by Elen Jones
Is there still a place for pen and paper in the Digital age?
Architectural drawings are not just blueprints or the 2D versions of scaled toothpick models. They help to convey the purpose of a building, to inquire if the use of space is truly effective, to note information helpful to a creative process, or even to research Architectural anomalies, (phenomena), and their socio-political or economic impact on societal functions. In the digital age, with computers to create technical plans in half the time, already interconnected with data and to greater precision than any pen or pencil drawing, let us reassess the importance of drawn depictions – and the vitality they exude from the page.
Trained in Milan, Lina Bo Bardi moved to Brazil, finding her life in post-war Italy a challenge and, with her husband, in search of a blank canvas. A well regarded architect, she was just as enamoured by the physicality and skill required to build and construct as she was by the ideology and messages that would permeate her design. She was not known to produce 'standard' architectural drawings, though a skilled and notable draughtsman. Instead, she used pens, paints, watercolours and brushes, which help to characterise her childlike style. There is a naivety in her drawing, but it's almost always appropriate. Left, a preliminary study for MASP (Museu de Arte de Sao Paulo) conveys the optimism of the project and its cultural offering.
RICARDO
BOFILL
Then again, he also creates buildings so removed from reality in their stacked form and vibrant colours appear to be out of this world, explaining their appeal for film directors and tourists. His work certainly divides people, some in awe of its scale and others repelled by how ‘tacky’ it is, especially compared to a subdued modernist palette.
ROBERT
VENTURI AND DENISE SCOTT BROWN
Their writing is sardonic, but honest. If we were to bring their research into a more 21st century conversation, it would perhaps touch on the appropriation of cultural references and styles, and the inflated architectural and obvious projects which world leaders and billionaires take on, often with little regard for others. A particular example is of the horrible clash of fonts on the Caesar’s palace sign – referencing Ancient Rome, 1930’s Hollywood and the Paris Metro all at once. Las Vegas today is even more of an agglomeration, a sprawling metropolis, where you can find New York, Venice and Paris simultaneously. And all of this in a desert with temperatures soaring above 40 degrees Centigrade in the summer and with the whole population reliant on Lake Mead reservoir and the Colorado river. Venturi and Scott Brown begin to capture the architectural, geographical and planning absurdities of the place.
BUCKMINSTER FULLER
The drawing (below) of Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic sphere is perfect. Fuller had visions of these spheres forming what could be floating cities, and certainly here it appears weightless, composed of only thin red lines and without a perimeter, except the denser area to the sides, reflecting the curvature of the shape. Seen in 3D form (left) his more moderate aim of creating areas under which utilitarianism could flourish- ideas of working towards common aims for the common good above selfish desire.
However, here begins a contradiction. Architects have long seen the problem of a lack of interconnectivity to be solvable by creating transparent, or at least vast, communal areas, whether this is Roger’s Millennium Dome (O2 arena) or the Great Exhibition Crystal Palace (1851). They are supposed to be democratising, but can often feel cavernous, soulless, especially if they do not take on the hub of activity that their form requires ie a clear function. Living in a geodesic dome could be utopic, even crime free. But it could also be a trapping, surveillance state, isolated both in geography and time, and only honouring the vision of one individual. Fuller’s drawing is no doubt mathematically beautiful, but one can’t help wondering about the practicality of his technologically and ecologically aided alternate-reality.
DANIEL
LIBESKIND
Very few of Libeskind’s early works could be described as buildings. They are conceptual and assembled like art compositions, exploring fragmentation and the nature of architectural space. In these projects he challenges the traditional expectation of architecture, carried through from the enlightenment period. The drawing itself in in some sections seems to have depth and dimension, but other aspects it is flat and ambiguous. These different projections means that the compositions have a certain dynamism and a sense of time, acting like cubist paintings, able to capture multiple facets and faces of the interlocking shapes. Not only this, but each face is also drawn on a different plane, some axonometric, some vertical, some horizontal and some driving straight into the page.
Libeskind urges that this drawing represents more than just the breaking down of form or the shadows of objects. It is ‘more than a resignation to the inertia of convention’. This is true, as the lack of conventional walls and perimeters breaks the boundary between internal and external space. His work is hard to understand, being so Avant Garde and intellectually supported. But this drawing provides at least a small insight into how Libeskind goes about planning his compositions in their physicality.
HERZOG & DE MEURON
The final essential drawing in my list depicts the present and future of architectural practice. A Building Information modelling (BIM) representation: this drawing is super smart, drawing upon data from multiple sources. This can be generated by software and built up so that all can be reflected in a visual representation. Everyone involved in the project can work on the drawing, so it becomes an extremely useful tool. This particular image is a print taken from the BIM plan of the Elbphilharmonie (2016), an innovative extension of an existing warehouse in Hamburg. It displays the role of an architect in co-ordinating construction. The layers of the model seen here display the air supply and servicing of the project, vital to prevent too much fluctuation in the environment, given that the building houses a concert hall. The undulating roof displays the character of the building and of the music that drifts from inside the main auditorium. A cross sectional image of the building can be seen above.
IMAGES AND SOURCES
Thomas, Helen (2018). Drawing Architecture: The Finest Architectural Drawings Through the Ages. Phaidon Press.
Lina Bo Bardi
https://drawingmatter.org/lina-bo-bardi-public-plaza-and-museum-of-art-sao-paolo/
Ricardo Bofill
Venturi
https://www.phaidon.com/agenda/architecture/articles/2018/september/20/robert-venturi-dies-aged-93/
https://americansuburbx.com/2012/11/venturi-scott-brown-learning-from-las-vegas.html
Buckminster Fuller
https://drawingmatter.org/buckminster-fuller/
https://www.architecturaldigest.com/gallery/buckminster-fuller-architecture
Zaha Hadid
Herzog & de Meuron
https://drawingmatter.org/herzog-de-meuron/
Daniel Libeskind
http://fineartdrawinglca.blogspot.com/2017/02/the-drawings-of-daniel-libeskind.html
https://www.pinterest.it/pin/560064903637566835/
Comments
Post a Comment
Comments with names are more likely to be published.