dinsdag 30 april 2013
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Battlefield Bushwick
Slowly an unsuspected offensive is penetrating the interior
of Brooklyn, strategic pawns are placed in battle formation, driving the
natives from the current frontier of Bushwick. Here the signs of battle mark
the façades of old warehouses that have fallen into disuse. Now, they are
scarred by brush strokes like blood streaks of large murals announcing the
arrival of the gentrifying army: the artists. The first stage of the battle is
written in paint and graffiti. The infiltrators slowly appropriate the expressive
building-high typical murals of the local Spanish-speaking inhabitants,
claiming their part of the underused territory. And, like every battle, also
this one has its war reporters, observing the movements of
the next battalion dispatched to the battlefield. The main carrier for the
movement was tracked down to be the L-train when the pioneering artists had to
leave their strongholds of SoHo and the East Village – that they had
established in the 1960’s until the 1980’s – and crossed the East River to
Williamsburg in the 1990’s. These hip and creative pioneers were closely
followed by a migration of young settlers attracted by the wealth of the large
open loft spaces the artists had uncovered in the old industries of Bushwick. The
ever more affluent settlers took over the abundant vacant industrial remnants
until it now clashes hard with the homogeneous residential core of Bushwick,
just beyond the Morgan and Jefferson stops of the L-train.
But, unknowingly, the creative vanguard is in fact a kamikaze
force, now rebelling against and deserting their initial offensive. By
revealing the dormant wealth of space of the area, they opened it up to
speculation and immediately lost it to the rearguard of opportunistic
developers. However, they are not alone in their rebellion. Like in every great
battle, an active resistance has openly taken on the fight:
community organizations reclaim their rights and take a stand for the local
residents. Perhaps now, in the tumult of battle, an image emerges of what Bushwick
could be, a vital and mixed community rather than a container for a succession
of homogenous Dutch, German, Italian, Puerto-Rican, hipster communities. It is
in the skirmishes of battle, in the blur of clashing troops, that the community
regained its strength and vitality.
Thomas Willemse
April 2013
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A Composition of Contradictions - The Glass House
If I wanted to describe
Philip Johnson’s Glass House, I would start out describing the well-known image
of how it is set free and transparent in front of a backdrop of large trees,
but would find myself talking about its dependence and ties with its neighbors
and barriers to this landscape. Or I would indicate the minimal furniture set
in the liberated open interior, but would end up admitting their fixed position
to enable the habitation of the house. Or I could describe the essential,
almost universal, simplicity of the glass box, but would be led to talk of how
it is tailored to the person of Philip Johnson as both its designer and
resident. It is clear after this enumeration that this hailed monument of
Modernist architecture has risen out of contrasts and counter-movements and is,
perhaps, not this pristine object we all imagine it to be, but rather a
composition of contradictions.
