Earlier today, Patrik Schumacher of Zaha Hadid Architects posted a nearly 1,400 word polemic on Facebook denouncing contemporary architecture criticism and defending the “star-system” that has been instrumental in his firm’s success in the last few decades. Instead of “seeing conspicuity and success merely as a red cloth and occasion to knock down icons (and to teach the virtues of the ordinary, obscure and underappreciated),” Schumacher suggests that the role of the architecture critic should be to explicate and defend the work and status of successful architects to an ignorant public.
Schumacher sets out some “heuristic principles” that he hopes could guide his proposed role for the architecture critic. He states that so-called “iconic architecture” is the invention of critics rather than “the architects’ discourse,” which “serves the purpose of filling the explanatory gap that inevitably opens up because the methodology and motivation behind the unusual appearance of a radically innovative design cannot be fully explained to the general public.” Basically, Schumacher says that the visual appearance of the work of his firm (and, presumably, unstated others) emerges from complex relations to site and program. That the result appears as “iconic” to the public is merely a symptom of more “radical architectural innovation” that the general public simply cannot understand. Working under his often-stated assumption that his methodology will define the future of architecture, Schumacher says that the iconic status of their buildings is an inevitability until “our methodology and style becomes more widespread.” And it helps with the clients, he adds.
In a similar manner, Schumacher defends the “star-system,” while also dismissing it as an invention of the critic. His basic sentiment here is that “starchitects,” as they are commonly-called, achieve that status through “a long, competitive process of peer selection.” The system helps prevent the usurpation of status from “falling prey to the superficial, short-lived spectacles of the charlatan epigones.” (Woah!) Like a commercial brand, Schumacher argues that a starchitect must still be able to deliver quality work in order to maintain their legitimacy. And like brands, they help condense complexity into legible form for the, once again, assumedly ignorant masses.
Schumacher concludes by condescendly relegating the role of the critic. He states, “The critics only distil [sic] what the expert discourse among architects and architectural theorists has already selected and confirmed through a proliferating influence within the discipline.” Then, moving from vinegar to honey, Schumacher suggests “the foregrounding of the underlying innovative possibilities and the (if sometimes only partial) rationality of the stars’ oeuvre could be attempted as a worthy task for the critics’ informed intelligence and eloquence.”
Schumacher makes some legitimate points in his Facebook rant. Certainly, the idea of the starchitect emerges, in part, from the reduction of complex discourses by critics for a larger audience. But his general elitism is hard to stomach, as is his continued insistence on the perpetuation of a hermeneutic architectural field. Architecture criticism and “the architects’ discourse” have never been, and shouldn’t be, considered distinctly separate. Some of the most fruitful work of the last few decades, it seems, has come out of alliances between critics and architects. And I’m wary, generally, of any architect who tries to preempt critique (of their own work) by relegating the work of criticism to that of explanation. Criticism is not mere explanation of “complex innovations,” (which oftentimes only appear that innovative to their author), but a necessary mode of, yes, translation, but also of critique as critique. Moreover, it seems to me that if “the general public” can’t understand a work of architecture, than perhaps its merits aren’t so great after all. Architecture should not exist only for the propagation of its own discourse. Architecture constructs and instructs lived experience by spacing individuals and objects in relation to one another. Architecture should first and foremost be oriented around this fundamental act, not around the hermeneutics of its own obfuscated rhetoric.
I could go on – there’s a lot to be said about the way Schumacher seems to maintain rather outdated and elitist aspects of architecture, particularly its self-isolating tendencies. Schumacher assumes that criticism of “starchitecture” emerges primarily from jealousy and superficial readings, in the process affirming probably the most salient critique of it: namely, that the current socioeconomic system in which the most visible architectures exist today perpetuates outmoded distinctions between high and low architect/-ures and isolates architecture from necessary interactions with the public and political sphere. I actually agree that critics should spend less time trying to bring down so-called "starchitects," and more time on the more pressing realities facing the field, such as housing shortages, climate change, economic instability, militarism, etc (all of which continue, at great cost, to be largely relegated to the outside of the "architects' discourse.")
Oh, and, as a note, by "charlatan epigones," he probably means you.
165 Comments
everything is awesome
Ever thus to Epigones.
The douchebag comes and goes, and we still talk about it incessantly. Who's the loser, us or them (Z+P)?
Orhan, as always has the best word.
I can very much assure you Zaha and Schumacher are not the losers. You may not like their style, but the substance - the possibilities of computational/ parametric (I prefer the term Objectile - a la Bernhard Cache) design are amazing, and not going away any time soon.
Just because something uses parametric techniques does not mean it has to be blobby or angular or "look like a dragon."
I would encourage everyone to embrace the technology and make it their own - anyone who use ArchiCAD or Revit is already using the technology, it just needs to be talked about, made explicit and then truly interrogated and used to its full extent, of which Revit and most users thereof do an abysmal job.
Architecture because we can!
oh man this thread's downward spiral convinced me Schumacher or Smacker! (as fineprint keeps typing ) is right about everything!
Philosophers can talk about everything, he said that.
Architects can't, I think he said that as well.
This is all true.
so why you smart political kids go off and be political and rage against neo-whatever liberally, like a bad Sesame Street PBS campaign, I think we are all missing the ticket to the revolution!
Parametricism!
Paremetrics in it's own way is the closest thing to Artificial Intelligence in architecture.
The pinnacle of all theories in raging manifestos is that thought can become itself a being!
Artificial intelligence of proposals, theorems, deducts, and what-not's; these are the purposes of a fully enclosed comprehensive MAN-ifestos!
Men want their thoughts to be automated producers while we all get diabetic on sodas and confirm craft is the pinnacle of life - as we dwindle away in front of smart phones, i-pads, and other bullshit interfaces to the spirit of humanity - THE INTERNET!
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you kids keep screaming about poverty, rights, unfair world, illegal governments, NSA spying on your asses (not that they give a fuck about your liberal statements, trust me they don't, but for some reason a very reliable source told me Will Smith takes-up 1100 pages of NSA documentation - Get Jiggy With it?....)
anyway, keep avoiding the obvious solution!
Parametrics.
Once you get the stupid rich people, and most are stupid (that's why they hire smart people) to spend all their money on Parametrics - a Zaha Hadid urban plan will at it's own will liberate the poor....
A parametric building will devour slums and favelas and spit out clean water running places for citizen's who give a fuck.
The parameters like a parking meter will take the money of the rich and then do whatever they want - preferably JUSTICE!
like a Virus, the Parameters set for the poor will take the rich's money and re-build the cities to oasis for all - so we all can become diabetic junkies sitting in front of computers all day.
did I get that right?
hold on, this FB post was about the knuckleheads in the media thinking every architect should be a Jesuit missionary and avoid the very sources of architectural production - CAPITAL!
Parametrics will convert CAPITAL TO JUSTICE.
Orhan is right - I'm jamming to Frank Zappa - Gumbo Variations at the moment
HOT RATS
sesame street isn't bad. sesame street is a good thing.
curtkram Sesame Street is full of stereotypes based on the Village....
not good.
homeless man
hippy dude on acid (no one ever saw snuffaluffagus until recently)
two dudes that live together
Parametrics.
side not: if you read the text above the urban parametrics image (like actually read it) you'll note the image moves slightly - at least for me....slightly creepy.
Parametrics = Architectural Artificial Intelligence
I'm sorry, but the Nicholas Korody, Orhan and Olaf have it right.
Having a "who cares" whatever mentality doesn't really get you anywhere. In most cases it leads directly to fascism....
Is that how we describing the free-market now? Well, maybe we agree on something.
Free market? Hahahaha.
b3, do you believe that people choose to eat Mcdonalds and to live in mcmansions? if they cant even influence the food they directly purchase how could they possibly influence large scale architecture and urbanism? The market is not free...
parametrics is a tool and only as good as the data its fed... in the hands of the rich and their architect whores that data is most likely not geared towards improving the lives of the 99%.
The critics and media are responsible for creating the icon/star system and also help explain the radical avant guard position to a general public that is incapable of understanding the complexities of Schumacher's methodology and style. Yet when parametricism becomes wide spread there won't be a need for these critics, yet they are an inevitable part of a system by creating value for the client who needs their stamp of approval to help explain what average people will never understand.
It's an interesting argument and definitely full of ideas that understandably sometimes contradict each other, but it's clear that Patrick and the other icon/stars rely on the mass media to sell their work to the public, aka 'non experts' in the architectural discourse.
Looking back historically, there have always been stars and icons in architecture. We love both and our culture has always relied on them. Take Palladio or Richardson. Super stars of their time. The trouble with Mr. Schumacher's argument, if one can call it that, is that in the past there never was a necessity to have the work explained to the general public. It held up both at the academic level and on the street. As a card holding member of the general public, I need help understanding some of Mr. Schumacher's sentences like...
"Elsewhere I have written about the instrumentality of appearances, information-rich environments, the built environment as semiological system and about the inevitability of navigating the environment (and indeed the social world in general) on the basis of aesthetic appeal and repulsion."
