Archinect
anchor

A (Hard-Boiled) Response to 5 (student) Projects

brooklyn.fv

The Brooklyn 5, aka The Architect's Half Dozen: a group of egg-cellent creations completed in Brooklyn Heights by 5 young architects (and an unsuspecting lawyer) one steamy Easter Sunday. Each of the 5 is sited on paper towels on or adjacent to some Ikea furniture. Each project focused on the institution of celebrating rebirth, loosely defined by religion, hollowness, and color. These commonalities became a framework for Prosecco-infused discussion that illuminated individual polemics and debate about experimentation in today’s archit-egg-tural landscape. Despite the initial appearance of diversity within the set, each project sought to address a common set of ideas emerging organically (and cage-free) within the discourse of architecture at large (or were they medium-sized?).

 

Primarily addressing the legacy of Postmortem-ism (in its various gauzes and forms), each artist sought to engage childhood memories, local flavor, and a renewed concern for the reciprocity between dye and vinegar. Each was interested in a delicate or speckle-ative way to use sponges, and their associated values of porosity, special brushes, and plastic dippers to produce new combinations of pastels. In that sense, each sought a contemporary way to learn from the past that would have particular resonance in today’s social, political, and cultural omelet.

 

The identity of the group of 5 remains hidden (much like their creations; coincidentally, the prize for discovery is a big chocolate bunny) and is meant as a provocation toward two related issues: the desire for individuality and expression by today’s younger generation of architects (who, let's be honest, may be a little too old for this particular endeavor) incubated in a world of Whites and Grays; and secondly, the desire for consensus within this (breakfast) course on what counts today as crackable and seculo-theological concerns for architecture. The inspiration behind the feature is to reveal an inside joke which demonstrates an effort to poke fun at a set of ideas that previously were published in several daily architecture productions. The feature was hatched by a couple of eggheads with a little too much time on their hands, apparently.

 
Apr 25, 11 3:21 pm
mini_clips

This was hilarious, entertaining to read, and intelligently thought out - unlike a lot of archi-babble out there. Thank you for making my day more enjoyable...

Apr 25, 11 9:26 pm  · 
 · 
marcitect

Eggmen.

 

Go big or go home.

You should only need one paragraph for satire, and three for critique.

 

-The Walrus.

May 3, 11 12:20 pm  · 
 · 

Block this user


Are you sure you want to block this user and hide all related comments throughout the site?

Archinect


This is your first comment on Archinect. Your comment will be visible once approved.

  • ×Search in: