and to probe the spaces of sexual identity, ethnic identity, and social difference. 3 Working within the contemporary milieus of conceptual and performance art—while still making use of certain Dadaist devices—the artist Adrian Piper, for example, introduced questions of racial subjectivity into the vocabulary of conceptual art, demonstrating that racial identity is spatialized and informed by experience. Hence, artists like Piper not only attacked the institutionalization of art (including the historical avant-garde) but also the hegemony of white male subjectivity relative to the production of the art object, its commodification and exclusion of difference, and the discourse of art itself. Their works are a direct refutation of Burger’s contention that “the Neo-avant-garde, which stages for a second time the avant-gardist break with tradition, becomes a manifestation that is void of sense and permits the positing of any meaning whatever.” 4 Instead, taken together, the radical artists of the 1970’s and 1980’s neo-avant-garde exposed discursive spaces that problematized the relationships between subject and art object, and critiqued institutional art practices by reworking the historical avant-garde in terms of formal language, cultural-political strategies, and social positioning.

In doing so, they also provided space for radical architecture, whose goal was not form but the politics of space. Their conceptual practices allowed architects such as Bernard Tschumi to replace questions of formal language with questions of relationships and space—concept, experience, and implicit questions of subjectivity. That the strategies and practices of these artists critiqued construction of subjectivity, representation, and identity in terms of spatial relationships and praxes rather than signifiers, symbols, and mimetic images suggests tactics by which architecture might overcome the burdens of representation in the address of racial identity and cultural experience.

During the historical avant-garde, the Berlin Dadaists George Grosz, John Heartfield, and Raoul Hausmann derived techniques from mass media to create works with fragments of photographs, text, and found objects. These were disassociated from their original context, disassembled, recombined, and reconfigured in a way to create new meaning; likewise, Dadaist poetry depleted words, syllables, and sounds of their traditional semantic functions, forms, and references until they became visually and concretely present. The Dadaists were the most outspoken critics and antagonists of Expressionism, and of bourgeois art, politics, and society.

As Hans Richter wrote in his introduction to Dada: Kunst und Antikunst (1965), the Dadaist sought direct engagement, if not confrontation, with the present, as well as the internal contradictions, doubt, chaos, flux, and chance forces of life. Dadaists used photomontage in opposition to the increasing aestheticism and formalism of collage (which Richter dismissed as “pieces of paper and cloth stuck on to a picture, which had already been tried”) in order to create, often from totally disparate spatial and material elements, a new unity that was to reveal a visually and conceptually new image of chaos in an age of war and revolution. 5 Richter quotes George Grosz in Dada: Kunst und Antikunst recalling that in 1916, when he and John Heartfield

This fact became significant to the avant-garde of the 1970s and 1980s as a theory of allegory and montage that describes how if language and image were taken into the service of advertising, that trajectory could be subverted by appropriating the languages of mass media (television, advertising, and photography) and subjecting the idea of everyday life to a set of formal, spatial, and linguistic operations. These operations included the splintering of the signifier from the signified, the dismantling of hierarchical ordering systems, and the transformation of larger social structures. For “the procedure of montage,” as Benjamin Buchloh puts it, “is one in which all allegorical principles are executed: appropriation and depletion of meaning, fragmentation and dialectical juxtaposition of fragments, and separation of signifier and signified.” 8

In New York Dada, these early motives were most apparent in the readymades of Duchamp. Buchloh argues that in the case of the ready-mades,

Duchamp’s investigations into the relationship between subject and art object—undertaken by changing the status of the everyday object and its understanding by displacing it into a new context—prefigure the work of neo-avant-garde artists of the 1970s New York scene.

Martha Rosler’s House Beautiful: Bringing the War Home series (1967–72), to take one example, uses photomontage of housekeeping advertisements and mass-media domestic environments together with images of war culled from Life magazine to protest the war in Vietnam. [14, 15 ] Rosler explains that the work emanated from “frustration with the images we saw in television and print media, even with anti-war flyers and posters. The images we saw were always very far away, in a place we couldn’t imagine.” 10 Rosler’s work reveals the artificiality of this severed relationship between consumer media and the political and economic realities of war. The work also contrasts the brutality and androcentrism of war with the changes happening in the interior domestic environment, which was being transformed by the Women’s Liberation Movement.

In Rosler’s photomontages, these relationships are played out in the domestic spaces of the kitchen, the bedroom, and the living room sofa. The Vietnam War was the first “television war” to be viewed remotely from the comfortable confines of domestic space, and Rosler sought to reconnect the two sides of this human experience. Therefore, in a series of allegorical investigations, the relationships between signifier and signified reveal the dissociation between subject and object within the consumervalued context of advertising, and subjectivity is repositioned within the political and economic space between the living room and the battlefield. The Bringing the War Home series connects its visual foregrounds with its infrastructural backgrounds by stitching the two together in a jump-cut of space and time, a technique that was first theorized in the late 1910s films and writings of Sergei Eisenstein and developed further by radical filmmakers of the 1960s and ‘70s. Laura Cottingham, in a catalog essay that accompanies this photographic series, argues that Rosler’s work

Hence, the jump-cuts in Rosler’s work collapse “here” and “there” into a temporal simultaneity that interrupts the unconscious consumption of war and the socio-political everyday of domesticity.

In September 1978, the curator Janelle Reiring invited Louise Lawler, Adrian Piper, Cindy Sherman, and Christopher D’Arcangelo to participate in a group show at Artists Space in New York. These artists’ installations shared an interest in exposing power relations and rethinking the institutional obligations of an alternative arts organization, as well as the relationships between the viewer and the work of art. Through techniques of appropriation, withdrawal, direct address, and redirection, the artists reflected these concerns back onto the role of the viewer. In The Proposal for Artists Space , Reiring’s text that framed the ideas of the show, she described it as

The installations by Lawler and Piper, in particular, share Rosler’s concern with subjectivity and the repositioning of subject and object relationships to uncover politically charged in-between conditions and spaces of contested identities. Lawler’s untitled installation included an 1824 painting of a racehorse by Henry Stullman, borrowed from the New York Racing Association. [16, 17 ] Placed high in front of the windows on a wall dividing two galleries, the painting was flanked by two theatrical spotlights directed not at the painting but at the viewer, interfering with the painting’s visibility, and, at night, projecting the viewers’ shadows onto the facade of the Citibank across the street. [18, 19 ] This gesture connected the isolated exhibition space of the gallery with its outside environment, and brought the exhibition to the attention of passersby. In this way, Lawler’s installation made the elements of an exhibition the subject of her work—the institutional framework, the autonomy of art production, the processes of artistic commodification, and the physical site. Lawler’s installation raised questions of material definition and the spatial displacement of mechanisms of display by radically realigning the relationship between mode of address and audience through the social repositioning of interiority and exteriority. The installation highlighted the diverging subjectivities of the gallery insider “consuming” the artistic experience versus the subjectivity of the everyday person walking down the street.

In a small white alcove separated from the other installations in the exhibition, Adrian Piper installed a 30 by 30 inch black and white photograph behind reflective Plexiglas that depicted black South Africans descending a staircase while staring directly into the camera (and directly at the viewer). [20, 21] The photograph was positioned on the wall such that the viewer was located at its base, while a taped monologue titled Aspects of the Liberal Dilemma (read by the artist herself) directly questioned the viewer’s reaction to the photograph as well as the viewer’s perception. Piper’s voice takes the incessant and authoritative tone of a lecturer addressing and informing the viewer:

Hence, the viewer is engaged in a visual and spatial tête-à-tête with the subjects in the photograph and with the artist. This relationship flickers between spatial foreground, background, and multiple subjectivities.

Piper’s exploration of racial identity, representation, and subjectivity was made still more explicit in The Mythic Being (1972–75), a street performance in which she dressed as a man with a dark mustache, afro wig, and reflective wire rimmed sunglasses. In a related text titled “The Mythic Being: Getting Back,” Piper described this alter ego as a “third-world, working-class, overtly hostile male.” 16 The performances were recorded on videotape as Piper walked through the streets of New York reciting passages from her journal. This challenged passersby to classify her through the lens of their own preconceptions about race, gender, and class. The video recordings reveal Piper’s spatial and programmatic disruptions to the social and cultural economies of New York street life and urban space, as passersby and onlookers attempt to decipher Piper’s presence and repeated incoherent mumblings: “No matter how much I ask my mother to stop buying crackers, cookies, and things, she does anyway even if I always eat it; so, I’ve decided to fast…” 17 Piper later produced a series of photographic stills from the performances and annotated the photos with a philosophical monologue on identity. The images comprise Piper’s I am the Locus series (1975), and the resulting images—which appear to be somewhere between montage and comic drawing—capture the spatialization of subjectivity and identity through techniques of drawing, text, and erasure that at once dislocate and reposition Piper’s own presence and alternate subjectivity. [22–26 ] Each photo is annotated with a phrase that floats above the Mythic Being’s head:

Perhaps it’s no coincidence that the show that took place in Artists Space six months prior to the Reiring group installation was the first major solo exhibition of the architect Bernard Tschumi and the first show of his architectural drawings held in a gallery or a public space. Tschumi’s sympathies with these neo-avant-garde artists are notable, in that he sought to radicalize architecture in the 1970s and 1980s not only in terms of procedural operations but also in terms of spatial representation, linguistic tactics, and subject/object spatial identity. The exhibition and installation, Architectural Manifestos , included a series of drawings, manifestos, and notations deploying very similar techniques to those of his avant-garde artist contemporaries: “Manifesto 1, Fireworks” (1974); “Manifesto 2, Questions of Space or the Box” (1975); “Manifesto 3, Advertisements for Architecture” (1976); “Manifesto 4, Joyce’s Garden” (1977); “Manifesto 5, Birth of an Angel” (1977); “Manifesto 6, The Park” (1977); “Manifesto 7, Border Crossing” (1978); and “Manifesto 8, The Room” (1978).

Tschumi initially moved to New York because he was interested in the art scene and wished to forge connections between neo-avant-garde art and an architectural discourse. “For me at this time it was very important to get involved with the art scene,” he later recalled. “I saw it as an escape from the restrictive political dimension of architecture. And I was fascinated by what was happening in New York in the ’60s and ’70s. So I was coming to New York for the art scene.” 18 Tschumi was interested in questioning the idea of what happens in space, the actions of characters in space, and the connections between architecture and disciplines like performance art and film (including the work of Michelangelo Antonioni and, as with Martha Rosler, Jean-Luc Godard).

The relationships between architecture and art were the focus of a special September/October 1975 issue of Studio International , a journal of modern art. The issue included essays by Daniel Buren, Germano Celant, RoseLee Goldberg, Dan Graham, Charles Jencks, Joseph Rykwert, and Bernard Tschumi, among others. Of particular note, the essays by Celant, Goldberg, and Tschumi focused on discursive spaces within art and architectural production. In each of these three essays, the concepts of space, spatial relationships, and experience are critical to the making of art and architecture that reorients subject and object relationships in order to address questions of politics and institutional critique, pointing the way towards latent considerations of subjectivity and identity. In the article “Artspaces,” Celant writes:

The article includes examples that put space rather than form into question, such as Kurt Schwitters’s Merzbau in Hanover (ca. 1927), Alexander Rodchenko’s Line Construction (ca. 1917), Duchamp’s Door, II Rue Larrey (1927), and Vito Acconci’s Voices for a Second Sight (1974) installation at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

RoseLee Goldberg’s article, “Space as Praxis,” begins with the affirmation that space is always inherent in art. The article, which takes as its starting point the February 1975 exhibition and publication of A Space: A Thousand Words at the Royal College of Art Gallery in London (which she co-curated with Tschumi), considers the way in which the perception of space is challenged and altered through experience and various spatial praxes. In examining the tensions between theory and practice in the production of art, Goldberg cites the experience of space as the differentiating factor:

Goldberg’s emphasis on performance space and the materialization of concepts leads to an insistence on the body as a means of experiencing space and creates a different spatial expression than the painting and sculpture of previous avant-garde movements.

Goldberg’s article precedes and references Tschumi’s essay entitled “Questions of Space: The Pyramid and the Labyrinth (or the Architectural Paradox).” [27] The front plate to “Questions of Space” includes the following caption:

Questions of Space. Experienced (A), Conceived (B), Perceived ©

On April 21, 1975, visiting an architectural exhibition in Central London, I asked 66 viewers to write questions relating to space. This inquiry into the matter formed the question pattern that defined a “question space,” i.e. the first form of presentation. The viewers’ writings defined another space and provided the second form of presentation. I then set further series of questions and new forms of presentation, one of which is illustrated here. The numbers refer to the questions included in the footnotes section of my article. The plan is one of Palladio’s unrealized villas. 21

Tschumi’s article later became the collection of essays entitled Questions of Space , which includes the original article (with its title shortened to “The Architectural Paradox”) along with the entire list of questions posed by the sixty-six viewers, as well as the seminal essay “The Pleasure of Architecture.” In “The Architectural Paradox,” Tschumi acknowledges the failures of the utopian ideals of the early-twentieth-century architectural avant-garde, as well as the rupture between utopian ideals and social realities that gave way to dismay and disillusion with political structures and eventually resulted in the reformulation of architectural concepts by “those who turned towards earlier centuries and advocated restoration and continuity based on historical precedents.” 22

In the Studio International article, Tschumi attempts to get at the very nature of architecture itself—space. The article is a conceptual montage of jump-cuts, cross-cuts, and dissolves through experienced, conceived, and perceived space. This montage is constructed through the annotation of the Palladian floor plan with an inset numerical index that refers to the sixty-six viewers and their questions, which are also indexed in a photograph placed above the floor plan; the viewers’ questions are then referenced back to the body of the text through footnotes. The article also employs a number of illustrated footnotes, citing a range of art and architecture from Bruce Nauman’s Floating Room (1974) to Tschumi’s own “architectural performance” entitled Fireworks (1974). [28] The illustrated footnotes are precursors to the conceptual techniques Tschumi later deploys in the Advertisements for Architecture (1976) and the Manhattan Transcripts (1981).

Tschumi wrote in 1990 that the aim of the article was a conscious strategy “in parallel to the concerns of critics, philosophers and artists of our time to open up unexplored ground and develop conceptual tools for the making of a new architecture.” 23 Furthermore, in the text he characterizes a new split within architectural discourse that emerged from the previous rupture—a split between the ontological form of architecture and the experience of space. Yet, this split is not so cut and dry. For perception and reason cannot be so easily decoupled, and instead operate within a mirror-image relationship oscillating between the subject and object of space:

The paradox of architecture is not about the impossible reconciliation of perception of the architectural concept and real space but about the complex and dialectical relationship between the “ideal” (form) and the “real” (experience) in architecture—the questioning of the nature of space while at the same time experiencing a real space that is sensual and, perhaps, even political.