And while I may never understand the information-rich ideas Mr. Schumacher traffics, his bullshit-rich semantics is clear as day to anyone who's attended architecture school.
i enjoy the discussion. ... let me add:
architectural values, trends, reputations are created in a bottom up aggregation and amplification process that is similar to markets, but the discourse of a discipline is no market in the strict sense because money is not the medium here and commercial success only an external, secondary factor. however, architects also compete in markets for clients and here the independently sustained architectural reputation becomes an asset as star status functions as a brand which helps clients to cope with their information problem. brands are proxies or reasonable substitutes for first hand experience.
you might be critical of these structures and mechanisms but i think its necessary to understand what they achieve before ripping into them. this does not mean that critique of these institutions is wrong, it just means that i would like to set the bar a bit higher and expect constructive criticism rather than gut reactions that simply want demolish or abolish.
oh thayer, at least pick a sentence thats actually confusing or actually filled with bullshit.
Patrik -
I'm sorry but I can't understand why you complain about constructive criticism while you ignore that which was offered on this very thread (see my last post on the first page), or how you can claim to be a victim of neoliberalism while simultaneously being the champion of it, or your comment that architectural values, trends, reputations are created in a bottom up aggregation and amplification process that is similar to markets, which completely ignores the fact that most architecture - and yours especially and exclusively - caters to great financial wealth, unless that is the only market that is important, or more likely the only one that exists for you.
Please explain.
^ well put miles
I think its more a question of what architects should not do.
should i order the Mayweather vs Pacquiao fight? its $100?!? ..........anyway to fineprints point - salary employee means you have no connection to the "neo liberal capital",small business means you have a feel for it.....and when you get to PS level you are in it.......from my experience as small business and free lancer consultant anf somewhat employee of a small firm.......and given PS very German structured sentences...assuming Parametricist is PS, i think most crits are clueless assholes not trying to understand.......i do not think a journalist could ever get it all he flows of influences in a project, its not virtual theoretical, its virtual physical in architecture. Eventually "it" materializes. i think you play the game the best you can and you take care of people while you are doing it and if you can divert it for the better, you do so....miles i do not think you walk or flip tables like Jesus in the house of the lord (his father).
ok i accidently ordered the fight....if you in monmouth county NJ come on over.............Miles my parents were Christian Missionaries, they are now international teachers and my dad will be the superintendent in Hanoi, Vietnam for a US international school this fall........they did everything they could according to God's calling.......some douche bag republican bull shitting realtor asked me once how it felt to live off of other peoples money as I paid a $90 tab for a round drinks for 4 people in the Mandarin Orient Columbus Square, NYC....I remember my parents driving around Berlin wondering where the money would come from and my dad opened the car door and found 20 DM and we praised Jesus...I also remember the German family the Brauns who had a similar experience and guess what he gave that money and became a successful business man.......i never wanted to depend on Faith to keep me afloat...................i have much respect for my parents ability to put morals above all else... BUT you can not abandon capital in this, you have to embrace it with all its politics and perhaps you can interject a theory, a logic, that alters uhe course of greed........Miles your question is unfair and shitty journalism.
i ussed to live in monmouth county. damn.
damit Koense! exit 120 GSP, YO....just watched Lomenchenko kick some ass.......now Cruz vs Cayetano...........the bearded baseball cap white boys at the liqour store all are rooting Pacquiao because according to them Mayweather has had rigged fights......
105 yo!
Do you serve capital or does it serve you?
Does that depend where you are on the scale, or what your principles are?
for small business i think you get the option for both......Miles you posed the question that I think leads to a Paradoxical answer if taken as a concrete answer defined clearly at one moment in time..........what I mean by this, when you move on a scale your principles change accordingly. what we all hope is - when someone gets to the top they remember the bottom they came from? you know like Jenny from the Block ( j-lo)....but principles that work at the bottom do not work at the top. see Parametricist point above.......now Miles I know you are thinking this through, but do journalists? are journalists even aware of this? ........as an analogy to the major error in Logic we are discussing here; I presented this to a Cuban escaped to Miami comedian and he agreed... the Communist Manifesto's biggest error and accordingly a serious problem when properly considered - the working class can not rule. the working class can work. the ruling class can not work. the ruling class can rule. Remember Braveheart and de Bruce and his fathers relationship? the game changes at each level. SO.....PS presents an autonomous logic,apparently outside reality and what if accordind to Olaf it could do what it may do? All men are created equal....first meant for white property owners who wanted to avoid the King's taxes....now for all,all over the world......you dig? this ceuz vs catenyano fight is boring.....
red bank...ish? jay and silent bob and koense at a Wawa! podcast that!
