WA/SA [waldrip architects/ s.a.] [architecture- los angeles]
Alberti, Sandro The New Postmodern, Encased; 30 April, 2002 [text14]
Working 9-5, at...
‘WA/SA’, ‘Aloha8’, and ‘Working 9 to 5, at...’
‘Idea and Phenomena’ was the name of the lecture last night, and it was also the title of an essay published some years ago (both by Steven Holl, architect). Fortunately, this last ‘exposure’ delved less into music and pre-logic, and more into architectural design. It was so crowded, by the way! The meeting could not be held at UCLA’s Guadalajara project. Architecture department, or, perhaps, it had been planned not to be held there. Over 600 people were in attendance, which was quite surprising, considering it has been a while since I noticed Holl ‘listed’ on the glossy magazines (although he has been ‘there’, certainly) . He did participate recently in the LACMA-remodel competition (and seems to be basking in the softly diffused light of his current ‘prismatic’ buildings), but I really have lost track of him since the ‘Guadalajara fiasco’ (read ‘JVC Cultural Center’, where Holl’s design for mid-high-income housing slowly mutated from a stepped ‘porosity’, to more-basic ‘framing’, to, well, nothing, as the architect withdrew and was replaced by Zaha Hadid. The Mexican proposal is not even listed in the architect’s Web site (I have included an image here), but the exercise is certainly 100% Holl, down to the watercolor ‘intro’. At any rate, his recent presentation provides an opportunity to review quite a few projects, some of which include:
Nelson Atkins Museum of Art: A series of prismatic galleries developed alongside a secondary edge, neglecting centrality. This project reveals Holl’s interest in ‘other’ and ‘minor’ and ‘lateral’, yet in the end he returns to the ‘center’ with an emphasizes water element. University of Iowa Art + Art History Building: The building site straddles an area where the regular city grid is broken up by natural topography. This led to a fragmented design in rusted metal, in which Holl finds an accidental relationship to a cubist violin (this particular reference shows the privileged position of chance in Holl’s oeuvre, a ‘realm’ where experience-deriving ‘appearances’ are good enough to pass for the ‘real thing’; one does not need to apply strict
are fictions of fen-om: [www.fen-om.com]
Nelson Atkins Museum.
U. of Iowa Art + Art History.