In 1976 Tschumi published two of his Advertisements for Architecture alongside the essay “Architecture and Transgression” in the journal Oppositions . Using Dadaist photomontage techniques with Georges Bataille-like headlines that indicate the sensual, erotic, or even perverse conditions of architecture, Tschumi confronts the prospective consumer’s deepest fears of rationalism and reason made manifest in aesthetics. The advertisements emphasize the conception of architectural modernism—idealized, rational, clean, and white—as an agent in the wider social repression of anxieties about cultural and political heterogeneity and “otherness.” The advertisements that concern Villa Savoye, Le Corbusier’s most recognizable project which had since entered a state of decay, is promoted as the ultimate erotic object caught between sensuality and rationalism, revealing both the “traces of reason” and the “sensual experience of space.” [29, 30] In particular, the first of the two advertisements argues: “Architecture only survives where it negates the form that society expects of it. Where it negates itself by transgressing the limits that history has set for it.” 25

The publication of the Advertisements for Architecture parallels the strategies of appropriation, dissociation of subject and object, and redirection in Rosler, Lawler, Piper, and other artists such as Barbara Kruger and Jenny Holzer, where the languages of advertising, television, photography, and the ideology of everyday experience were subject to formal and linguistic operations. One might detect in this the model of Roland Barthes, whose semiotic analyses were intended to deconstruct hegemonic ideologies. As Benjamin Buchloh writes, “Barthes’ strategy of secondary mythification repeats the semiotic and linguistic devaluation of primary language by myth and structurally follows [Walter] Benjamin’s ideas on the allegorical procedure that reiterates the devaluation of the object by commoditization.” 26 Likewise, Tschumi used language and the techniques of advertising and photography to transgress architecture’s ideologies. Reflecting upon the 1978 Architectural Manifestos exhibition at Artists Space, Tschumi stated in 1998, “I felt in many ways the art context was an incredible one in which to push the boundaries and limits of architecture and to explore areas you cannot in the context of normal architectural practice.” 27

While the concepts of subjectivity and identity were never made explicit in Tschumi’s writings and architectural projects, the strategies and operations deployed by neo-avant-garde artists and by Tschumi’s own writerly and exhibitionary practice have much to say about how those subjectivities and identities are constructed and perceived. Tschumi’s focus on spatial experience indirectly extends outward to encompass forms of subjectivity, as there is a profound relationship between experience and self. This connection can be seen in the writings of Jacques Lacan and Michel Foucault. The Lacanian psychoanalytic subject is constituted through a perceptual and spatial process of differentiation (the mirror stage), whereby the subject and object engage in a fluctuating relationship of the gaze. On the other hand, the Foucauldian subject is constituted historically in its relation to forms of power and social practices in his early writings, and in later writings this subject is self-constituted and self-reflexive within a framework of discursive practices. The shift in Foucault’s conception of the subject occurs between the first volume of his History of Sexuality (in which the subject is dominated by the sexual repression of seventeenth century bourgeois order) and the final two volumes of History of Sexuality (Vol. 2, The Use of Pleasure and Vol. 3, The Care of the Self ), in which he arrives at a strategy of “aesthetics of existence” designed to practice power over the self by the self. 28 Likewise, Tschumi attempted to liberate architecture from its historical repressive powers through his architectural operations and Bataillean strategies.

Foucault’s project on the self culminated in his faculty seminar on “Technologies of the Self” presented at the University of Vermont in the fall of 1982. The seminar began an investigation of the praxes used by subjects, by their own means or through the aid of others to act on their own body, soul, thought, conduct, and manner in order to attain a particular state of being. In the resulting book Technologies of the Self (1988), published after Foucault’s death in 1984, he sets out a genealogy of how the self constituted itself as subject. In his examination of Plato’s Alcibiades I , Foucault analyzes the notion of “taking care of oneself” as the intersection of political ambition and philosophical love. Furthermore, in the translation from the Greek word Epimelesthai , “taking care of oneself” expresses more than the simplicity of paying attention; more specifically it refers to “taking pains with oneself” and one’s health. “Taking pains with oneself” is then divided into the following questions: “What is this self of which one has to take care, and of what does that care consists?”

Foucault’s analysis is not intended to suggest that identity is predetermined, but rather, identity can be located within a spatial construct or within the spatial relationships through which subjectivity is constituted as the result of experience and reflexivity.

It has been frequently assumed that architectural space is incapable of locating identity and its accompanying politics. After all, modernism’s failure to adequately confront the social realities and ills of urban life in the 1960s and 1970s are well rehearsed, and identity politics were thought to be better left to artists’ two-dimensional representations. The architectural projects of modernism—housing projects and otherwise—did not address the subjectivities of their users or inhabitants, but rather projected paternalistic views of their subjects through the abject lenses of poverty, class, and race. In contrast, the discursive spaces of neo-avant-garde artists like Rosler, Lawler, and Piper, and the architectural transgressions of Tschumi, reveal both the construction of subjectivity and the multivalent spatial relationships through which those subjectivities are formed. The operations they deployed—spatially connecting visual foregrounds with their political and cultural backgrounds, the social repositioning of relationships of interiority and exteriority, visual and spatial flickering between the “other” and its repressive power structure, and programmatic and spatial disruptions to normative hierarchies of architecture and urban space—do not portend a set of codified techniques for rendering identity in architecture. Rather, these actions inform the possibilities for locating and revealing identity within architectural space and its relationships. Concepts are materialized through the experience of space that in turn renders identity through the interactions of multiple subjectivities. Hence, questions of space and experience translate into questions of identity, and such discursive spaces have the power to reveal cultural, political, sexual, ethnic, and even black identity.

  • Peter Burger, Theory of the Avant-Garde , trans. Michael Shaw (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1984), 58.
  • Burger, Theory of the Avant-Garde , 60.
  • Hal Foster, “What’s Neo about the Neo-Avant-Garde?” in October 70, “The Duchamp Effect” (Autumn 1994): 23–25.
  • Burger, Theory of the Avant-Garde , 61. See also Benjamin H.D. Buchloh’s discussion of Burger’s lack of awareness of late 1960’s and early 1970’s artists whose work radically opposed the “institutionalization of the avant-garde as art” in “The Primary Colors for the Second Time: A Paradigm Repetition of the Neo- Avant-Garde,” October 37 (Summer 1986): 42.
  • Hans Richter, Dada: Art and Anti-Art , trans. David Britt (New York and Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1965), 116. Originally published as Hans Richter, Dada, Kunst und Antikunst .
  • George Grosz’s account of the invention of photomontage is quoted in Richter, Dada, Art and Anti-Art , 117. See also Benjamin H.D. Buchloh, “Allegorical Procedures: Appropriation and Montage in Contemporary Art,” Artforum , vol. 21, no. 1 (September 1982): 43. Finally, see Dawn Ades, Photomontage (London: Thames and Hudson, 1976), 12–18. Grosz disputes Raoul Hausmann’s claim to have been the inventor of photomontage. Richter offers Hausmann’s version of the invention of photomontage also in Art and Anti-Art . Hausmann’s quote is taken from Definition der Foto-Montage (Definition of Photmontage): “The Dadaists, who had ‘invented’ static simultaneous and phonetic poetry applied the same principles to visual representation. They were the first to use photography to create, from often totally disparate spatial and material elements, a new unity in which was revealed a visually and conceptually new image of chaos of an age and revolution. And they were aware that their method possessed a power for propaganda purposes which their contemporaries had not the courage to exploit.” See Richter, Dada, Art and Anti-Art , 116.
  • Raoul Hausmann, “Fotomontage,” in A-Z 16 (May 1931). Reprinted in Raoul Hausmann (Hanover: Keslnergesellschaft, 1981), 51; translated by Buchloh in “Allegorical Procedures,” 43.
  • Buchloh, “Allegorical Procedures,” 44.
  • Taken from an interview with Martha Rosler by Laura Cottingham for the catalog essay, “The War is Always Home: Martha Rosler,” in Bringing the War Home: Photomontages from the Vietnam War Era (New York: Simon Watson Gallery, October 1991). House Beautiful: Bringing the War Home is the original title of the series which was subsequently reversed in a number of publications. The artist has since repaired the circulating title of the series of photomontages in question.
  • Cottingham, “The War is Always Home.”
  • Janelle Reiring, The Proposal for Artists Space (New York: Artists Space, 1978).
  • Monica E. McTighe, Framed Spaces: Photography and Memory in Contemporary Installation Art (Hanover, NH: Dartmouth College Press, 2012), 62. See also the 5:33 minute audio monologue at the Adrian Piper Research Archive (ARPA) at www.adrianpiper.com . A second version of the installation was installed at the Wadsworth Atheneum, Museum of Art in Hartford, Connecticut, March 7 through April 6, 1980.
  • Adrian Piper, Aspects of the Liberal Dilemma (1978), audio monologue, Adrian Piper Research Archive (ARPA), www.adrianpiper.com .
  • April Kingsley, “Art Goes Underground,” The Village Voice , October 16, 1978, 122.
  • Adrian Piper, “The Mythic Being: Getting Back,” in Out of Order, Out of Sight: Selected Writings in Meta-Art, 1968–1992 (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1999), 147.
  • Excerpted from the film Other Than Art’s Sake by the Australian artist Peter Kennedy, which documents Adrian Piper’s Mythic Being street performances. The film includes footage of Piper getting into and out of drag, rehearsing her mantra taken from her journal, and roaming the streets muttering it, followed by crowds of curious onlookers. Other Than Art’s Sake also includes work by and interviews with Ian Breakwell, Judy Chicago and Arlene Raven, Hans Haacke, David Medalla, Charles Simonds, and Stephen Willats.
  • Joan Ockman, “Talking with Bernard Tschumi,” Log 13/14 (2008): 163.
  • Germano Celant, “Artspaces,” Studio International: Journal of Modern Art , vol. 190, no. 977 (September/October 1975): 116.
  • RoseLee Goldberg, “Space as Praxis,” Studio International: Journal of Modern Art , vol. 190, no. 977 (September/October 1975): 130.
  • Bernard Tschumi, “Questions of Space: The Pyramid and the Labyrinth (or the Architectural Paradox),” Studio International: Journal of Modern Art , vol. 190, no. 977 (September/October 1975): 136. Tschumi would later reveal that he was surprised when the article turned up in architecture schools.
  • Bernard Tschumi, Questions of Space (London: Architectural Association, 1990), 8.
  • Tschumi, Questions of Space , 9.
  • Tschumi, Questions of Space , 140.
  • Bernard Tschumi, “Architecture and Transgression,” Oppositions 7 (Winter 1976–77), 56.
  • Buchloh, “Allegorical Procedures,” 47.
  • Claudia Gould and Valerie Smith, eds., 5000 Artists Return to Artists Space: 25 Years (New York: Artists Space, 1998), 95.
  • See Andrew Thacker’s discussion in “Foucault’s Aesthetics of Existence,” in Radical Philosophy 63 (Spring 1993), 13.
  • Luther Martin, Huck Gutman, and Patrick H. Hutton, eds., Technologies of the Self: A Seminar With Michel Foucault (Amherst: The University of Massachusetts Press, 1988), 25.

How does it feel to be a problem? This question exemplifies the struggle for social justice that opens W.E.B. Du Bois’s The Souls of Black Folk, a book of essays that delves into the question of “The Negro Problem”—the place of the Negro in American society. As black Americans have sought to define that place over the past decades, they have variously been labeled “negro,” “colored,” “black,” and now “African American.” That the phrase “African American” is used to describe Americans of African ancestry (the majority of whose ancestors were not immigrants to the United States, but rather were forcibly removed from their native lands and sold into slavery in Colonial America until the early nineteenth century) as well as to identify cultural production by black Americans is a recognition of the double consciousness of being both black and American. According to Du Bois, the black American is born with a veil and gifted with second-sight in a world that yields him no true self-consciousness and in which he only sees himself through the revelation of the otherworld. “It is a peculiar sensation, this double-consciousness,” writes Du Bois, “this sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others, of measuring one’s soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity. One ever feels his two-ness—An American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder.” 1

Yet black Americans have generally resisted the lenses of others’ eyes in constructing self-consciousness, rather than merging the two selves. This resistance manifested itself in the New Negro Movement of the 1920s and 1930s, of which Du Bois was the preeminent Negro figure, as well the Black Power Movement of the late 1960s and 1970s. The New Negro Movement gave rise to the Harlem Renaissance, jazz, and the work of such artists and literary figures as Aaron Douglas, Zora Neale Hurston, Countee Cullen, and Langston Hughes. The Black Power Movement resulted in the replacement of the fraught word “Negro” with a celebration of blackness, embodied in the words of James Brown’s “Say It Loud, I’m Black and I’m Proud” as well as the profusion of visual symbols like dashikis, Afro hairstyles, and raised fists. Wherever they are situated within this interchange of “double consciousness” and its resistance, black Americans have always been keenly aware of the potency of visual and rhetorical forms in the construction of self-identity.

Likewise, America has always been keenly conscious of black Americans, and across the history of the struggle for racial justice, forms of black self-awareness seeped into the more broadly American cultural consciousness. While early jazz may have been referred to as “race music,” the novels of James Baldwin and Richard Wright derisively termed “protest literature,” and later rhythm and blues recordings categorized as “race records,” today the words “African American” are not used to identify jazz, rhythm and blues, or hip-hop (each of which has been adopted by a multiracial, if still predominantly black, cadre of artists). Nor do the words “African American” inevitably precede the descriptions of works by such poets and writers as Maya Angelou, Toni Morrison, or Alice Walker. But this naturalization of blackness into American culture—resulting in a more postmodern black double consciousness that finds itself at the center of cultural production while still marked by difference—did not bring about the merged, singular, and “better and truer self” that Du Bois described the American Negro longing for. 2 This black consciousness is embedded in the cultural expression of these works not in style or image, but rather in the manner in which these works exist in relationship to all other modes of American cultural production. While the most expected kinds of artistic encounter may rely on opposition or confrontation, the embedded cultural relationships of African American forms like music and literature also exploit paradox, irony, subversion, and nuance. Thus, the double consciousness continues to exist as a condition of being that is communicated in the work and translated through language, meter, syncopation, manner, and self-consciousness.

This expression of black self-awareness within American consciousness has not fully extended to black visual arts and architecture. Perhaps the gaze of mainstream culture (conditioned by centuries of white representation) is not yet able to shift focus from a concept of difference marked by racial otherness and its visual attributes. The prioritization of vision is, after all, the keystone of the modern observer’s perception of art, space, and cultural difference. In European art and philosophy, this extends from the sixteenth century with the development of perspectival space and a lineage of religious paintings that emphasized a theological understanding of space—that “seeing is believing.” More recently, we have seen that primacy of vision reiterated in Lacan’s theory of the gaze and his idea of the “mirror stage,” the moment when a child—presumably white, male, and European—is able to distinguish his reflected image in a mirror and differentiate himself from the things around him. Perhaps the forms of self-awareness more common to music and literature have not yet inflected black visual arts and architecture in the consciousness of the casual observer because the black viewer seeks the recognition of his own reflected image in a mirror stage that for most had been suppressed and denied for nearly three centuries.

In Exhibiting Blackness: African Americans and the American Art Museum, Bridget Cooks argues that “regardless of the intentions of the curators, exhibitions of art by African Americans are often perceived through the limiting ‘either/or’ paradigm; through a lens of either anthropological study or aesthetic value.” The anthropological gaze reflects curiosity toward the presence of otherness, and the “objective” distancing implicit in this curiosity confirms an age-old power structure of white cultural superiority and a desire to maintain a hierarchy under which Black culture is viewed as inferior. The aesthetic gaze, by contrast, presents art by African Americans—which historically has been absent and misrepresented in mainstream art museums—as being devoid of cultural context, objects to be appreciated for their representational or textural inventiveness but little else. As a rejoinder to these defaults, Cooks argues instead for exhibitions that “demonstrate the understanding of artistic merit and Black identity as interdependent instead of mutually exclusive categories.” She continues that because exhibitions have pedagogical roles—teaching the values of art, cultures, social movements, and national histories—exhibition spaces are inevitably contested spaces for African Americans, a population whose presence in those histories is highly complex. The visiting public internalizes these institutional narratives of cultural history and art history, making the museum gallery a critical space for black representation and participation. 3

The museum building itself is likewise a contested typology for African Americans, thanks not only to the historical absence of art by African Americans but also the history of segregation and Jim Crow laws that prevented the presence of African Americans in certain museums, as well as the generally complex relationships in American history between race, space, and cultural identity. Hence, the conditions of this contestation problematize both the anthropological and aesthetic approaches that enter into the design of museums for African American art, history, and culture. These highly loaded acts of architecture require thoughtful consideration of the multivalencies and complexities of relationships that persist, demanding more than just a higher aesthetic quality. Such museums need to interrogate more than what can be seen on the surface.

While architecture certainly does overlap with the visual arts and the production of perspectival space, the current preoccupation with the mage of architecture and its superficial aesthetics—its surfaces, skins, symbols, and skin color—is a recent and postmodern phenomenon, and one that afflicts a number of major African American museums. Furthermore, instead of only serving as a form of remediation for the past injustices of exclusion (and thus the remediation of a perceived “problem”), these museums should also engage questions of cultural identity, social and racial justice, and American identity as a contemporary discourse. Museums are institutions that can and should participate in the work of constructing better understandings of these issues. As such, their architecture should become a form of knowledge rather than displaying the knowledge of form, tropes, and superficial “africanisms” and token symbols of a mythologized African heritage.