koense, i have to ask you....Mall Rats - the movie.....does that sum up late 90's eary 2000's Monmouth county, NJ?
fight still hasnt started...
isn't zha still a small business? how many paid staff do you guys have? i have some other thoughts, but i know i'm an asshole so i'd rather wait until i'm not drinking to post them.
parametricist, i think you have a different perspective on the profession than i have, so i hope you continue to be active within this community. i know i disagree with you quite severely on a few points, so i hope you can temper the pains of the disagreements/trolling a little bit so i can understand where your view comes from. if i could understand the development of your philosophy better, it might help me to absorb it into my own a little better. somewhere our paths just sort of crossed a line in a different direction, and i'd like to figure out where.
i know this is a selfish request, but i also know you're a pretty smart guy despite our conclusions sometimes arriving at a different end. i think a public dialogue like this could sort of be a mentor-mentee type thing, but in a manner history hasn't seen due to the fact communication just works different now.
fineprint, I can list several...
1. should not work for/with nations that use slave labor or have inhumane working conditions
2. should not displace, disenfranchise , or disrespect local peoples (as commonly happens with certain large scale Olympics like projects...
3. should not degrade the planet by using toxic materials or by building glutonous works unless the social and cultural impact is significant enough to justify the sacrifice...
I do not believe that architecture can save the world, but I do belive that it can be used as a devise to further a destructive agenda (greed). Utopia is impossible, but Dystopia is very easy to achieve, and without resistence, inevitable.
principles that work at the bottom do not work at the top
How would you know? If your principles must be violated to get to the top your principles clearly aren't worth much. Or maybe the top is really the bottom.
Chris, Mallrats, summed up my experience in the late 80's - 90's. Monmouth Mall was the epitome of that movie. Especially the arcade. The only place in Monmouth that seemed to operate outside of that, Holmdel.
One of the guys in my wedding party, his cousin was in Clerks, cut out, and in Chasing Amy - he was the one talking about "finger-cuffs".
Ha, Ken, I knew it....first time I watched Clerks was in Studio in undergrad at Kansas, great movie and Kevin Smith supposedly did that on $25k in credit cards.....was in a Barnes and Nobles in Holmdel yesterday with daughters (4 & 7), walked out with a copy of "The History of Madness" by Foucalt and two beenie babies or something....off to North Jersey for some Christening or Baptism event at the Brownstone or somethin....
___
Miles, I'll give you an architectural example. Draftsmen = worker. Project Architect = ruler.
Let's say a firm has a fairly large job and one Draftsmen discovers a condition in the project that is very detailed and could lead to huge issues during construction.
The draftsmen discovers it because they have been spending 40 hours a week on that detail. The Project Architect ponders the the issue through, looks at their man hours and schedule and then decides to tell the Draftsmen to just "note it out, we will pick it up in construction".
The Draftsmen flips out and says no way the project will get built right now, but the Project Architect knows when and where they can essentially "cheat", "avoid thoughtful considerations of problems", etc...
Miles, that is a very basic example and does not seem at first to indicate Ethical decisions, but it does if you considered the detail to be a social condition and the entire project a nation, etc...
Curtkram, posting drunk is awesome! do it, haha
Not sure that is a good metaphor, Chris, or I'm missing the point. Maybe we're talking about different things. Or maybe you're PWI.
For many economics have become the only measure of value. The fight last night is a perfect example: the most expensive sporting event in history, biggest purse, temporary truce between fiercely competitive media empires, national celebrity event, etc. Who won? Showtime, HBO, MGM - even the loser was guaranteed $100m.
When money is the only thing that matters everything else is meaningless. Or to be more precise, anything done only for money is guaranteed to be shit. Do I need to make a list?
Can some one explain to me why Patrick Looks Like Big in, Sex and the City? You know the same guy who plays the Husband of Allesia in the "Good Wife." Guess those basic looks make me want to distrust what ever the guy has to say.
Miles,I am just saying you can not operate same at all levels and therefore not all principles at the bottom work at the top. principles can not be separated from modes of operations. in other words, you may have evey intention to maintain your principles, but sooner or later you will have to change them based on the level you oprate at to remain successful or grow..............now to your WSJ post have a great book on my shelf have not read in a while - something like - the illusive quest growth, which discusses in depth the points...........if you asked Satre, the world and its social organizations all started based on 'scarcity', so assuming the end is at 'abundance' makes sense.
Miles I took a photo of facts about the fight, as per HBO/Showtime...grossing more than the GDP OF 29 COUNTRIES.
So success necessitates abandonment of one's principles? For me that is the definition of failure.
As for "operating the same", each client / project requires different approaches / techniques / management etc. Those are not principles, but how you execute them is guided by your principles. Thus principles can not be separated from modes of operations.
Simplistic example: do you tell your potential client what they want to hear (that their palace can be built for their budget) or the truth (that their budget is sufficient to build a nice dog house)? The first will secure the project, the second will lose you the client. Or do you take them through the complete design / development / bidding exercise on a project you know full well that they can't afford just so that you can bang them for fees?
if i have a tenant that needs 3 offices and a place to put 4 workstations to run their small business which is operating on tight margins, and i provide architectural services to help them build out their infrastructure in such a way as to keep their small business running, aren't i helping to make the world a better place? i suppose that might depend in part on what that tenant is doing, but still, 'making the world a better place' doesn't have to be some big social change forced on people who don't want it, or a parametric starchitect project, or anything like that.
maybe there will be slave labor involved, or maybe the other indigenous tenants will be upset with core drilling, etc. etc. a lot of that really is outside my control, because means and methods are the responsibility of the contractor and i don't typically get to pick the contractor i like to work with. as a human being, if a tenant project i worked on causes the proliferation of human trafficking, or if hundreds of laborers are killed while changing the carpet, i would probably feel pretty bad. i might be able to talk to future tenants about the conditions of the place they're choosing to operate their business, and possibly suggest some potential solutions such as including workers rights agreements in the rfp or something, but some decisions just aren't made by the architect.
of course i can understand why you wouldn't want your name to be associated with that kind of behavior. perhaps that's where mile's conundrum with principles comes in? If you want to be famous, you have to work in UAE. if you want to work in UAE, you have to accept some common construction practices for what they are.
Curtkram, Helping to design a factory for Philip Morris, or a Juvenile Prison with a solitary confinement ward, would clearly feel "immoral" to most of us. The question is where do we personally draw the line? Its subjevtive. A gas chamber? A building for a uranium mining operation in the grand canyon? A fast food joint in a poor area? A condo tower in a gentrifying area? A chemical plant next to a 3rd world town? A soccer stadium over a 600 year old working class neighborhood? A Mc mansion on virgin desert? What about one on virgin forest? These all vary in their level of destructiveness...Where do we draw that line? we all have one. You are only disagreeing with me on the degree of destructivness that is acceptable to you..not saying that its a free for all..correct? Morality is a personal line we draw...PS seems to be attempting to create a philosophy that denies the existence of this line and its relevance...which im saying is impossible... and therfore his philosophy/position is more of an opinion about where that line should be drawn...it is not an absolute idea, ism, or philosophy, but rather a personal opinion on the acceptable degree of moral turpitude. To which, I disagree!
Miles, as you say it depends on the client.......here is another example where principles and mode of operations come in conflict.........let's say your number one principle in life is to be On Time. so one day you have to deliver your kid to some event and for you to get there you have to operate your car at 100 miles per hour. the mode of operation required to achieve your main principle in life will require to you to risk attempted manslaughter charges (most states will hit you with that if you are driving 100+ mph with a passenger) or in other words go against perhaps other principles. i think it is more than obvious what works at the bottom will not work at the top and what seems ethical for a journalist will not seem relevant, as curtkram points out, because the question is not within the control of the architect or even frankly systematically related.
My example was of the choices facing the architect, not the client.
Let's agree to define principles as the guiding sense of the requirements and obligations of right conduct with the understanding that while this varies from person to person it is in fact a fairly consistent set of ethics that prohibits one from harming others.
Jia, I don't think I'm disagreeing with you at all. I agree our moral compass plays a role in decisions we make. Mostly I was saying in response to fineprint that the world doesn't become better all at once, it becomes better one person at a time.
if principles are guides, then they are hardly mandatory or absolute. Therefore, modes of operations may and do compromise or redirect the intentions of principles based on circumstances.
the world doesn't become better all at once, it becomes better one person at a time
+++ curt
modes of operations may and do compromise or redirect the intentions of principles based on circumstances
You're starting to sound like PS here. Only if you allow your principles to be compromised. Your choice, but you principles may be pretty weak or weakly adhered too if you do. Think Ghandi or MLK.
I feel the same about "global" architecture the same way I do about anything that grows large for the sake of growth: disgusted.
If your goal is domination, your goal sucks. If, through making good work, you become globally desired, great. Then you get to tread the knife's edge of doing good work without being sucked into the cycle of growth too large to be sustained with good work and projects too large to be done well with your current level of size.
Craft beer is great, but why does ever brewery seem to want to saturate the market? What happened to being excellent in your local area, both geographically and philosophically?
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