Thursday, February 19, 2009

Books and Architecture


One of the reasons for FAT's flirtation (I was going to say interest, but that implies dry academicism, rather than a love that dare not speak its name) with architectural post modernism is the fact that for a number of years we only bought architecture books from the remainder book shop on Islington's Upper Street.

The shop operated on a ten year lag, selling end of print copies of once fashionable architectural theory that had fallen out of favour. At the time - the mid to late 1990's - this mainly meant Architecture Design specials on Post Modernism, Rizzoli monographs on Charles Moore and James Wines and - slightly beyond the pale even for our depraved tastes - Michael Graves. Along with a book on the wooden architecture of Russia and an anonymous collection of gothic drawings, these formed our principle influences. High on this toxic mix of the unfashionable and the unspeakable we thought we had chanced upon a little corner of architecture that we could call our own. Certainly no one else wanted it.



The Rem Koolhaas and Bernard Tschumi books stayed on our office shelves (alongside, for some reason, Jane's Fighting Ships and a book on the Hungerford massacre), their supposed radicalism appearing suddenly pallidly tasteful compared to architectural apostates like Stanley Tigerman and Ricardo Bofill We discovered something else too, which is that if you stop looking at the same stuff as everyone else, strange things happen to your architecture. Most obviously it stops looking like everyone elses' architecture.

The relationship between fashion and architecture is a thorny one. Reference to it usually involves formal analogies between cladding and clothing, or, more literally still, collaborations between architects and fashion designers. Very rarely are the fashion cycles within architecture itself considered. Architecture is generally considered to be above such things, aloof in its timelessness from ephemeral preoccupations and trivial matters of style. This aloofness is slightly absurd, only serving to draw attention to an underlying anxiety. There is nothing as troubling as the recently fashionable, nothing so unwanted or dangerous to one's self belief. Fashion works as a form of Orwellian un-think, a cultural amnesia that allows us to believe that the present is infinitely preferable to the past, always has been and always will. I wear skinny jeans. I will always wear skinny jeans. Oceania is at war with Eastasia. Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia.



At any one time various theoretical and formal trends seem to push a number of people in the same direction at once. At architecture school for instance, there are always a small number of books that change hands feverishly, forming a closed circuit of influences until they fall out of favour. Mark Cousins gave a lecture at the Architectural Association once where he observed the impact this process had on the school library. For a while all the books by Deleuze and Guatarri would be out on loan and then, suddenly, they were all back and everyone was borrowing books on bird migration and wave formation.

In my local library there are no books by Deleuze and Guattari and only a couple on wave formation. The architecture section is bracingly random and contains nothing published within the last five years. Unlike the remainder book store it doesn't represent the fag end of a particular point in time either. It is in fact a potentially richer experience, one that could take you in any number of unexpected directions. Like only buying clothes from a slightly ageing mail order catalogue a certain idiosyncrasy of style is guaranteed.

I've been going there a lot lately, mainly to expand my Robert Wyatt collection, but the architecture and design section is a new joy to me. This is what I've read so far: a book on the early work of Philip Johnson, some Pevsner, a dictionary of architectural styles that ends at the Neue Sacklikeit, a Shell guide to ruined monastries and Terry Farrel's autobiography. Very little on parametric modelling basically. Next week I'm hoping to check out Elizabethan building techniques and the history of Playboy. Coupled with watching Doctor Who and the Pyramids of Mars and listening to this, the implications for architecture, as my old tutor used to say, are endless.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Strange News From Another Star


St. Blaize has kindly sent me this link to Jonathon Haeber's amazing flickr site featuring photographs of the recently abandoned Neverland ranch. Tragic, ghoulish and macabre in equal measure really, especially the stone bas relief depicting Jackson leading the children of the world into the grounds of his spooky mansion.

The photograph above is of the entrance to the private railway station, the sort of toy/folly beloved of 19th century European aristocrats. There is much to be said for the idea of the picturesque garden as a narcissistic fantasy placing the owner at the centre of a shrunken, ersatz depiction of the world. Wacko Jacko's is merely a belated example albeit with more uncomfortable and unpleasant contemporary associations. And one that has been even quicker to ruination.

Monday, February 16, 2009

The Collection of the King of Pop

Yesterday's Observer Music Monthly featured the contents of Michael Jackson's Neverland Mansion, which are soon to be auctioned off in Beverley Hills. The catalogue for the auction represents quite possibly the world's strangest museum. Part regal, part childish and entirely narcissistic, the character of the collection is like a hybrid of Jeff Koons, Louis XIV, Citizen Kane, Ludwig II of Bavaria and Toys'R'Us. Most of the objects seem to exist in a closed circuit of self-obsession: bizarre self-portraits, stage costumes, awards and hundreds of objects with mirrored surfaces that must have reflected a thousand tiny Michaels as he stared into their pointless opulence.



The collection includes a chrome and gold plated espresso machine, a velvet and ermine robe, a single white Billie Jean glove, a mirrored model of Falkenstein Castle in Texas and various paintings of Jackson himself, mostly depicting him as a member of the Royal Family. Most disturbing of all is a painting of various famous figures, some fictional, including the Mona Lisa, Abraham Lincoln and E.T. all wearing Jackson's iconic white glove and sunglasses.



The Neverland mansion was sold on last year and renamed more prosaically Sycamore Valley Ranch after Jackson became a kind of nomadic recluse following his child abuse trial. Neverland itself was a queasy picturesque landscape designed by a child - literally as Macauley Culkin is credited as joint designer - where the follies and grottoes have been replaced by fairground rides and miniature trains. There is a short video of the park which was open to child visitors here and a map describing it via boingboing. All this has been sold off too and the famous Neverland gates now sit outside a warehouse in LA.