Superficialities and generalizations regarding cultural identity usually play out through the constructions of stereotypes. Racist stereotypes of black Americans have long been part of a political and economic equation in American society that places whites on the plus side and blacks on the minus side of the calculations. These stereotypes essentialize blacks as Other and set up an “us versus them” opposition between whites and blacks, in which blacks are perceived as “not like us,” not American, not of the same shared history. The “othering” of blacks denies them the right to American history (unless accompanied by the qualifying prefix “African”)—a historical and social exorcism. But white and black Americans have a complicated and shared history of intermingled bloodlines, black mammies nursing white babies, and the fact that the American economic system was built on the backs of black slave labor and their inventions—not to mention that political symbols like the U.S. Capitol and the White House were literally built by black slaves. Because of this joint history, white stereotypes of blacks have been constructed to deny to themselves their own blurred blackness. 4 Elisabeth Bronfen has stated that the “stereotype of the Other is used to control the ambivalent and to create boundaries. Stereotypes are a way of dealing with the instabilities arising from the division between self and non-self by preserving an illusion of control and order.” 5

Stereotyping and constructing Otherness are strategies of symbolic containment and risk. That which they seek to resolve into steadfast fixity is, by that move, potentially reanimated as the threat that such strategies wish to keep constantly at bay. Furthermore, as Michael Pickering has written:

White stereotypes of black Americans—“Sambo,” “Mammy,” the hypersexulized “Mandingo,” and the 1990s “Welfare Queen,” among others—were intended to maintain an image of blacks as servile, illiterate, mentally inferior, lazy but over-sexed, incapable of self-care, and burdensome to American society. Such stereotypes are discriminatory, and are frequently reiterated with the intention of maintaining white power structures and social hierarchies, as well as to induce a fear of black Americans at a time when black political power, visibility in mainstream popular culture, and intellectual discourse have in fact brought about tremendous social change in recent decades. As black Americans have ascended the rungs of social progress, such stereotypes are reminders to keep blacks in check, to “keep them in their place.”

The instrumental power of stereotypes makes the self-stereotyping of black culture all the more ironic. This tendency can be seen in the consciously Afrocentric symbols of kente cloth, Ashante stools, head-wraps, and occasional Egyptian iconography, each of which aims to fix a definition of what it means to be African American while seeking to recuperate the power of “Africa” as the majestic foundation of much of modern Western civilization. “Afrocentrism, a contemporary species of black nationalism, is a gallant yet misguided attempt to define an African identity in a white society perceived to be hostile,” as Cornel West has written. “It is gallant because it puts black doings and sufferings, not white anxieties and fears, at the center of discussion. It is misguided because—out of fear of cultural hybridization and through silence on the issue of class, retrograde views on black women, gay men, and lesbians, and a reluctance to link race to the common good—it reinforces the narrow discussions about race.” 7 The further irony is that Afrocentrism assumes that everything descended from Africa is homogenous, as if Africa represents a single ethnic group or a single country—the very same critique that is often leveled against the white European colonialists and empire builders who raped the African continent, exploited its resources, and devalued its diversity and the heterogeneity of African cultures.

The problems with social constructions like these go beyond their frequent racism. Whether from the white or black perspective, stereotypes like these lead not to fixity and order but to simplemindedness—one of the prime dangers of lowest-common-denominator thinking in a society that privileges image over idea in politics, popular culture, and mass media. Likewise, the use of cultural stereotypes in architecture reduces a building to the flatness of its two-dimensional representation (image); a sound-bite or “one-liner” figurative symbol (metaphor); or an overused idea, depleted of its original intensity, uncritical, and no longer contributing anything new to the discourse of architecture (cliché).

Stereotypes have at times been deployed in the name of creating counterimages to the prevailing stereotypes of blacks. In a conscious effort to create an alternative image for the Black Power Movement—which emphasized black racial pride, black political and economic power, and the creation of black cultural institutions—many of its radicals began wearing African-styled dashikis, natural rather than processed hair, Afros, and kufis (brimless, short, round skullcap often knitted, crocheted, or made of kente cloth or mud-cloth). A 1969 New York Times “Report on Men’s Wear,” illustrated with black male models wearing dashikis and Afros standing in front of artwork with African motifs, described the dashiki as a “freedom garment” found neither in Webster’s New World Dictionary nor at Brooks Brothers. Designed, manufactured, and sold in Harlem by a company called New Breed, the dashiki’s fabrics “may be plain, or in sharp and soft plaids, stripes, and loud prints, or they may be synthetic ‘African’ such as fake leopard fur. The only authentic African material they use is gold kente braid from Ghana.” The article continues matter-of-factly and without irony to add that New Breed’s “‘African prints’ are imported from Holland.”

Dashikis quickly moved beyond the world of radical politics to be worn by black celebrities such as Jim Brown and Wilt Chamberlain, and featured in Hollywood movies such as Uptight and Putney Swope , a satire about race in Hollywood films and white-privileging power structures. Kufis were also worn by black entertainers; Marvin Gaye was frequently depicted in one (on the cover of Let’s Get It On , for example). This counter-image saw many reflections in black popular culture in television shows such as Soul Train and Good Times , and Afros became a popular hairstyle among a large percentage of black Americans. But these counter-images had limits to their efficacy. The New York Times article continues:

While cultivated counterstereotypes may have helped produce a new subjectivity among black Americans, these final statements inherently raise the question of whether image alone has the agency to change not only social patterns but also relationships of political and economic power, as well as social and cultural relationships—all of which are multidimensional and interrelated. Self-identity extends beyond the two-dimensional surface of the mirror. This problem also extends to the use of Afrocentric imagery in the architecture of African American cultural institutions.

In his well-known analysis of Velázquez’s Las Meninas (The Maids of Honor), Michel Foucault exposes the spatial tensions embedded within subject-object relationships, as well as the complex web of subjectivities that are constructed through the gazes of the figures in the painting but also those gazes that pass between the viewer of the painting in front of the frame and the painter within the frame. While Foucault’s discussion is specific to this single painting and its cast of characters (particularly in his detailed geometric analysis), it also produces a far larger discourse around identity and the blurred boundaries between positions of power, subjectivity, and cultural representation.

Hence, the doubleness of this condition—produced by multiple subjectivities flickering between foreground/background, interior/exterior, and here/ there—reveals multiple identities: cultural (the painter Velázquez); political (the royal couple Philip IV and Mariana of Austria); class and labor (two ladies- in-waiting); and gendered (Princess Margaret Theresa under the gaze of a chaperone, dressed in mourning, talking to a dimly lit bodyguard). Furthermore, the revelation of these conditions translates into further subjectivities outside the frame—this reflexive doubleness subconsciously reveals to the viewer of the painting his or her own identity, a self-conscious Otherness that is spatial, three-dimensional, and simultaneously included and excluded from the frame of representation.

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In several recent African American museums, the use of visual symbols to render cultural identity remains two-dimensional at best. For museums like the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture in Baltimore (2005), the Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta (2012), and the New Africa Center in New York (2015), blackness is found in the colors of black liberation (red, yellow, and black, colors coincidentally also found in the Maryland state flag), façades of alternating shades of sandstone or limestone, or façade patterns inspired by African woven fabrics. The frequent references in this kind of architecture to woven fabrics are most often drawn from Ghanaian kente cloth, made by the Ashante people of Ghana and the Ewe people of Ghana and Togo—Africa’s Gold Coast.

The paradox of kente cloth is that it has become immensely popular internationally as an indicator of black identity while only representing a limited range of African heritage. Only 14 percent of the slaves exported from Africa by the English and French between 1711 and 1810 were from the Gold Coast; far more came from areas like Nigeria (39.6 percent) and southwestern African countries like Cameroon and Angola (24.7 percent), representing twenty-five different ethnic groups in addition to the six major ethnic groups of the Gold Coast. Historically, Kente was a royal cloth, but it also appears in many other important forms of regalia among the Ashante and Ewe, including drums, shields, umbrellas, and fans. Over the past forty years, the cloth has been transformed into hats, ties, bags, and many other accessories worn and used on both sides of the Atlantic. Individual kente strips are especially popular in the United States where they are sewn into liturgical and academic robes or worn as a “stole.” Kente patterns have developed a life of their own, appropriated as surface designs for everything from Band-Aids and balloons to beach balls and Bible covers. 10

The lack of conceptual or visual depth in each of these building envelopes is an absence of what could possibly be more than skin deep. Since the avant-gardes of the early twentieth century, it has been understood that color might be employed as propaganda and that the spatial patterning of façade elements might strike a particular stance regarding industrial processes. But these more recent buildings do not recognize the political potency of image making, either for cultural advertisements or for critiquing an economic status quo based on commercialization and the consumption of images. Furthermore, they do not take explicit positions regarding the technological processes of building production and the history of black labor in America.

The National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis (1992), the Museum of the African Diaspora (MOAD) in San Francisco (2005), and the International Civil Rights Center and Museum in Greensboro (2010), all exercise another trope of cultural representation in architecture—the use of photographic images to signify collective identity. In the case of MOAD, a mosaic of more than two thousand faces of people from around the world—illuminated behind the building’s commercial storefront façade of the first three floors of the St. Regis Hotel and Towers—is meant to explore the ties of African-Americans to Africa. The mosaic was conceived of by the museum’s graphic designer, Deborah Sussman, and its imagery is potent—but also a missed opportunity, in that the mosaic’s representation of this diasporic connectivity does not engender the reconceptualization of the museum’s architecture as being itself a container of that collection of identities. 11

At the Lorraine Motel (the site of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in Memphis, Tennessee) and the International Civil Rights Center and Museum (the site of the heroic 1960 sit-in at the “whites only” F.W. Woolworth store lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina), the iconic photographs that mark the significance of each site challenge the architecture’s ability to come to terms with the profundity of these events. Judge D’Army Bailey—the founder of the National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel—said at the museum’s opening that “the museum is a propaganda vehicle to create more soldiers and generals to carry on our fight for equality, by teaching them and showing them what we came through, who and what our leaders were. The major thrust of the museum is that the movement did not die in 1968, that others picked up Dr. King’s work and carried on.” 12 But throughout the article in which Bailey articulated this mission (in an April 1992 issue of Ebony magazine), the museum is alternately referred to as a shrine and a memorial. The emotional climax of the museum is the balcony on which Dr. King was shot, while the historical climax resides in Room 307, where Dr. King slept. As visitors enter Room 307 and the adjoining Room 306, a glass etching of Dr. King’s likeness and recording of Mahalia Jackson singing “Precious Lord”—Dr. King’s favorite song—plays as visitors pass through the narrow glass-walled passageway that separates the rooms.

Herein lies the struggle that the architecture of this and other museums fail to come to terms with. Is the museum a propaganda vehicle that projects forward, or is it a memorial? How should the museum respectfully honor Dr. King’s memory while at the same time translate the memories of the Civil Rights movement into action? How should the motel be transformed to expose future potentialities and overcome the site’s incredible weight of emotion and sentiment? That the exhibition sequence ends in Room 307 with a song of enormous emotional gravity—not only sung by Mahalia Jackson at civil rights rallies to inspire crowds, but also more often sung at funerals in African American churches—mires the architecture in this conundrum. The design of the museum should be challenged to construct a cultural discourse that probes deeper than the emotions that resonate on imagistic surfaces like the photos of the fallen Dr. King on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel.

Similarly, the famous photograph of four North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University students passively challenging injustice and inequality throughout the South by refusing to leave their seats at the lunch counter in Greensboro challenges the architectural intervention at the International Civil Rights Center and Museum. The nonviolent sit-in was a radical act of defiance that exceeds the possibility of photographic representation. Civil rights protesters routinely faced mortal danger at the hands of law enforcement, whether in the form of water cannons, dogs, or arrest, and it was within this state of normalized violence that the “Greensboro Four”—Ezell Blair, Jr., David Richmond, Franklin McCain, and Joseph McNeil—staged the first sit-in on February 1, 1960. They broke Jim Crow laws, challenged the racist legal system, faced taunts and physical abuse by white patrons, and confronted the threat of being thrown in jail, or even the loss of their lives.

They took radical action to bring about radical change. In his discussion of the blues and its emphasis on the tragic struggles of African Americans, Cornel West links the heroic actions of ordinary people reacting to the radical contingencies of everyday life to a history of American pragmatism. This is a form of cultural awareness that is intimately tied to historical consciousness,

Hence, the protesters’ actions—in the context of radical conditionedness—were in fact acts of freedom. Therefore the problem for architecture and its expressions does not reside in the museum’s objecthood or representational imagery, but rather in the ways that it enables action and event. As Foucault has observed, institutions and their architectural embodiments are never the guarantors of liberty, though they can at times open themselves to the possibility of understanding that dichotomy between freedom and conditionedness. “Liberty,” Foucault argues, “is a practice ,” and it is a practice that can, in certain forms, be cultivated through a different kind of museum. 14

The cultural space of the Woolworth store transformed into a museum should not be about the artifacts and objects but about spatial praxes, the relationships among things that cannot be identified as proper objects but yet constitute a material presence, and how identity was performed in the 1960 sit-ins and future performances of identity. 15 The Woolworth store and the museum should be liberated to perform identity.

Yet another means of rendering cultural identity in African American museums over the past thirty years has been the use of certain iconic metaphors as signifiers of “Africa.” Such metaphors include domes (hut), ziggurats (pyramid), stool (throne), crypt or vessel (tomb), and crown (headdress). They are used with the hope that the implicit and explicit attributes of the objects will invest the buildings with positive connotations (cultural heritage, legitimacy, and value) and make them “recognizable” and more acceptable to the general public than if they were rendered in the language of architectural abstraction. These metaphors are often implemented as figuration in the elevations of the buildings, or as plan elements without respect to a particular place or cultural context. They do not speak to politics, socio- spatial relationships, or even historical specificity. The California African American Museum in Los Angeles (1984), the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit (1997), and the newly planned National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, DC (projected to open in 2016) utilize these kinds of signifying metaphors.

The modest looking, low profile, horizontal California African American Museum (CAAM), with its somewhat diminutive scale, never had a chance of competing with its tall and extremely close neighbor, Frank Gehry’s Aerospace Museum. As a meager attempt to establish an honorific presence on its triangular site in Exposition Park, the museum’s entry is defined by an apse-shaped portico with round columns supporting a concrete beam set against a ziggurat-shaped pediment. These entry elements do not produce real meaning, but rather are scenographic effects—a de-historicized architecture appended to a triangular modern building.

The Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History uses similar scenographic effects at its two main entrances to signify the honorific status of the museum. Poised above each entrance is a gold and black mask embellished with gold plated bands, diamond shapes, and rosettes designed by the sculptor Richard Bennett. The masks, called “Sentry,” are modeled on N’tomo society masks from the Bambara people of Mali. Each mask consists of six horns, which have been described as an evocation of the anatomy of antelopes, linking animal and human forms. 16 But the Bambara masks are in fact used in rituals of initiation, and the six horns atop the mask represent the six clans or societies called “dyo” that are in charge of instructing the youngest members of the village. The Sentry masks are each framed by diagonal elements that resemble crossed Egyptian scepters, and are supported by columns said to be based on an “African” rope motif. A main feature of the museum is its rotunda, covered with a glass and steel dome, with a structural logic similar to that of a round African thatched hut. The clear glazing at the bottom of the dome, just above its drum, resembles a series of pointed arches. Yet the array of arches is neither structural nor intended to form pendentives that transfer the structural load of the dome to the circular base. Instead, the bottom of the circular array of arches recalls the bottom of a Sahelian nomadic tent structure, found to the north of the Sudanian savannah in Africa.