The entrance of the Glass
House compound is set as a careful scene, with Johnson as the stage master,
deciding what is to be revealed and what not. It grew as a personal
autobiography where Johnson added his latest folly when a new aesthetic had
seized him. You first encounter two of Johnson’s later contraptions: ‘Da
Monsta’, a sculptural estranging force as gatekeeper, and a tiny library set in
the middle of the slightly sloping meadow. However, the winding entry road
bypasses the library and leads you through an evergreen thicket of trees to
arrive at your first encounter with the Glass House: its gray asphalt parking
lot, lined by a rocky wall obscuring most of the house. It is clear that the
rocky wall – which was raised from former small walls that delimited the old
fields – is compensating for the openness of the house to conceal the cars. One
wonders why these cars, as an unwanted part of the composition, were not left
somewhere beyond the evergreen trees at the street. But it seemed as if Philip
Johnson was reluctant to create something so immaterial as a house of glass and
had a need to compensate both its shortcomings in enclosure and lack of mass as
reflected in the rocky wall and the brick guesthouse. The Brick House marks the
other end of the parking lot and creates a massive counterform for the Glass
House since their simultaneous construction in 1949, and provides yet another
aspect that the rigorous aesthetic principles of the Glass House apparently
prevented: a space for its heating. Its long façade faces the Glass House and
is equal in length and composition with a door right in the middle, except that
a blind brick wall here replaces the abundant glass. In stark contrast with
this massive bunker, you suddenly find yourself facing the Glass House. Where
you expected an intangible structure, hardly intruding in the landscape, you
encounter the heavy black metal columns and cornice, firmly set on the ground
with a brick base. These heavy elements underline the strongest contrasts with
Johnson’s inspiration of the transparent glass Farnsworth House by Mies van der
Rohe. Even though you do not localize it at a first glance, you feel an
undercurrent of something held back, this is not a free, light object of
crystallized transparency that has gently landed here, but is inseparably part
of a larger composition bound to earth. This is not just because of the literal
technical and proportional association with its brick counterpart, but even
more because of its setting on an unnatural horizontal plane in the landscape. Contrary
to the implantation of his later works in the compound, where Johnson used the
rolling fields to insert his architectural experiments – placing the library on
a small hill or disguising the painting gallery as a grass tumulus – he
flattened the slope to a completely horizontal lookout, delimited by a fine
white border that, contrary to the house, does distance itself a few inches
above the ground. This on the one hand creates a useful space around the house,
but unfortunately also sets it apart from the landscape of the valley of the
North Stamford Reservoir. Because of its dependence on the larger arrangement,
the Glass House is not the free exposed observation post it could have been in
this extraordinary setting. The clutter of other structures, walls, the white
border, etc. prevent it to become the true crystallized free object it should
have been.
When you pass the
transparent door and enter the interior, the austere simplicity of the idea for
the house – replacing all walls by the largest glass panes possible – makes it
a unique vantage point on the valley right in front of you. However, Johnson’s
obsession with the aesthetics of his architecture makes him give precedence to
his exterior shell in which later habitation has to find its place. Since the
glass does not replace the wall, but the landscape becomes – as Johnson put it
– the wallpaper, the filtering function of the wall had to be on the one hand
extroverted – the Brick House, the rocky wall, etc. – but also interiorized to
the furniture that, rather than being free in the completely open space becomes
a fixed answer to the surroundings. Despite the perfect symmetry accomplished
in the exterior façades, the interior is not liberated of answering to the
orientations of the landscape, to this painting instead of uniform wallpaper.
This leads to a similar ambiguity as before, all the liberating achievements of
the simple exterior shell have stronger restrictive repercussions imprisoning
the occupants in a highly demanding bare box. As for the outside, Johnson also
anchors his interior strongly to the soil trough the massive brick floor,
hinting at the kinship with the Brick House, but also bringing in an unexpected
kind of geometric decoration that he would fully embrace in his later work,
especially in the interior of the NYU Bobst Library in Manhattan. The earth
colors of the brick together with the black frame form a counterforce to the
openness and are anchored at the circular bath cell, which is the only element
reaching from the floor to the ceiling and bringing with its hearth a strange
element of homeliness to this hard interior. It is in these elements that we
can truly find Philip Johnson’s strong personal grip on the design, as both architect
and future resident, who tailored the house to his personal needs, bringing
extra ambiguity to the minimal ideals of its conception. And this is perhaps
the only justification to call the glass pavilion a house, or as Frank Stella
expressed it:
“Philip Lived here, and
it’s livable, it’s just not livable for everybody.”
However, after some time
this open structure of his weekend house became even too demanding for him and
later he moved his bedroom to the brick guesthouse.
Today, after the demise
of the only man who could live there, the house is left as an empty shell in
the very ambiguous company of Johnson’s later follies. When you go there now
the spell is broken and this dream and image of free and open architecture is
held back by the strong imprint of Johnson’s ego with almighty formal control,
but sadly he resolved all newly created architectural challenges of the new
form, outside of the shell inflicting its surroundings and interior.
Thomas Willemse
April 2013
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