It is safe to say that architects,
academics, critics and even the public have been arguing about the merits of
architectural style for centuries. Even during the course of my own career,
the more general style categories of contemporary-vs-traditional have
continued in an unabated battle. For better or worse, contemporary has
generally won out as the default position for most schools and publications,
probably because of the sheer visual entertainment value it offers, and the
lucrative merits of its two stepchildren, branding and advertising.
I’d like to propose another
position: that certain enduring principles of art, rather than any temporary
style—and, remember, they are all temporary—should be our real
architectural goal. This presumption means you must be agnostic when it comes
to style and put aside any notion of an ideological stance regarding the
right or wrong of your architectural preferences. There are those, of course,
who say that to imagine that “my art” is better than yours, or even that I
can define real art in the first place, is a fool’s errand.
I think otherwise.
Good art is, in
fact, definable, and the best architecture is artful. This position means any style is possible and the best
architecture can be defined by principles
of good art rather than the correct style. Note that I’m
not arguing for “beauty” here, a more ephemeral concept. Beauty may be in the eye of the beholder, but I would
argue artfulness is not.
Some background: I’m an architect
with 40 years of experience and an author, but I’m also a landscape painter.
So I know something about both architecture and the pure art of painting.
Over the years, I’ve developed some concepts about the relation between the
two. It’s important to say first that some fundamental rules apply in
painting no matter what. Last time I looked, the complementary colors were
still complementary, and if I mix yellow and blue on my palette, I get a
green. Depending on the pureness and amount of those two primary colors, the
green will change. That’s why I have no green in my paint box. There are just
too many greens out there to rely on just one. And if I mix red, the
compliment, with that green it will dull it, or more accurately, gray it.
That principle is true now and always has been. (As a matter of interest,
there is no such thing as an absolutely pure primary color. That fact makes
the mixing of colors even more interesting.)
I also happen to think there are
other principles that apply across both architecture and painting. Let’s
start first with Composition and Value. In painting, composition refers to the configuration or
framework of a piece, while value means the lightness or darkness as they relate within the
composition. Any great or even good painting has both, and I think the
same can be said for a piece of architecture. Unlike a static painting, you
move through a work of architecture so good composition and value must be
dynamic and there’s the added quest for good composition and value on the
interior as well as exterior. Nonetheless, we can all recognize a piece of
architecture that has both. Large cantilevered or multifaceted roofs may make
for interesting photos but not necessarily good composition or value. Likewise,
a static composition modeled after a Greek temple doesn’t necessarily ensure
a good composition either, even though its value may be quite dramatic.
-
I don’t understand what Value exactly means in this paragraph
There are a number of other
principles that I have discovered over the years as well. Edges is
another one. In painting, it’s the thin edge between two larger areas of the
painting that can have an immediate and magical impact on how those two areas
relate—for instance, between the horizon and the sky. In architecture, the
same principle applies. Who hasn’t seen an otherwise interesting building
ruined by the clunky nature of a roof edge? The edges between roof and wall,
or wall and ground have a large impact on the quality of the overall visual
experience.
Perhaps the most obvious principle
and—if there is any order, the highest one—is Space and Light. Without
both—and the elegant interaction of the two—neither a painting nor a work of
architecture can be truly meaningful. The masterful use of both by painters
and architects as diverse in style and time as George
Inness, Willem de Kooning, Edwin Lutyens,
and Tadao Ando attests to its being perhaps one of the
most important principles we can apply to merit a good work of architecture.
Some painters and architects have even defined the very nature of painting
and architecture using the words “space” and “light” or their
interaction; I.M. Pei once
said: “The essence of architecture is form and space, and light the essential
element.”
Perhaps my favorite principle
is All
Great Paintings Have a Moment. What I mean is that all great
paintings place us in a unique place or time, or perhaps help us reflect on
some iconic or eternal truth that is within all of us. The same can be said
of an artful piece of architecture. Great paintings and architecture go
beyond any immediate time and place and have a kind of transcendent sense
about them. They deify time as much as they define it. I’m reminded here of
Louis Kahn’s Salk Institute. Standing in that exterior courtyard transports
us to another place that is not about style but about the art of the
experience. It is a moment made even more magnificent because of
its clearly manifested composition and value, its edges, and the
use of space and light.
I’m certainly not the first to
relate art to architecture or other art forms such as poetry or even to call
architecture “frozen music” as Goethe did. But sometimes we need to step away
from our intra-professional definitions and remind ourselves that simple
enduring principles are often the best. Architecture is, after all, an
exercise of the mind and requires some clear discipline. It may be that we’ll
all be just a bit richer with a fresh look at how we define a good piece of
architecture, if we also define it in terms of the enduring principles of
art.
Jeremiah Eck is
founding partner of the Boston-based Eck/MacNeely Architects, which
specializes in houses and private schools. He is a Fellow of the American
Institute of Architects, author, landscape painter, and a former lecturer at
the Harvard Graduate School of Design, where he continues to offer seminars.
|
Nov 8, 2017
4 Proven Artistic Principles That Can Help Make Better Architecture by Jeremiah Eck
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