The design for the National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) relies upon its association with the image of the tiered capitals of the caryatid veranda posts at the Ogoga’s palace in Ikere, Nigeria. (This is not a distant historical reference—the capitals were carved from wood by Olowe of Ise, a Nigerian artist, in the early 1900s.) 17 At the Ikere palace, the inverted pyramidal capitals were situated on the heads of posts representing the king and queen, although other veranda posts carved by Olowe placed tiered capitals upon warrior and even servant figures. At the NMAAHC, the use of the tiered, inverted pyramid is intended to invoke an honorific status, as well as to recall African American church hats, once an iconic symbol of black women and their “Sunday Go To Meetin’” finest wear. Another possible reading could be found in the tiered columns’s striking resemblance to Brancusi’s “Infinite Column” of 1938, although there is some dispute as to the extent of the influence of African art on Brancusi’s work. That there may be multiple references for use of the inverted pyramid at the NMAAHC does not undermine the central intention of the metaphor, which is meant to connote something recognizable, imageable, and somehow “African.” This metaphor, however, inevitably relies on an architectural fragment that has been removed from its historical and cultural context—thus ironically becoming only self-referential.

Furthermore, the museum, sited at the foot of the Washington Monument, only timidly acknowledges its panoptic relationship to the events and government institutions that are woven in the shared landscape of black American identity and the National Mall—the executive order emancipating the slaves, the legislation of civil rights, the adjudication of laws affecting civil liberties and rights, and the Great March on Washington in 1963. That the surrounding icons of government institutions within this network of relations—in particular the White House and the U.S. Capitol—were constructed with black slave labor is not a part of any discourse concerning the site’s strategy or the architectural design. Instead, the NMAAHC’s square footprint seems to be more preoccupied with its platonic relationship to other museums on the National Mall, such as the triangular shape of the National Gallery of Art East Building by I.M. Pei and the circular form of the Hirshhorn Museum by Gordon Bunshaft.

The use of de-historicized architectural fragments that aspire to something recognizably “African,” plainly visible at the CAAM, the Charles H. Wright Museum, and the NMAAHC, is marked with the scent of architectural postmodernism. The use of modernist architectural clichés in projects like the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati (2004) and the August Wilson Center for African American Culture in Pittsburgh (2009) is no less suspect. At the Underground Railroad Freedom Center, curving pathways representing the winding paths to freedom of slaves on the Underground Railroad also define the curved walls of the museum’s three linked pavilions, and that linkage is in turn intended to commemorate the cooperation of diverse groups that worked to overcome slavery. The museum is set on the north bank of the Ohio River, sandwiched between the Cincinnati Reds baseball stadium on one side and the Cincinnati Bengals football stadium on the other.

Cincinnati has a complex history in regards to civil liberties and civil rights. The city was one of the first stops on the Underground Railroad where slaves could not be recaptured and taken back across the river to southern slave states; it was in Cincinnati that police arrested Dennis Barrie, director of the Contemporary Arts Center, on obscenity charges when he exhibited homoerotically explicit photographs by Robert Mapplethorpe in 1990; in that same decade, the owner of the Cincinnati Reds, Marge Schott, referred to two black players with a racial slur and made admiring public statements about Hitler; until 2002, the Ku Klux Klan often displayed a cross during the Christmas holidays in Fountain Square; and fifteen black men, including an unarmed teenager fleeing arrest, have died in confrontations with the police between 1996 and 2001. 18 Despite this profoundly charged urban context, the museum’s symbolic curving pathways stop at the building’s property lines, and the architectural design makes little attempt at relating to the fabric of the city. The three pavilions with their curved walls sit as objects in a de-contextualized landscape, separated from the city by more than eight lanes of roadway and an interstate underpass. The clichéd curves of the site and the pavilions frame the building as a neutral object, making the museum more like the entertainment venues along the river—an unthreatening engine of redevelopment—than a cultural institution.

The August Wilson Center for African American Culture in Pittsburgh likewise relies on a symbolically curved wall, this time turned vertically to resemble a three-story-tall sail. The height of the sail-like wall bestows “iconic” status on the building. It does not mark the entry to the building; rather, it is a visual marker intended to be part of the vista from a nearby intersection. Nor does the three-story curved wall contain a significant public space or triple-height volume, as might be expected from its prominence (and given its intention to invoke the memory of a slave ship as a shared history for African American ancestors). The curved wall is very much a façade, an image of a tall sail that is not only a cliché of contemporary iconicity but also a cliché of modernist architecture, which considered ships as emblems of modernity and industrialization. In Le Corbusier’s chapter on “Eyes Which Do Not See,” from Vers une architecture (1923), images of steamships and sailing vessels serve as examples of l’esprit nouveau and encourage architects to pursue a kind of beauty of a more technical order. Le Corbusier critiques the styles of the past as the surface decoration of façades, arguing that “this is the degeneration of ‘style.’” 19 But Le Corbusier’s metaphoric use of the steam liner itself became a cliché of the high modernist period, and its relevance to a particular time and cultural context was all but lost as the reference became subjected to its own representation as style.

An architectural cliché need not already exist in order for a design element or relationship between elements to become a cliché in the context of cultural identity. Such is the case of the competition-winning design for the Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta, where the original design of the building was based upon the image of interlocking arms of civil rights marchers in the 1960s. This symbol of solidarity between people of diverse cultures and backgrounds is primarily represented in the plan outline of the building, and would have only been visible from the sky. The exhibition spaces in the design were located in one arm and the administrative functions in the other; this arrangement failed to yield a meaningful programmatic interlocking, and the public circulation begins at the space between the two L’s rather than establishing a sequence that would begin at one L and flow to the next. Additionally, there is no differentiation between the two L’s in terms of tectonics or materiality, diminishing the building’s intended expression of the diversity within those interlocking figures. But such design decisions would be trivial anyway—the design was fundamentally not intended as a discourse on cultural diversity and its spatialization. Rather, the appropriation of shapes and imagery from famous photographs—even those that form much of our broadest cultural awareness of this historical moment—trivializes the radical acts of civil disobedience and the radical reshaping of socio-spatial relationships brought about by the Civil Rights Movement. Yet the “evolution” of the design into its final built form is even less conceptually ambitious. Opened in 2014, the building is primarily comprised of two curving walls leaning inward toward each other. In plan, the figure resembles a hut with openings at either end, while in section, it resembles a double lean-to structure. The curving walls are clad in alternating colored metal panels to resemble a woven African fabric.

Two particularly notable African American cultural institutions do not rely upon cultural stereotypes or architectural imagery steeped in metaphor and cliché, and these projects offer a way forward for a building type that will continue to be an important part of a larger project of cultivating black self-awareness. These are the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute (1993) and the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta (1984), both by the architect Max Bond, Jr.

The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute—an interpretive museum and research facility dedicated to human rights more generally—occupies a significant urban site bordering the 16th Street Baptist Church and the Kelly Ingram Park. The 16th Street Baptist Church is the first African American church in downtown Birmingham, and the site where a bomb killed four young girls attending Sunday School on September 15, 1963. Crowds gathered to protest this bombing in the nearby Ingram Park, a scene made famous with images of guard dogs unleashed on marchers. The design of the building acknowledges its relationship to the park by pulling back from the street wall to create a wide sidewalk and forming a public space at the corner of 16th Street, allowing a cross-axial view of the church. [31–33] Additionally, the public sequence through the building begins at an interior courtyard where the domed roof of the entrance hall echoes neighborhood churches, without overwhelming them, by establishing an independently iconic presence. The circulation builds through a sequence of exhibition spaces, and the building only reasserts its presence at the conclusion of the sequence where two windows bring light into the final gallery (where one window frames a view of the 16th Street Baptist Church and the other looks onto Kelly Ingram Park, reminding the visitor again of the histories that are deeply embedded on the site).

In Atlanta, an open courtyard with reflecting pool surrounded by a vaulted colonnade sets up a sequence of movement whereby the visitor is always aware of the space’s relationship to the King Memorial, a sarcophagus faced with white Georgia marble inscribed with an epitaph taken from Dr. King’s Mountaintop speech—“Free at last, free at last, thank God Almighty, I’m free at last”—set on a circular brick island in the center of the reflecting pool. While visitors are always aware of the memorial, they are never too close. The visitor’s perception of the memorial (and of the memory of Dr. King more generally) are defined through specific perspectival views, reflections of the memorial itself, and the play of light and shadow between the surface of the pool and the darker interior surfaces of the vaulted colonnade. [34–36] The massing of the vaults and the forms of the various buildings create an interplay of solid and void, presence and absence, rather than relying on iconographic imagery or symbols.

The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute and the Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change are only two among the large number of African American cultural institutions designed and constructed over the last few decades that do not use cultural stereotypes to communicate cultural identity through design. Yet these two examples were constructed over twenty-five years ago. Hence the questions remain: Why does architecture continue to prop up and perpetuate African American stereotypes and “Africanisms” through imagery, metaphors, and clichés? Why do these cultural stereotypes persist? Even if these stereotypes are due to a long history of “othering” black Americans (largely by their white cousins, who remain loath to acknowledge their own indebtedness to African and African American culture): Why does architecture not interrogate this condition to produce architectural works of merit, instead of mythologizing the notion of “Africa” and using skin-deep aesthetics to assert legitimacy and to mark out a symbolic legacy?

In reference to the black film historian Thomas Cripps, Michelle Wallace’s “Why Are There No Great Black Artists?” asserts that “we are in danger of getting wasted by ghosts … by ‘black shadows on the silver screen,’ by effusions and visual trances that haunt us because we refuse to look them in the eye.” 20 Perhaps we in the field of architecture refuse to look beyond these ghostly reflections in our own pupils. This lack of critical design and discourse—what Wallace calls “the visual void” in black discourse—ironically perpetuates black American invisibility in architectural design.

  • W.E.B. Du Bois, “The Souls of Black Folk—of Our Spiritual Strivings,” in Writings (New York: Literary Classics of the United States, 1986), 364–65.
  • Du Bois, “The Souls of Black Folk,” 365. Du Bois states that “the history of the American Negro is the history of this strife—this longing to attain self-conscious manhood, to merge his double self into a better and truer self.”
  • Bridget R. Cooks, Exhibiting Blackness: African Americans and the American Art Museum (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2011), 2–3.
  • See Jesse Holland, Black Men Built the Capitol (Guilford: Globe Pequot Press, 2007), 3–4. “One of the things that I found was that actual African American slaves were used in the construction of the U.S. Capitol and the White House. Out of just about the 600 or so people who worked on the Capitol, maybe about 400 were African American slaves… Most people look at the Statue of Freedom now and they think, this is the statue of an American Indian on top of the Capitol. No, it’s not. It’s actually a statue of a freed slave with an American eagle helmet on top.”
  • Elisabeth Bronfen, Over Her Dead Body: Death, Femininity, and the Aesthetic (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1992), 182.
  • Michael Pickering, Stereotyping: The Politics of Representation (Hampshire: Palgrave MacMillan, 2001), 3.
  • Cornel West, Race Matters (Boston: Beacon Press, 1993), 4.
  • Ann Geracimos, “About Dashikis and the New Breed Cat,” New York Times , Report on Men’s Wear (April 1969), 93 and 101.
  • Michel Foucault, “Las Meninas,” in The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences (New York: Vintage Books, 1970), 8.
  • Wrapped in Pride: Ghanaian Kente Cloth and African American Identity , exhibition at the Smithsonian Museum National Museum of African Art (1999).
  • The mosaic behind the glass façade of the Museum of the African Diaspora in San Francisco—conceived by Deborah Sussman and composed by Robert Silvers of Runaway Technology—is based on a photograph of an African girl by Chester Higgins, Jr. The composite image pixellates more than 2,000 individual images. “Beyond Black + White,” Metropolis (March 2006), 104.
  • “King Memorial: Memphis Motel Becomes a Shrine,” Ebony (April 1992): 56.
  • Cornel West, The Cornel West Reader (New York: Civitas Books, 1999), 23– 24. Cornel West sets the foundation for the link between the history of American pragmatism and how black Americans deal with radical contingencies and the struggle for justice in his 1993 essay, “Pragmatism and the Tragic,” published in Prophetic Thought in Postmodern Times (Monroe, ME: Common Courage Press, 1993), 31–32.
  • “So there may, in fact, always be a certain number of projects whose aim is to modify some constraints, to loosen, or even to break them, but none of these projects can, simply by its nature, assure that people will have liberty automatically, that it will be established by the project itself. The liberty of men is never assured by the institutions and laws that are intended to guarantee them. This is why almost all of these laws and institutions are quite capable of being turned around. Not because they are ambiguous, but simply because ‘liberty’ is what must be exercised… .where liberty is effectively exercised, one would find that this is not owing to the order of objects, but, once again, owing to the practice of liberty.” Michel Foucault, “Space, Knowledge, and Power,” interview with Paul Rabinow, in The Foucault Reader (New York: Pantheon Books, 1984), 245–46.
  • In “On the Ontology of Events: A Conversation with Bernard Tschumi,” Peter Macapia discusses the ontology of architecture around the problem of program and event rather than the problem of form, an ontology that Delueze discovered in the ancient Stoics and their interest in limits, mixtures, time, space, and events. Online at www.petermacapia.com/blog/conversationbernardtschumi (25 October 2008).
  • Dennis Alan Nawrocki, ed., Art in Detroit Public Places (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2008), 65.
  • A photograph taken by Eva L.R. Meyerowitz in 1937 (the year before Olowe died) and published in 1943 in her article “Wood-Carving in the Yoruba Country To-Day” illustrates the veranda post in situ. The exact year they were carved and installed is unknown. See Roslyn Adele Walker, “The Ikere Palace Veranda Posts by Olowe of Ise,” African Arts , vol. 24, no. 1 (January 1991): 77–78 and 104.
  • Bruce Weber, “The Road to Freedom, Revisited,” the New York Times , August 1, 2004.
  • See “Eyes Which Do Not See” in Le Corbusier, Vers une architecture (1923), reprinted as Towards a New Architecture , trans. Frederick Etchells (New York: Dover Publications, 1986), 90–103.
  • Michelle Wallace, “Why Are There No Great Black Artists? The Problem of Visuality in African American Culture,” in Dark Designs & Visual Culture (Durham: Duke University Press, 2004), 191.

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A discourse on black subjectivity in contemporary architectural theory is virtually non-existent. Architecture historically privileges the construction of perspectival space through the gaze of the white male subject, from Pietro Perugino’s Christ Handing the Keys to St. Peter (1481–83)—whose primary actors are represented as fair-skinned European men with Roman features (although Christ and the Apostles were from Palestine and likely of darker skin tones)—to Mies van der Rohe’s perspective collages that unbind space in a manner that dislocates the stationary viewpoint and collapses it at the eye of the author. Within this spectrum, architectural space is conceptualized as a rational, linear system of spatial projection in which privileged and honorific bodies are captured within view and all other bodies and objects that lie beyond the cone of vision are excluded from the frame of the picture plane. In architectural representation, black bodies systematically fall beyond the frame of reference for spatial inclusion; likewise in architectural discourse, black bodies are either invisible, occupy unspoken spaces of colonial subjugation, or dismissed to locations of repressive difference where the black body is simultaneously an object of desire and derision, yet has no desires of its own.

The initial questions that come to mind ponder over the subjectivities that were relegated to the hidden kitchen entrances and rear doors of restaurants, hotels, and doctors’ offices during the Jim Crow era; the subjectivities that occupy the servant positions within Modernism’s hierarchal dyad of “served” and “servant” spaces; and the subjectivities of the curved, feminized, and “primitive” bodies to which Modernism refers as irrational, dangerous, and difficult, but which nevertheless signify sensuousness in contrast to the straight-lined rationality of the modernist grid. However, such considerations rarely occupy a position in architectural theory. Hence, black subjectivity is not just an “other” in modern architectural discourse; architectural theory represents a space of exclusion of black subjectivity.

The basis for that exclusion can be traced to Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel’s posthumously published Lectures on the Philosophy of History , presented at the University of Berlin in 1822, 1828, and 1830. According to Maurice Merleau-Ponty, “All the great philosophical ideas of the past century—the philosophies of Marx and Nietzsche, phenomenology, German existentialism, and psychoanalysis—had their beginnings in Hegel; it was he who started the attempt to explore the irrational and integrate it into an expanded reason which remains the task of our century.” 1 In the Lectures on the Philosophy of History , Hegel presents his theory of a universe rooted in the idea that the civilizing process, understood through various forms of history, is a rational proceeding that seeks rational freedom, to which Hegel refers as man’s spirit and existence. In addition to outlining the various types of history, Hegel (in alignment with the philosophical racism of David Hume and the scientific racism of the Enlightenment) conducts a geographical survey of the world and provides an analysis of the cultural and intellectual acuity of each continent’s inhabitants. Michelle M. Wright, in Becoming Black: Creating Identity in the African Diaspora , points out that Hegel positions the “Negro” outside of analytical history through examples of intellectual, technological, and moral histories as well as cultural progress—all of which exclude the “Negro.” 2 According to Hegel, “The peculiarly African character is difficult to comprehend, for the very reason that in reference to it, we must quite give up the principle which naturally accompanies all our ideas—the category of Universality… The Negro, as already observed, exhibits the natural man in his completely wild and untamed state.” 3 Furthermore, following his exegeses of the Negro’s want of reason and consciousness, his acceptance of slavery and inability to appreciate freedom, which leads to a contempt of humanity, and his inability to construct systems of social and political order, Hegel states:

In the text, Hegel positions the Negro in counter-distinction to the white European and delineates this dichotomy to illustrate that not only does the Negro lack consciousness and therefore subjectivity but he is also driven by irrational thought processes and inhuman desires. On the other hand, the white European is motivated by rational thought processes evidenced by organized forms of political and social orders, scientific and technological achievements, and desire for progress. Yet the implicit paradox of this dialectic is that while Hegel positions the Negro as the antithesis of the white European and outside of history, the Negro’s inferior position is necessary in order to define the white subject. Within Hegel’s explicitly racist analysis, superiority is dependent on a position of inferiority. By extension and irony, the anterior questions regarding the suppressed subjectivities of architectural discourse and its dark spaces of exclusion are illuminated and given presence.

Building upon this Hegelian foundation, modern philosophy’s subject is assumed to lay in the consciousness of white male patriarchy. Here, the confluence of philosophy and psychoanalysis exposes the sexual biases in both discourses, and as such was refuted by feminist thinkers such as Simone de Beauvoir. For example, Jacque Lacan’s notion of the “mirror stage”, which conceptualizes the formation of the “I” , theorizes that a male infant will recognize his image in a mirror and differentiate between his own body and the persons and things around him. In his 1949 lecture titled “The Mirror Stage as Formative of the Function of the I as revealed in Psychoanalytic Experience,” delivered at the16th International Congress of Psychoanalysis, Lacan states, “Unable as yet to walk, or even to stand up, and held tightly as he is by some support, human or artificial (what, in France, we call a ‘trotte-bébé’), he nevertheless overcomes, in a flutter of jubilant activity, the obstructions of his support and, fixing his attitude in a slightly leaning-forward position, in order to hold it in his gaze, brings back an instantaneous aspect of the image.” 5 For Lacan, the formation of the male “I” is the precursor to the formation of subjectivity, which supersedes all other constructions of a subject.

Therefore Lacan’s subject is presumably already marked by gender but before the entrance into language. Furthermore, at this stage the child’s ability to recognize himself as “I” is akin to recognizing his image as other which induces a self-alienation.

Simone de Beauvoir refutes this male-centric position in The Second Sex, originally published in June 1949 as Le deuxième sexe , nearly simultaneous to Lacan’s lecture. Beginning with an assessment of the status of women and drawing upon Hegel’s concept of the Other , de Beauvoir writes “Humanity is male, and man defines woman, not in herself, but in relation to himself; she is not considered an autonomous being…. She is determined and differentiated in relation to man, while he is not in relation to her; she is the inessential in front of the essential. He is the Subject; he is the Absolute. She is the Other .” 7 Yet de Beauvoir also exposes the Hegelian paradox and what she describes as Hegel’s fundamental hostility to any other consciousness while at the same time relying upon the Other in order to posit itself as the subject. However, de Beauvoir’s critique is not limited to the oppression of women, but extends to the othering of subjectivity based upon class and race and how the social and natural sciences have been used to construct dichotomies between the subject and the Other in terms of superiority versus inferiority.

The Second Sex is often described as the feminist bible, as it established the foundation for post-modern discourses on the identity politics of the feminist movement. Furthermore, given the inherent intersections of race, class, and sex, de Beauvoir’s exposition also helped set the groundwork for social and political art of the neo-avant-garde of the 1970s through mid 1990s, often in terms of two primary locations: the body and gaze.

Many feminist art practices of the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s theorized the female body as the material translation of the abjection assigned to it by patriarchy. This is exemplified through pain or trauma inflicted upon the body in the performances of such artists as Hannah Wilke, Gina Pane, and Carolee Schneemann. Through exaggerated eroticization, Hannah Wilke performs her body as an object and solicits the male gaze while reversing the gaze back upon itself through the exposition of her own subjectivity. This is exemplified by her performance photograph series So Help Me Hannah from 1978, and in particular the photograph What Does This Represent / What Do You Represent (Reinhart) (1978–84) included in the same series. In the photographs from So Help Me Hannah , Wilke presents herself in various nude poses in high heels holding a gun. The image is overlaid with texts quoted from mostly male philosophers (including Edmund Burke, Karl Marx, and Friedrich Nietzsche) and male artists including Daniel Buren and David Smith. According to Amelia Jones’s analysis of Wilke’s work in Body Art / Performing the Subject , “Wilke, like so many feminists of the period, projects herself forward in physical action, but also explicitly lays claim to her intellectual capacity as body/self.” 9 In What Does this Represent / What Do You Represent (Reinhart) , Wilke sits in the corner of a room, naked, wearing high heels, dejected, and holding a gun. Strewn at her feet are toy guns and Mickey Mouse dolls. The words from the title, taken from the modernist painter and illustrator Ad Reinhardt, are printed at the bottom of the photograph. Jones states that the abrupt, polemical nature of the text is intended “to disrupt any comfortable objectification of Wilke as image; they also point to the way in which the rhetoric of aesthetics has been deployed at the expense of women, whose bodies are usually the unspoken objects of representation…Wilke’s appropriation of Reinhart’s statement reconfigures it towards a feminist critique.” 10

The feminist critique in Gina Pane’s 1971 performance “Norriture, actualités televises, feu” reflects the artist’s position that traditional representations of male projections onto the female body are insufficiently challenged by “positive” images of the female body, thus requiring a means by which the artist could confound conventional understandings of the body and rearticulate its status among patriarchy. The work, originally performed in 1971 in a Paris apartment, is divided into three parts, staging the body at intersections of gender, violence, and representation in a manner recalling the transgressive surrealisms of Georges Bataille. “Pane began by devouring a large quantity of raw ground meat followed by spitting it out again. In the second sequence, Pane sat with other participants watching the evening news, while she was dazzled by a bright light coming from a lamp that was directed towards her eyes. In the last section, she tried to extinguish a fire ignited on a small hill of sand using her bare hands and feet.” 11 In contrast to conventional representations of the female body as a hopeful symbol of salvation in a time of violence, war, and destruction, Pane’s body is intended as a catalytic agent to collapse the distance between foreground and background, between the participants and the suffering and pain viewed on the evening news.

Similarly, in “Interior Scroll” Carolee Schneemann dislocates traditional gendered subjectivity. In “Interior Scroll”, originally performed in 1975, Schneemann insinuates the hyper-sexualized objectification of the female body, and in particular female genitalia, by “pulling a long, thin coil of paper from her vagina (‘like a ticker tape… plumb line… the umbilicus and tongue’) unrolling it to read a narrative text to the audience. Part of this text read as follows: ‘I met a happy man, / a structuralist filmmaker … he said we are fond of you / you are charming / but don’t ask us / to look at your films / … we cannot look at / the personal clutter / the persistence of feelings / the hand touch sensibility.’” 12 Schneeman simultaneously reconstitutes her own subjectivity while confounding the patriarchal white male gaze between the poles of desire and identity.

Yet like the Hegelian paradox that requires the Negro’s position of inferiority in order to establish the white male’s position of superiority and thereby delineate the white male’s subjectivity, the white male gaze must maintain a privileged status for the white female body even though his objectifying gaze works to suppress white female subjectivity. That privileged status is necessary to the inferiority of the black female body for the sake of his own European based narcissism within Hegel’s geographic ordering of history, reason, and rationalism, and by reason of his own hierarchy at the originating point of perception and a universal ordering of knowledge, as exemplified by Leonardo da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man. The white male body is the center of a universal circle that occludes the black body to the invisible margins.

But if the Negro in Hegel’s description has no historical part in the world and is cast somewhere Other, then the black female body in relationship to the white female body is “by virtue of color and feature and the extreme metaphors of enslavement…at the outermost reaches of ‘otherness’… she subsumes all the roles of the not-white body.” 13 This description comes from Lorraine O’Grady’s analysis of Édouard Manet’s painting Olympia from 1863, in an essay titled “Olympia’s Maid: Reclaiming Black Female Subjectivity.” O’Grady points out that the black servant, modeled by a professional named Laura, is a peripheral Negro who is intended to disappear into the background drapery. In contrast to the figure of Olympia posed nude upon the bed, Laura’s place is outside of what can be conceived of as woman. Hence, the construct of relationships between black and white bodies and subjectivities might be best described by a matrix that positions the European (white male) subject at the upper left quadrant, the white female body in the adjacent upper right quadrant, the Negro (non-subject) in the lower left quadrant below the European (white male) subject, but in direct relationship in order to establish the European’s superiority, and the black female body (non-subject) at the infinite limits of the lower right quadrant—removed from view but necessarily present in order to lend stability to the construct’s hierarchical order.

Sander L. Gilman’s analysis of Manet’s Olympia in “Black Bodies, White Bodies: Toward an Iconography of Female Sexuality in Late Nineteenth Century Art, Medicine, and Literature” notes that the black servant signifies the sexuality of the central figure, and in other works of art serves as a marker for the presence of illicit sexual activity. The obvious reference in this analysis is to Saartjie Baartman, better known as the “Hottentot Venus,” whose naked body was exhibited in London and Paris from 1810 to 1815 and whose physical appearance became an icon of sexual difference in Europe in the nineteenth century. However, the black female body in the analysis still lacks subjectivity and remains a merely objectified marker of difference and deviance. 14 Yet the black female body does occupy a space within the matrix of subjectivities and bodies, and as such, its spatial praxes, whether visible or invisible, yield its potential agency to reference its own self rather than to focus on exposing the hidden contradictions and assumptions of white male dominant hierarchy. Hence, we are confronted with the question of how to reassess these spatial praxes in order to reclaim the body as a site for black female subjectivity, and to claim a space for black subjectivity in spatial discourse and architectural theory.

A little more than a century after the exhibition of the “Hottentot Venus,” race and sex intersected with spatial praxes and architectural theory in two projects for modernist houses. One was the house for Josephine Baker designed by Adolf Loos in Paris in 1928, which became a celebrated and frequently discussed contribution to the European canon; the other, barely known to most architects, was the house named Azurest South, designed by an unknown, self-taught black female architect named Amaza Lee Meredith for herself and her life-long female companion in Petersburg, Virginia in 1939. In certain analyses, Josephine Baker, whose art is exposure, epitomizes the European history of ethnographic representations and the racist and sexist history of the objectification and desire of European Primitivism, similar to the “Hottentot Venus”. According to historian Farès el Dahdah in “The Josephine Baker House: For Loos’s Pleasure,” the house reflects a desire to see and to touch her eroticized nude body, bathed in the light while swimming in an elevated enclosed indoor pool that Baker could access from her boudoir. 15 The house is about the theatrical spectacle of Josephine Baker and its design exemplifies the racial and sexual desires of European white male Modernist Primitivism.

On the other hand, Amaza Lee Meredith, a college professor, artist, and arts educator, is the anti-thesis of exposure with an unassuming presence—perhaps due to the nature of her personal relationship, which was unspoken of at the time, as well as the fact that she was one of the first black female architects in the United States practicing in a profession dominated by white males. However, Meredith’s Azurest South is simultaneously a bold statement of belief in the doctrines of Modern architecture and a re-scripting its masculinist codes. Although the main body of the house exists on one level, its exterior shares certain semblances with the masked exterior of Loos’s Villa Müller, designed in 1928. [37] In fact, Meredith’s annotation on a photograph in her archives refers to the studio in the house (where she kept her library and art materials) as “My Lady’s Boudoir,” which is a clear reference to the withdrawn and inwardly facing Damenzimmer (lady’s room/boudoir) of Villa Müller and a recoding of male authorship and authority.

In contrast to the introverted spaces of Loos and Meredith’s boudoirs, Josephine Baker’s art of exposure and its visual complexities began on October 2, 1925 when “La Revue Négre” opened at the Thêatre des Champs-Elysées and Baker crawled onto the stage with her mouth painted in minstrel style, wearing cut-off pants and a frayed shirt, accompanied by other dancers dressed as black “mammies” and “bucks,” and performed a feverish version of the Charleston. She returned to the stage that evening for her second appearance and closing routine of the show and performed Danse Sauvage . Wearing only pink feathers around her waist, ankles and neck, Baker’s bare-chested body was splayed out and hung upside down upon the back of her male black dance partner, Joe Alex, who was equally naked except for beads around his neck, wrists, and ankles. The performance elicited thunderous applause as well as shock and disgust. It was the hit of the show and launched Baker’s European career.

However, Baker’s early career as a vaudeville performer in New York was not only an escape from poverty and the suppression she had experienced as a live-in domestic worker for white families in St. Louis, but it was also the beginning of her own agency towards constructing a visibility that would simultaneously beguile and vex European audiences. And although she was cast in “La Revue Négre” by French producers who had come to New York in search of an all black cast for a musical review in Paris, Baker’s energetic and spectacular performances far surpassed audience expectations and her role as an entertainer. Instead, these performance—along with Baker’s infamous “banana dance,” in which she wore multi-strand beaded necklace and a skirt made of a single string of bananas (that at once carry phallic, racial, and colonial insinuations)—yield a complex and ambiguous set of questions regarding the sensuous space between agency, performance, and spectacle. Baker’s beads, feathers, and bananas not only supplement the sensuality of her presentation, but these ornamentations also signify Baker’s self-fetishization that works to confound relationships between subject, object, and desire.

Ironically, sensuousness and sensuality have always seemed anathema and gratuitous to modern architecture and theory, known more for its functionalist dogmas and Puritan attitudes towards program and typologies, rationality, and structural order. In “Ornament and Crime,” Loos excoriates the criminality of ornament and sensuous dress, stating that those who go around in velvet jackets are not artists but clowns or house painters and that he (Loos) preaches to “the person at the peak of humanity, who yet has a profound understanding of the problems and aspirations of those at the bottom.” Furthermore, in the same discriminating voice, Loos states:

Despite certain critiques that suggest the house Loos designed for Baker epitomizes a European white male, and possibly Loos’s own, masculinist and Primitivist racial and sexual desires, the house—similar to Baker’s performances—can be seen to contain similar ambiguities between viewer and view and subject and object. The house not only signifies the objectification of Baker but also her elusiveness and the illusiveness of her image within liminal conditions that flirt back and forth between two perceptual poles, ultimately rendering Baker’s body unattainable. 20

These ambiguities begin at the exterior of the house, not in terms of its striped façade of alternating black and white stone, but in terms of the windows that present framed views from the interior towards Parisian street life, as well as framed views from the exterior for passersby secretly desiring glimpses of Baker’s body. [38] The ambiguities extend from the large scaled windows along the exterior to the salon and the peep show scaled windows at the passage adjacent to the elevated swimming pool. At the entrance to the house the viewer gazes up and expects to see Baker making a grand and theatrical descent on the monumental stairs. At the same moment, the viewer imagines Baker’s awareness of the viewer and the possibility of the visual exchange. Distances in the house are designed to fix the gaze of the viewer upon the movement of Baker’s body in space, and to induce an acknowledgment or at least an awareness of her admirers. Furthermore, on the étage noble and further along the public route of the house, the viewer imagines the possibility of being seen by Baker before seeing her. [39, 40]

In Lacan’s lecture titled “The Place, Origin and End of My Teaching”, presented at Vinatier in Lyon following the publication of Ecrits , Lacan states, “….desire full stop is always the desire of the Other . Which basically means that we are always asking the Other what he desires.” In his full explanation of this statement, he explains that desire is fundamentally the desire for recognition by the Other and that these desires are repetitive and engaged in a transference: “The necessary and sufficient reason for the repetitive insistence of these desires in the transference and their permanent remembrance in a signifier that repression has appropriated—that is, in which the repressed returns—is found if one accepts the idea that in these determinations the desire for recognition dominates the desire that is to be recognized, preserving it as such until it is recognized.” Furthermore, Lacan introduces a graph of desire found in his paper titled “The Subversion of the Subject and the Dialectic of Desire,” and explains

But we must also add that man’s desire is the Other’s desire (le désir de l’homme est le désir de l’Autre) in which the de provides what grammarians call a “subjective determination”—namely, that it is qua Other that man desires (this is what provides the true scope of human passion).

This is why the Other’s question (la question de l’Autre) —that comes back to the subject from the place from which he expects an oracular reply—which takes some such form as “Che vuoi?,” “What do you want?,” is the question that best leads the subject to the path of his own desire, assuming that, thanks to the know-how of a partner known as a psychoanalyst, he takes up that question, even without knowing it, in the following form: “What does he want from me?” 21

In the house, the desire for Baker is actually the viewer’s desire for himself to be desired by Baker, and Baker’s elusiveness only works to heighten those desires. The denouement of the viewer’s experience of the Baker House is the elevated, enclosed indoor swimming pool. The pool contains windows along the side passage where the viewer can gaze at Baker’s body floating in water, and illuminated by daylight from the skylights above the pool, as if in a dream or fantasy. However, the windows onto the swimming pool mirror windows along the exterior wall of the passage, which are behind the viewer. Therefore, the viewer also sees his own image reflected in the glass of the swimming pool windows enmeshed with the image of Baker’s body. Hence, the consciousness of the white male child in Lacan’s illustration of the “Mirror Stage” is foiled by the black female body. The hierarchical relationships and distance between subject and object collapse in the picture plane of the swimming pool window.

Amaza Lee Meredith’s Azurest South also works to confound the hierarchical male gaze and its subject and object relationships. However, the house subverts these relationships through the masculine guises of Modernism while never yielding the agency of the black female bodies of its inhabitants—Ms. Meredith and Dr. Edna Meade Colson. [41] The U.S. National Register for Historic Places catalogues the many “International Style” tropes contained in the house, which they describe as

The language of European white male Modernism is clearly recognized in this description. Its description as “devoid” of ornament or historic references suggests that it is lacking that which would be expected. In other words, the house is lacking any identifiable markers of domesticity associated with sex or race. Considering the geographical and cultural context of the house (not far from the capital of the Confederacy during the U.S. Civil War and constructed during the enforcement of Jim Crow laws throughout the South, as well as the peak of Colonial Revival architecture in Virginia), it displays no signs of female domesticity or of a black domestic servant. Instead the house subverts representation and patriarchal power structures through a “reverse othering” and its unexpectedness engages in queering European white male Modernism. Audre Lorde notes in her text “Age, Race, Class and Sex: Women Redefining Difference” that “in order to survive, those of us for whom oppression is as American as apple pie have always had to be watchers, to become familiar with the language and manners of the oppressor, even sometimes adopting them for some illusion of protection.” 23

Amaza Lee Meredith was born in Lynchburg, Virginia and studied at the Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute, now known as Virginia State University. Following this, she taught mathematics in Lynchburg before moving to Brooklyn, New York in 1926 and enrolling at the Teachers College of Columbia University during the Harlem Renaissance. She majored in fine arts and received a bachelor’s degree with honors in 1930 before returning to Virginia State University to teach. She then took a brief leave of absence to return to Teachers College where she earned a master’s degree in 1934. The details of her life in New York are unknown, however she did travel between Virginia and New York following the completion of her studies at Teacher’s College to attend museums and cultural events. It is conceivable that Meredith may have returned to New York in 1935 for one of the lectures given by Le Corbusier at area architecture schools including Columbia University. She did, in fact, return to New York in 1936 for the opening of the “House of the Modern Age” at Park Avenue and East 39th Street, and she retained the entry ticket to the opening as a souvenir of the event. The house, designed by William Van Alen for National Houses Inc., was constructed of steel panels for ten thousand dollars as an experimental demonstration of modernist architecture and fabrication techniques. The two-story, eight-room building was covered in a stucco-like finish and included a patio, sun terrace, and built in garage. The International Style house was completely furnished with state-of-the-art appliances and modernist furniture to illustrate a modern aesthetic and lifestyle that with few exceptions had not yet taken hold in domestic architecture in the United States. Furthermore, the catalog for the exhibition illustrates the interior as replete with all the finishes for the modern domestic housewife, including wallpaper, fur carpeting, and plush lounge chairs.

The interior of Meredith’s Azurest South exhibits a similar modernist aesthetic and is described as having been “enlivened by the vivid colors of the walls, floors, and ceilings” and a combination of contemporary and traditional materials in contrast to house’s exterior severity. 24 Throughout the house, different surfaces of colored glass and tile, as well as colored geometric patterns and colored surfaces, allude to Meredith’s vocation as a painter. [44] The living room, kitchen, and studio are relatively open spaces. A small vestibule separates the living room from the two bedrooms of Ms. Meredith and Dr. Colson that mirror each other, and are defined by a curved exterior wall with symmetrical windows and curved glass block at the building’s south elevation. [45, 46] The exterior wall, with its small-scaled windows relative to the curved surface, acts as a mask that confounds the reading of the domestic interior and spatial relationships between its inhabitants. Furthermore, Meredith’s isometric section and elevation drawings of the house pertain more to the technical aspects of its construction than to traditional ideas of gender in domestic architecture. [47] A wall section reveals unadorned ceilings and walls lacking mouldings or trim. Neither race, sex, or sexuality is visible; yet, their re-codings are in plain sight. 25

Returning to “Olympia’s Maid,” Lorraine O’Grady states that the question of modernism’s demise must be left open as an option for the reclamation of black female subjectivity in feminist and visual theory. “For one thing, there seems no way around the fact that the method of reclaiming subjectivity precisely mirrors modernism’s description of the artistic process. Whatever else it may require, it needs an act of will to project the inside onto the outside long enough to see and take possession of it,” states O’Grady.26 The question might also be put to architectural theory in terms of claiming a space for black subjectivity in architectural and spatial discourse. Yet, although black subjectivity may be relegated to the infinite limits of architecture’s picture plane, its presence has historically been required in order to structure the center point of its narcissistic perspective view. Therefore O’Grady’s question might be restructured in terms of projecting the outside to the inside of the frame of the picture plane—not in order to occupy the center but rather to excavate the ambiguous network of relationships that flicker back and forth for new terms that are no longer racially exclusive, but rather racially elusive and illusive.

  • Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Sense and Non-Sense , trans. Hubert L. Dreyfus and Patricia Allen Dreyfus (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1964), 63.
  • Michelle M. Wright, Becoming Black: Creating Identity in the African Diaspora (Durham: Duke University Press, 2004), 8–29.
  • Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, The Philosophy of History , trans. J. Sibree (Kitchener: Batoche Books, 2001), 111.
  • Hegel, The Philosophy of History , 116–17.
  • Jacques Lacan, “The mirror stage as formative of the function of the I as revealed in psychoanalytic experience,” Écrits: A Selection , trans. Alan Sheridan (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1977), 1.
  • Lacan, Écrits , 2.
  • Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex , trans. Constance Borde and Sheila Malovany-Chevallier (New York: Vintage Books, 2011), 26.
  • De Beauvoir, The Second Sex , 32.
  • Amelia Jones, Body Art / Performing the Subject (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1998), 157.
  • Jones, Body Art / Performing the Subject , 157.
  • Anja Zimmermann, “‘Sorry for Having to Make You Suffer’: Body, Spectator, and the Gaze in the Performances of Yves Klein, Gina Pane, and Orlan,” Discourse , vol. 24, no. 3 (Fall 2002), 32.
  • Jones, Body Art / Performing the Subject , 5.
  • Lorraine O’Grady, “Olympia’s Maid: Reclaiming Black Female Subjectivity,” The Feminism and Visual Culture Reader , ed. by Amelia Jones (New York: Routledge, 2003), 208.
  • See Sander L. Gilman, “Black Bodies, White Bodies: Toward an Iconography of Female Sexuality in Late Nineteenth-Century Art, Medicine, and Literature,” The Feminism and Visual Culture Reader , ed. by Amelia Jones (New York: Routledge, 2003) for a discussion of the sexualized woman and the black woman traced from Monet, Richard Strauss, and William Hogarth to J.J. Virey’s summary of the sexual nature of black females, and George Cuvier’s post mortem of Saartjie Baartman’s body including detailed examinations of her sexual genitalia and buttocks.
  • Farès el Dahdah, “The Josephine Baker House: For Loos’s Pleasure,” Assemblage 26 (April 1995), 75.
  • Adolf Loos, “Ornament und Verbrechen,” Adolf Loos, Trotzdem 1900–1930 (Innsbruck: Brenner, 1931), 93.
  • Christopher Long, “The Origins and Context of Adolf Loos’s ‘Ornament and Crime,’” Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians , vol. 68, no. 2 (June 2009): 208.
  • Long, “The Origins and Context of Adolf Loos’s ‘Ornament and Crime,’” 209.
  • Anne Anlin Cheng, Second Skin: Josephine Baker and the Modern Surface (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), 46–47.
  • For more on how the Baker House stages multiple slippages between viewer/ view, subject/object, that which is attainable/unattainable, surface/skin, so on, see Beatriz Colomina, “The Split Wall: Domestic Voyeurism,” in Sexuality and Space (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1992), 73–128; and Cheng, “Housing Baker, Dressing Loos,” in Second Skin, 49–82. The paragraphs that follow draw on and extend this thread from Colomina to Cheng to argue that what is troubled and thrown into question in the Baker House, such as the masculine gaze, undermines the very disciplinary foundations of architecture that are predicated upon an ideal subject as described by Vitruvius in The Ten Books on Architecture and subsequently embedded in Renaissance painting and architectural representation. The reversal of subject and object in the Baker House repositions the Black female body from beyond the picture frame to the point of power from which the picture frame emanates.
  • Jacques Lacan, “The Subversion of the Subject and the Dialectic of Desire,” Écrits , trans. Bruce Fink (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2006), 690.
  • Azurest South, Chesterfield County, Virginia , National Register of Historic Places, Virginia Department of Historic Resources No. 020-5583, NRHP Registration (December 30, 1993), Section 7: 1.
  • Audre Lorde, “Age, Race, Class, and Sex: Women Redefining Difference,” in Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches (Trumansburg, NY: Crossing Press, 1984), 114.
  • Azurest South, Chesterfield County, Virginia , National Register of Historic Places, Section 7: 2–3.
  • Background information provided to the National Register of Historic Places states the following: “When Miss Meredith created Azurest South, she was a middle- aged woman who had established a small architectural practice, designing houses and interiors for family and friends. Little of her work is documented; her drawings are not those of a practiced architect, but rather those of a person who was familiar with both traditional and current trends in architectural design. She designed a house in Lynchburg for one sister and a residence in Sag Harbor for another sister. It is likely that the largest assemblage of her architectural projects can be found at Sag Harbor on Long Island. At Sag Harbor, a resort for wealthy whites, including the Roosevelt family, Miss Meredith and her family and friends created Azurest North, an enclave of vacation homes for middle-class blacks. Miss Meredith worked on design commissions at Sag Harbor into the 1970s when she was an elderly woman.” Additionally, Meredith is known to have designed a house near Prairie View, Texas and another house near the campus of Virginia State University. 26. O’Grady, “Olympia’s Maid: Reclaiming Black Female Subjectivity,” 217.

Image Credits

1.Courtesy of the Museo Civica, Cento 2.Courtesy of the Regione Siciliana, Assessorato dei Beni Culturali e della Identità siciliana — Dipartmento dei Beni Culturali e della Identità siciliana — Museo interdisciplinare regionale di Messina 3.Courtesy of the Science Museum / Science & Society Picture Library 4, 6, 37–40. Courtesy of the Albertina, Vienna 5.© Sara Pezzoni 7.© The Courtauld Institute of Art, London, courtesy of the Conway Library at the Courtauld Institute of Art 8.Courtesy of the Art, Design, and Architecture Museum, University of California Santa Barbara 9-10. © J. Paul Getty Trust, Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles (2004.R.10) 12. From the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution 13. From the Collection Paul Citroen, Photo Prentenkabinet, Rijksuniversiteit te Leiden 14.© Martha Rosler 1970, 2002, courtesy of the artist, Mitchell-Innes & Nash, NY, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York 15.© Martha Rosler, courtesy of the artist, Mitchell-Innes & Nash, NY, and the Art Institute of Chicago 16.© Louise Lawler, courtesy of the artist and Metro Pictures, New York 17–19.© Louise Lawler, courtesy of Artists Space and Fales Library, New York University, New York 20.Courtesy of Artists Space and Fales Library, New York University, New York 21.© Adrian Piper Research Archive Foundation Berlin; image courtesy of the University of California Art Museum 22–26.Courtesy of The David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art, The University of Chicago, images © 2015 27–30.Courtesy of Bernard Tschumi 31–32, 34.From the Max Bond Papers, courtesy of the Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library, Columbia University, New York 35–36.© Rebecca Schenck 41, 45, 47.From the Amaza Lee Meredith Papers, 1912, 1930-1938, courtesy of Special Collections and University Archives, Johnston Memorial Library, Virginia State University 42, 46.By Mario Gooden 43–44.Courtesy of Special Collections and University Archives, Johnston Memorial Library, Virginia State University

Mario Gooden is a principal of Huff + Gooden Architects and a Professor of Practice at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (GSAPP) of Columbia University where is also the co-Director of the Global Africa Lab (GAL). He is a 2012 National Endowment for the Arts Fellow and a MacDowell Colony Fellow.

Acknowledgements

Special thanks for their support, guidance, and inspiration

The late J. Max Bond

Amale Andraos Luke Bulman Beatriz Colomina James Graham Paul Gunther Laurie Hawkinson David Hinkle Steven Holl Ray Huff Ryan King Hilary Sample Joel Sanders Bernard Tschumi Mark Wigley Deborah Willis Mabel Wilson

Drawings and Archives, Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library New York University Fales Library and Special Collections Virginia State University Special Collections and Archives

Columbia University Office of the Vice Provost for Faculty Diversity and Inclusion The MacDowell Colony The National Endowment for the Arts

RTF | Rethinking The Future

Third Spaces in Architecture: Edward Soja

essay on space architecture

In the present era of technological advancements and sustainable design practices, including design approaches such as adaptive reuse and retrofitting, artificial intelligence, urbanisation, and globalisation, negative consequences occur locally and globally. The field of architecture in the present day confronts many challenges and concerns, encompassing sustainability, climate change, urbanisation, gentrification, social inequality, non-inclusive spaces, cultural preservation, and a dearth of cultural and social value within society.

In the face of rapid urbanisation and globalisation , the “Third Spaces” concept is a potential solution to address various social issues such as cultural and social value deficits, historical and heritage value losses, and inadequate community cohesion. These spaces serve as catalysts for facilitating social integration, thereby fostering a collective sense of belonging and shared identity among inhabitants.

What are Third Spaces? 

Third, Spaces refer to social environments distinct from the home and the workplace. 

Public parks, plazas, community centres, libraries, cafés, workplaces, and internet platforms are all examples of Third Spaces. The capacity of such spaces to foster social interactions and generate a feeling of community is its defining feature. They often include facilities and services that attract people to remain, such as comfy seats, free Wi-Fi, conference spaces, and cultural programs.

Third Spaces are i ntermediary spaces that foster social interaction and egalitarianism among individuals. This location serves as a venue for social interaction and cultural exchange while also being easily accessible to all individuals. These spaces cultivate a sense of belonging and augment community well-being in the context of rapid urbanisation and globalisation.

Third Spaces in Architecture: Edward Soja - SHeet1

Edward Soja’s Theory of Third Space 

Edward Soja was a self-proclaimed urbanist and a well-known postmodern political geographer and urban theorist. The work of Edward Soja was largely concerned with the social, cultural, and political traits of urban areas. He believed that conventional techniques to comprehend space, such as physical and sociological viewpoints, were inadequate, and he suggested the notion of “Third space” as an alternative paradigm. Soja defined Third Space as an ever-changing and dynamic conceptual space that covers physical and mental worlds, merging people’s and communities’ perceived reality, imagination, and lived experiences.

Soja’s theory of Third Space is derived from Henry Lefebvre’s Lived Spaces, Foucault’s Heterotopias, Bell Hooks’ radical openness, and other notions, ideologies, and standpoints.

Third Spaces in Architecture: Edward Soja - SHeet2

In his book “Thirdspace: Journeys to Los Angeles and Other Real-and-Imagined Places,” Soja emphasised the necessity of understanding metropolitan landscapes by addressing the interaction between physical space, social ties, and people’s subjective experiences. He advocated for a more inclusive and multidimensional view of space that considers many perspectives, histories, and narratives.

Third Spaces in Architecture: Edward Soja - SHeet3

The graphic is a transdisciplinary portrayal of space incorporating historicality, sociality, and spatiality. When diverse individuals view, use, and experience a social space, imagined connections are built in their brains with their past or history based on the activities, space, and experience.

essay on space architecture

Edward Soja’s Classification of Space

First Space

It is the real material world. It represents the tangible, concrete spaces and spatial forms we encounter daily. This includes urban landscapes and architectural structures. First Space comprises both the tangible characteristics of space and the activities that occur within it. Human activities and interactions occur within the domain of objective reality.

Second Space

A perspective that interprets this reality through “imagined” representations of spatiality. It is how we perceive, conceptualise, and represent physical spaces in various formats, including maps, diagrams, mental images, and cultural narratives. It encompasses how we construct the physical universe’s meanings, interpretations, and comprehensions. Second, Space incorporates the social, cultural, and psychological factors that influence our perceptions and experiences of space.

Third Space

In a broader sense, Third space is a purposefully tentative and flexible term that attempts to capture a constantly shifting and changing milieu of ideas, events, appearances, and meanings. It is a place of multiplicity, potential, and inventive transformation. Third, Space comprises the lived experiences, narratives, memories, and imaginations that influence our understanding and engagement with the physical world.

Characteristics of Edward Soja’s Third Space

  • A geographically located social space
  • Historicality, sociality, and Spatiality as Transdisciplinary – Triple Dialectic
  • Each place can be seen clearly and from every aspect, but there is also a hidden object that is conjectured, full of deceptions and allusions, a space that is shared by all of us but will never be fully seen and understood, an “unimaginable universe.”

Everything comes together in Third Space: 

  • subjectivity (people) and objectivity (space)
  • Abstract (memories/experience) and concrete (space/people) 
  • Real (sociability/space) and imagined (nostalgia)
  • the knowable (space) and unimaginable (space/nostalgia)
  • the repetitive (sociability/space) and differential (experience)
  • structure and agency
  • mind and body 
  • consciousness and unconscious
  • disciplined and transdisciplinary 
  • everyday life (activities of everyday life) and unending history (memories/experiences)

essay on space architecture

It is a space of complete radical openness, free from the conflicts of race, gender, class, sexuality, age, country, religion, nature, empire, and colonialism.

Edward Soja’s Third Space is empowered by strategic flexibility in dealing with multiple forms of oppression and inequality.

References:

  • Dixon, D. (1999) “Between difference and alternity: Engagements with Edward soja’sThirdspace,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers. Association of American Geographers, 89(2), pp. 338–339. doi: 10.1111/0004-5608.00148.
  • Maier, H. O. O. (2013) “Soja’s thirdspace, Foucault’s heterotopia and de Certeau’s practice: Time-space and social geography in emergent Christianity.” doi: 10.12759/HSR.38.2013.3.76-92.
  • Maran, A. and Raj, M. (2023) “Integrating Oldenburg’s concept of place and Soja’s concept of space: a spatial enquiry of denial, repression, and closure in Ishiguro’s ‘The Remains of the Day,’” Humanities & social sciences communications, 10(1), pp. 1–8. doi: 10.1057/s41599-023-01676-0.
  • Practical design for better urban spaces (2022) EIT Urban mobility. Available at: https://www.eiturbanmobility.eu/news-events/impact-stories/new-kid-on-the-block/.
  • Soja, E. W. (1996) Thirdspace: Journeys to Los Angeles and other real-and-imagined places. London, England: Blackwell.
  • Soja, E. W. (1998) “Thirdspace: Journeys to Los Angeles and other real-and-imagined places,” Capital & class, 22(1), pp. 137–139. doi: 10.1177/030981689806400112.
  • (2018) Planningtank.com. Available at: https://planningtank.com/blog/edward-sojas-theories-of-urban-space.

Third Spaces in Architecture: Edward Soja - SHeet1

A Postgraduate student of Architecture, developing an ability of Design led through Research. A perceptive observer who strives to get inspired and, in doing so, become one. Always intrigued by the harmonious relationships between people and space and the juxtaposition of the tangible and intangible in architecture.

essay on space architecture

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Building Living Bridges with Sensory Space: Crafting timeless connections through Architecture

essay on space architecture

From our early years, we start to make sense of the world around us in fragments. As we recalibrate this understanding with every passing experience, there comes a need to enrich our experiences along the way. And so, voluntarily or involuntarily, we yearn to seek out meaningful ways to connect back to the world, to society, to nature, and to ourselves. In this journey of seeking, we stumble upon bridges that help us establish meaningful connections.

Edmund Husserl, the founder of the phenomenological movement makes an analogy of a bridge that connects our subjective experience to objective reality. The “subjective” side represents our perceptions of the world, our memories, thoughts and feelings, and the “objective” side of the bridge is the lived reality or the world as it exists, independent of our consciousness. The bridge itself is what symbolizes the processes through which our consciousness connects to the lived reality and helps us understand the world better with respect to our past experiences .

When we attempt to give this analogy tangible form, it makes perfect sense for us to perceive Architecture as that bridge, since within this realm is where life thrives in its entirety.

Can we then re-imagine Architecture and the design of the built environment as a Living Bridge that connects our inner selves to the infinite world around us in meaningful ways?

Sensory Dimensions- A Catalyst to Creating Architectural Atmospheres

For Architecture to become a powerful connector, it has to be able to evoke emotions. To that end, Sensory design can be a very effective approach in rendering spaces expressive. Barbara Erwine, author of Power of Sensory Space [1] says “The most evocative spaces encountered are the ones that have a strong relationship between the intangible sensory space and the tectonic tangible space”. Sensory Space, according to her, is an amorphous entity that is perceived more through the senses as a felt experience, as opposed to a purely visual encounter.

The beauty of Sensory spaces is that they are ephemeral, constantly moving and changing with time and context. The craftsperson or designer must understand the transient nature of Sensory space in order to sculpt an architecture that brings out its sublime beauty, thus injecting the potential for the space to arouse the visitor, the ability to seduce them into wanting to explore its layers. When Sensory space merges with tangible space in congenial ways, it creates rousing “ Atmospheres ” as Zumthor terms it.

This essay will attempt to bring out instances of sensory crescendos achieved when built space congenially intermingles with the 6 sensory dimensions put forth by Barbara Erwine- Light space, Thermal space, Acoustic/ Auditory space, Olfactory/ Smell space, Haptic / Tactile space, and a very important sixth sense- the Personal/ Cultural space. It will seek to unearth layers of the sensory world required to build evocative connections through Architecture.

Between Silence and Light

Light space is strongly influenced by the nature of the building envelope. In Western India, fenestrations were crafted to create light patterns through intricate traceries called Jaalis . The enchantment of luminosity is that it is constantly shifting in its tones with the movement of the sun. With an architecture that embraces the dynamism of light space, magic can be created.

essay on space architecture

The Bait Ur Rouf Mosque in Dhaka by architect Marina Tabassum [2] is a personification of ethereal light space. Natural light is used to instantly soften the stark geometrical form of the building. While the wall in the direction of the qibla [3] is bathed in sunlight, the devotees in front kneel on a floor dappled with sunlight streaming in through the skylights . It appears as though the stars have descended from the sky with light enabling the union of the sky and the earth, wrapping the devotees in a divine tapestry of lit constellations. Just as Light has the power to kindle emotions, so too does Shadow have the ability to stir.

essay on space architecture

In the book In Praise of Shadows , author Junichiro Tanizaki paints a captivating image of shadows [4] . He speaks about the Japanese discovering meditative beauty in shadows and how traditional architecture in Japan emerges out of obscurity. The roof with a deep overhang is mounted first and within its shadows, the house manifests. Interior walls are painted with muted tones, and when sunlight streams through the paper-panelled doors, it sinks into the walls with absolute repose. In a dissolving threshold of light, space fades into shadows.

essay on space architecture

Comforting Thermalscapes

Thermal spaces, whether the cool shade of a magnanimous tree in the hot sun, or warm flames of fire in biting cold have the ability to breathe in a sense of comfort. Materiality plays an important role in moulding Thermal Space. In western India, dwellings are traditionally designed to protect from blazing summers. The circular Bhunga huts [5] in Kutch, Gujarat are built with thick adobe blocks, coated with mud plaster that insulate the interiors. The openings are small and roof overhangs deep, to prevent direct sunlight from penetrating the inside.

essay on space architecture

Conversely, in colder regions, fire- a source of heat can be vastly comforting. A bonfire produces thermal space around it that calls out to people to huddle and seek warmth. Fire can also bring tranquility with its crackling sounds. The aura of fire has been captured through a conical installation built by the Haugen/Zohar Arkitekter [6] for a kindergarten in Norway. Fire naturally kindles an ambience of socialising, storytelling and sharing. Using that as a cue, the architects built a cocoon with repurposed oak pieces to encompass a bonfire and create an intimate, cosy space for the children.

essay on space architecture

Cocooning Thermal Space | Fireplace for Children in Norway by Haugen/Zohar Arkitekter, Image Credit: ArchDaily

essay on space architecture

Passive solar design strategies emerging from context also contribute to shaping thermalscapes. Courtyards are multifaceted spaces in the South Asian context that are a direct response to the climate. The open space typically within a dwelling, surrounded by built form, allows hot air to escape from the building and refreshing, cool winds to enter. They were conceptualised as spaces that promoted mental, physical and social well-being.

essay on space architecture

The Sound of Space

Auditory space or Acoustic space has healing abilities. With innovation, Sound as a device can provide a stimulating experience. A unique area of the interactive soundscapes- a fusion of Architecture and Acoustic space was explored by French Musician and Architect, Iannis Xenakis, who worked with Le Corbusier’s Atelier. Xenakis invented the concept of polytopes [7] that presented to visitors, an immersive experience of sound, light, colour and space. The Polytope of Cluny was one of his compositions created in 1972. A large vaulted volume was earmarked within historic bathhouses for the installation. The light and sound show that took place within this experiential space created a riveting experience for visitors.

essay on space architecture

Sounds can also be strong mnemonic devices that can trigger memories, and provide canvasses for contemplation on life and existentialism. The Teshima Art Museum, designed by Ryue Nishizawa [8] is a brilliant confluence of architecture and art. The gently curving concrete structure emulating a water droplet overlooks lush green paddy fields. 2 large elliptical cut-outs in the thin slab allow for a sensory exchange of natural elements. Within the womb-like structure, a curious installation, “ Bokei ”, designed by artist Rei Naito amazes visitors. Water droplets emerge from the ground in the form of mist from small apertures. The amoebic droplets that are directed by wind blowing through the elliptical oculi, move around as though of their own volition. The trickling sounds of the droplets in this magnetic auditory space make for the sensory architecture of the highest order, immersing the visitors and persuading them to sit and contemplate within and without.

essay on space architecture

The Scent of Space

Urban and Architectural smellscapes can make spatial experiences compelling. Urban planner and olfactory advocate of urbanscapes, Victoria Henshaw, speaks about the necessity of embracing the delights that smell can offer to make for a multisensory experience [9] . She reinforces the fact that smells play a critical role in connecting us to the world around. But sadly, designers are eschewing the use of this potent sensory dimension in contemporary spatial environments. Henshaw illustrates the power of olfactory scapes with the example of the Moriyama & Teshima’s Multi-Faith Centre for Toronto University. The minimal space was designed to cherish and enhance the evocative power of smells during sacred rituals. The intelligently designed ventilation system allows for air to be still during rituals, for the fragrance of burning incense or sage to pervade and elevate the ceremony, and then allows the air to quickly clear up before the ceremonies of a different faith begin. This novel design acknowledged the unique smells that are associated with different cultures.

essay on space architecture

The beauty of smells is that they vary drastically between regions. While walking past an Indian spice market, the aroma of roasted and ground spice wafts through the air and fills the senses, while around the patisseries of Italy, the rich olfaction of freshly baked bread lingers. Smells have the capability to produce strong neural reactions and etch themselves as memories associated with the context.

Tactile Thresholds

In her essay The Place of Place in Memory , Esther Da Costa Meyer says that “ Our memories have been heavily edited, not only by fear and desire, habit and prejudice, but by the hegemony of sight, the most abstract of our senses .” [10]

Today as we absorb ourselves endlessly into digital screens, we get sucked into virtual rabbit holes and lose sight of our sense of touch- an asset that allows us to connect deeply with each other and the world. Visually impaired painter Esref Armagan sees the world through his skin. Born without sight, the Turkish artist taught himself about the world by feeling it [11] . He naturally then began expressing his learnings through paintings. Esref is also capable of drawing buildings in perfect scale and proportion, and with perspective, by experiencing the building through touch, and then imagining it in his mind before putting it to paper. Such is the power of Tactile space, that opens inconceivable gateways to imagination. If environments are designed with tactility, they are bound to become more expressive.

Juhani Pallasmaa in his book Eyes of the Skin speaks emphatically about the need for haptic environments and he cites examples of Finnish Architect Alvar Aalto’s work whose buildings he calls muscular and tactile. Aalto’s approach to the iconic Villa Mairea set a precedent for architects to translate contextual values of the past into contemporary styles. Like the surrounding birch forests inspired the tactile interiors of Villa Mairea, similarly, the Venice pavilion in 2016 designed by Swedish studios Kjellander + Sjöberg and Folkhem paid tribute to the forested foundations of Venice city. Wood as a material has an irresistible tactility because of the pleasures of texture, smell and temperature it offers. A latticed wood structure, the Venice pavilion [12] emulates a peaceful forest with filtered sunlight pouring in through the top, creating fleeting patterns. The structure's rhythmic progression was borrowed as a purposeful inversion of the Doge's Palace- a Venetian Gothic structure. This further connected the space with strong contextual associations from the past. Being within the pavilion is an intimate feeling of being cradled in nature with a soft lullaby.

essay on space architecture

Intimate Spaces | Venice Pavilion 2016, Image Credit: Dezeen

Sensory Memory- Evocative Power of Personal or Cultural Landscapes

Juhani Pallasmaa delves into the aspect of Cultural space when he says “Human constructions also have the task of preserving the past, enabling us to experience and grasp the continuum of culture and tradition. We do not only exist in a spatial and material reality, we also inhabit cultural, mental, and temporal realities” [13]

The 6th sensory dimension that Barbara Erwine speaks about is the Personal or Cultural Space. We find that often places with traditional space-making, the ones closer to cultural roots have an inherent atmosphere or ambience that renders them naturally evocative without planned orchestration.

Didi Contractor, an architect based in the hill town Dharamshala, in Himachal Pradesh, India, crafted Architecture that was rooted in context. Her buildings are in sync with nature and are built with local materials like mud, thatch and wood. She says, “ I'm very interested in using landscape as a visual and emotional bridge between the built and the natural. Look at the old buildings, they are beautiful in the landscape, and the new ones are at war with it—they say something. One of the problems with contemporary life is losing our contact with the cycles of nature”. [14] Didi’s buildings are humble and close to the earth. In its nooks, the inhabitant feels nestled and one with the world.

essay on space architecture

The living roots bridges in Meghalaya [15] are natural connections across rivulets made by indigenous tribal folk living here for centuries. Grown over hundreds of years, the bridges are symbolic epitomes of the symbiotic connections between man and nature.

Architecture, like the living roots bridge, has to grow one with nature, embedding within its core- the sensory powers of the natural world; it must strive to become ephemeral and enmeshed with sensory dimensions; only then can it grow to become truly timeless.

essay on space architecture

Author's Interview

essay on space architecture

RAMA RAGHAVAN

Rama Raghavan is an Architectural Writer based in Pune, India. After working for several years in the Industry and Academia, she found her passion in Writing. She is also a trained musician and a self-taught artist who enjoys feeding her interests into projects through creative, out-of-the-box storyboarding. Rama strongly believes that multidisciplinary perspectives enrich design thinking and trigger critical discourses. She now works full-time as an Architectural Writer and several of her articles have been published on renowned platforms.

References:

[1] Erwine, B. (2016). Creating Sensory Spaces. Routledge. [2] Qibla: the direction oSf the Kaaba (the sacred building at Mecca) which Muslims face during prayer. [3] Bait Ur Rouf Mosque: https://www.dezeen.com/2017/03/05/bait-ur-rouf-mosque-dhaka-bangladesh-marina-tabassum-brick-aga-khan-award/ [4] Jun'ichirō Tanizaki. (2019). In praise of shadows. Vintage Digital. [5] Bhunga Huts of Kutch: https://sahasa.in/2020/09/03/bhunga-house-a-traditional-mud-house-of-kutch/ [6] Fireplace for children- https://www.archdaily.com/43809/fireplace-for-children-haugenzohar-arkitekter [7] Polytopes has Greek etymology- Poly: Many; topes- place. Polytopes designed by Iannis Xennakis used Cartesian coordinates to play music and light flashes from multiple points to create a dynamic experience. [8] Teshima Art Museum- https://findshikoku.com/articles/6LOWm [9] Power of Olfactory Space: https://www.architectural-review.com/essays/scents-of-place-the-power-of-the-olfactory [10] From the essay “The Place of Place in Memory” in the book Spatial recall: Memory in architecture and Landscape by Marc Treib. New York: Routledge. [11] Esref Armagan- https://www.trtworld.com/magazine/esref-armagan-a-blind-turkish-painter-who-sees-through-his-fingertips-53568 [12] Venice Pavilion 2016: https://www.dezeen.com/2016/05/29/forests-of-venice-pavilion-venice-architecture-biennale-2016-kjellander-sjoberg-folhem-wood/ [13] Quote by Juhani Pallasmaa in his essay “Space, Place, Memory, and Imagination: The Temporal Dimension of Existential Space” in the book Spatial recall: Memory in architecture and Landscape by Marc Treib. New York: Routledge. [14] Didi Contractor- https://www.architecturaldigest.in/content/meet-octogenarian-architect-speaks-language-mud-clay/ [15] Living roots bridges: https://www.meghalayatourism.in/experiences/living-root-bridges-2/

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The Art of Space: Exploring the impact of interior design on environments

An interior designer in an office looking outward

From the meticulously designed tombs of ancient Egypt to the thoughtfully planned office spaces of today, interior design has always been a versatile discipline. Throughout its history, the core purpose has remained constant: to shape functional and comfortable spaces that cater to the occupants' needs.

While aesthetics has undoubtedly played a role, humans have always strategically arranged furniture and utilized natural light sources to optimize their living areas. The placement of hearths and sleeping areas within homes reflected a deep understanding of spatial flow and the need for warmth and safety. This focus on functionality, even in the most basic sense, laid the foundation for developing interior design into the complex and influential field it is today.

Today, however, advancements in materials, construction methods, and integrated technology are propelling interior design, also referred to as interior architecture, forward into incredible new avenues of problem-solving. High-performance fabrics, sustainable materials, and innovative furniture designs are allowing for the creation of spaces that are not only beautiful but also environmentally responsible and adaptable to evolving needs.

Let's delve into some aspects of interior design that play a vital role in shaping the experience of a space.

The psychology of space:

Effective interior design involves having an understanding of psychological principles that can greatly influence the way people experience and interact with their surroundings. By considering factors such as human behavior, emotions, and cognitive processes, designers can create spaces that are not only visually appealing but also conducive to well-being.

One key psychological principle that informs interior design is the concept of environmental psychology, which studies how our physical environment affects our thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. For example, the use of natural elements like wood or plants can evoke a sense of tranquility and connection to nature, while incorporating bright colors can stimulate energy and creativity.

The principle of spatial perception also plays a crucial role in design. The arrangement of furniture and architectural elements can influence how people navigate and interact within a space, as well as how someone perceives its size and proportions. By strategically placing objects and creating clear pathways, designers can enhance flow and functionality while also creating a sense of balance and harmony.  

Color psychology:

A fascinating aspect of interior design, color psychology delves into how different colors can impact emotions and moods. Each color has its own psychological associations, with warm tones like red and orange often evoking feelings of energy, passion, and warmth, while cool tones like blue and green are known for their calming and soothing effects.

For example, a room painted in a soft blue hue may promote relaxation and tranquility, making it an ideal choice for a bedroom or meditation space. On the other hand, a vibrant yellow accent wall can inject a sense of joy and optimism into a living room or workspace.

By strategically incorporating various colors into a space, designers can create atmospheres that cater to specific emotions and activities. Whether it's using earthy tones for a grounded and nurturing feel or bold pops of color for a dynamic and stimulating environment, the possibilities are endless when it comes to harnessing the power of color in interior design.

Trends and innovations:  

Current trends in interior design focus on well-being by applying sustainability practices, biophilic design, and smart technology. Sustainable design practices, such as using eco-friendly materials and incorporating energy-efficient systems, are gaining popularity as people become more environmentally conscious. Biophilic design, which integrates natural elements like plants and natural light into indoor spaces, is also on the rise due to its proven benefits for mental and physical well-being.

Smart technology is another trend that is revolutionizing interior design, with features like smart lighting, automated blinds, and voice-controlled assistants becoming increasingly common in homes and commercial spaces. These innovations not only enhance convenience and efficiency but also contribute to creating a more connected and functional environment.

In terms of emerging innovations, virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) are poised to revolutionize the way designers conceptualize and present their ideas. With VR technology, clients can experience a space in 3D before it is even built, allowing for better decision-making and visualization. AR, on the other hand, enables designers to overlay digital elements onto the physical environment, offering endless possibilities for customization and personalization.

The power of design in different environments

While it is true most associate interior design with homes, skilled designers do play a vital role in shaping a wide range of environments, each with its unique set of considerations.

  • Healthcare facilities:  Interior design plays a crucial role in promoting patient well-being and recovery in healthcare settings. Designers create calming and healing environments by incorporating elements like natural light, biophilic design (incorporating nature), and layouts that promote patient privacy and dignity.
  • Educational institutions:  Well-designed classrooms can significantly enhance the learning experience. Interior designers incorporate elements that promote focus and collaboration, such as flexible furniture layouts, proper lighting for reading, and designated areas for group work. 
  • Workplaces:  A thoughtfully designed office fosters employee productivity, well-being, and collaboration. Designers create workspaces that cater to different work styles by incorporating areas for focused work, collaborative brainstorming sessions, and relaxation breaks.

An interior design case study: The Musée d'Orsay in Paris, France

The middle interior of the Musée d'Orsay (d'Orsay Museum)

  The Musée d'Orsay (Orsay Museum) in Paris, France is an incredible example of the power of interior design! Originally constructed in 1900 as a train station and hotel in the center of Paris, called the Gare d'Orsay (Orsay Train Station), the impressive building wasn't immediately suitable to house an impressive collection of the finest art in the world.

When it was converted into a museum in the 1970s, the interior had to be completely reimagined. Here's how interior design played a key role in this transformation:

  • Preserving the grandeur: Rather than segmenting the entire space into enclosed exhibition rooms, the station's impressive expansive main hall was preserved. This grand space provided an awe-inspiring backdrop for displaying large-scale artwork.
  • Creating functional galleries: Exhibition spaces were created on multiple floors alongside the main hall. Italian designer Gae Aulenti used similar stone flooring and walls throughout, creating a sense of unity and allowing the artwork to take center stage providing an enriching experience for visitors.
  • Integrating natural light: Aulenti also ensured natural light played a significant role by incorporating skylights and strategically placing the galleries to maximize the use of the existing glass roof. Artificial lighting was carefully designed to complement the natural light and showcase the artwork effectively.

The traditional approach to earning an interior design degree

What degree do you need to be an interior designer? One option involves obtaining a degree from an interior design school on a university campus. These programs typically last four years and provide a foundation in design principles, space planning, building codes, materials and finishes, color theory, and computer-aided design (CAD) software.

This might not be ideal for everyone with busy work and life schedules. An online option might offer more flexibility.

Design your future with OHIO Online

The growing popularity of online education has opened new opportunities for those looking to learn how to become an interior designer.

OHIO Online’s Interior Architecture degree leverages technology and the virtual studio concept to prepare future designers for success in the 21st century in residential and non-residential settings. You'll develop an understanding of how architectural elements interact, enabling you to design spaces that cater to the physical, psychological, social, and intellectual well-being of people in a variety of contexts.

Whether you're a working professional seeking a career change or a high school student thriving in online environments, OHIO Online offers a compelling alternative to the traditional on-campus experience. This fully online program provides exceptional flexibility:

  • Tailored pace: Choose full or part-time enrollment with terms starting three times a year (Fall, Spring, Summer).
  • Accelerated options: Graduate sooner by enrolling in a full summer course schedule.
  • Immersive learning: Most classes are offered in intensive 7-week sessions, allowing you to focus deeply on a smaller course load.

If you are looking for a career that offers a unique blend of creativity, problem-solving, and technical knowledge, the interior design field presents a rewarding career path. Learn more about how OHIO’s online interior design degree program can help you turn your design dreams into reality.

SpaceX launches next-gen US spy satellites and sticks the landing (video)

Liftoff of the NROL-146 mission occurred at 4 a.m. ET.

SpaceX launced a pioneering set of spy satellites for the U.S. government early on Wednesday morning (May 22).

A Falcon 9 rocket carried the NROL-146 mission for the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) to space after liftoff from California's Vandenberg Space Force Base at 4 a.m. EDT (0800 GMT; 1 a.m. local California time).

We don't know much about the payloads sent to space as part of the NROL-146 mission, which isn't surprising; the NRO typically reveals little about its satellites ' activities and capabilities. For the same reason, there was no footage of the stages of the Falcon 9 rocket separating.

Related: SpaceX launches US spy satellite, lands rocket in flawless Easter flight

A view from a Falcon 9 rocket as it launches to lift the NROL-146 mission to space

Around six minutes after launch, the first stage of the Falcon 9 rocket began its entry burn, a key step in its safe return to Earth. 

A Falcon 9 rocket comes in for landing on the droneship of Course I Still Love You

The first stage touched down on the drone ship Of Course I still Love You, stationed in the Pacific Ocean, around nine minutes after launch. This was the 16th launch and landing for this particular Falcon 9 first stage rocket, according to SpaceX. 

An image of a Falcon 9 first stage on the drone ship Of Course I still Love you after sucessfully launching the NROL-146 mission on May 22

In a prelaunch mission description , NRO stated that NROL-146 will be "the first launch of NRO's proliferated architecture." The agency explained a bit more about that architecture when discussing the mission's tagline, "Strength in Numbers."

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That motto "describes the NRO's new strategy of a proliferated overhead architecture — numerous, smaller satellites designed for capability and resilience," NRO officials wrote.

It's therefore probably safe to assume that multiple small satellites launched as part of the NROL-146 misison, rather than a single bulky spacecraft.

Editor's note: This story was updated on May 22 with news of successful launch and rocket landing.

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A SpaceX mission description didn't say where the satellites are headed or give an expected time for their deployment, details that SpaceX usually includes for non-classified missions.

Wednesday morning's launch was the 52nd orbital liftoff for SpaceX in 2024. Of this year's 52 launches to date, 36 have been devoted to building out the company's Starlink broadband constellation.

Join our Space Forums to keep talking space on the latest missions, night sky and more! And if you have a news tip, correction or comment, let us know at: [email protected].

Michael Wall is a Senior Space Writer with  Space.com  and joined the team in 2010. He primarily covers exoplanets, spaceflight and military space, but has been known to dabble in the space art beat. His book about the search for alien life, "Out There," was published on Nov. 13, 2018. Before becoming a science writer, Michael worked as a herpetologist and wildlife biologist. He has a Ph.D. in evolutionary biology from the University of Sydney, Australia, a bachelor's degree from the University of Arizona, and a graduate certificate in science writing from the University of California, Santa Cruz. To find out what his latest project is, you can follow Michael on Twitter.

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WASHINGTON — A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on May 22 launched an undisclosed number of small spacecraft into orbit for the National Reconnaissance Office.

The Falcon 9 lifted off from Vandenberg Space Force Base, California, at 4:00 a.m. Eastern.

The classified mission, designated NROL-146, was SpaceX’s 52nd launch of the year and the Falcon 9’s fifth launch for the NRO.

After separation from the upper stage, the rocket’s first stage, which flew its 16th mission, landed on a drone ship stationed in the Pacific Ocean.

essay on space architecture

At the request of the NRO, SpaceX did not show images of the rocket’s upper stage and ended the webcast after the first stage landed, marking the company’s 310th recovery of a first-stage booster.

The NRO designs and operates classified U.S. government surveillance and intelligence satellites. NROL-146 is the agency’s first deployment of a new imaging satellite constellation built by SpaceX and Northrop Grumman.

The NRO has not disclosed how many satellites were launched on this mission or the projected size of the new constellation. Agency officials previously said six launches are planned in 2024 for the NRO’s proliferated architecture of small satellites.

The NRO said it aims to quadruple the number of spacecraft in orbit. Officials said smaller, more numerous satellites will allow for far more frequent revisits of critical areas of interest, leading to faster delivery of crucial intelligence. 

“This mission is the first launch of the NRO’s proliferated systems featuring responsive collection and rapid data delivery,” the NRO said in a statement. “NROL-146 represents the first launch of an operational system following demonstrations in recent years to verify cost and performance.”

Sandra Erwin

Sandra Erwin writes about military space programs, policy, technology and the industry that supports this sector. She has covered the military, the Pentagon, Congress and the defense industry for nearly two decades as editor of NDIA’s National Defense... More by Sandra Erwin

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Computer Science > Machine Learning

Title: mambats: improved selective state space models for long-term time series forecasting.

Abstract: In recent years, Transformers have become the de-facto architecture for long-term sequence forecasting (LTSF), but faces challenges such as quadratic complexity and permutation invariant bias. A recent model, Mamba, based on selective state space models (SSMs), has emerged as a competitive alternative to Transformer, offering comparable performance with higher throughput and linear complexity related to sequence length. In this study, we analyze the limitations of current Mamba in LTSF and propose four targeted improvements, leading to MambaTS. We first introduce variable scan along time to arrange the historical information of all the variables together. We suggest that causal convolution in Mamba is not necessary for LTSF and propose the Temporal Mamba Block (TMB). We further incorporate a dropout mechanism for selective parameters of TMB to mitigate model overfitting. Moreover, we tackle the issue of variable scan order sensitivity by introducing variable permutation training. We further propose variable-aware scan along time to dynamically discover variable relationships during training and decode the optimal variable scan order by solving the shortest path visiting all nodes problem during inference. Extensive experiments conducted on eight public datasets demonstrate that MambaTS achieves new state-of-the-art performance.

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    SpaceX launched the first batch of satellites for the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office's "proliferated architecture" early Wednesday morning (May 22).

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