WA/SA [waldrip architects/ s.a.] [architecture- los angeles]
Alberti, Sandro So Phat; 25 September, 2002 [text22]
Working 9-5, at...
‘WA/SA’, ‘Aloha8’, and ‘Working 9 to 5, at...’
are fictions of fen-om: [www.fen-om.com]
FAT-London (www.fat.co.uk) delighted some of us, metaphorically, at SCI-Arc on the second session of the Fall-2002 lecture series. No, not fat… F.A.T. (Fashion, Architecture, Taste). Caricature, hipness, jokes;
that’s what it’s all about, on the surface. But beauty is only skin deep. FAT, like the punk movement and other reactionaries, finds itself in ultra-conservative ‘ground’ (a ‘representation’ of England that has managed to empower gen‘FAT’ house. erations of reactionaries, from hippies to punks to…, and from which sprout endless symbols [the crown, the pint, the navy,…]). FAT joins the parade. However, it does so with symbols derived from the diagrammatic milieu. For, indeed, we are shown that even a diagram is symbolic, if it is to be represented (even in language). And here is where the tables are turned, for, although at first it seems that FAT joins the SCI-Arc community in an eager diagrammatic manipulation, the procedure is taken a step further, and symbols are revealed as the necessary contamination of diagrams. Sam Jacob (FAT) began his presentation with artistic meaning. A series of light bulbs, hyper analyzed at near-microscopic, symbolic, narrative levels. In the end, one light bulb is like the other, but the slight differences are still noticeable (…, 60W clear, ‘Elegance’, flicker type). It was a nice study on architectural precision, where the last type (the candle-associated flicker type) is revealed as a ‘tight’ design package (combining the origin of the entire light bulb/ lighting evolution, together with a high level of technology necessary to make its recreation possible; a ‘high-tech vernacular’, obtained when metaphor is applied to the same object it is derived from; metaphor and object are only separated temporally, not spatially). Then there was the neon-house representing ‘information for living in’. And a bit of fun, shifting the meaning of gallery symbols by playing with their position (FAT sent an ‘army’ of designers into an art gallery, armed with red adhesive dots, identical to those used to denote sold art pieces; in the end, thousands of dots were to be found on doors, fire extinguishers, odd patterns, etc.). Time changes meaning; personal knowledge changes meaning; position changes meaning. One minimalist work emerges at the crux of this ‘matter’, though: the exhibited text “taste not space”; taste at least as equivalent to space. At the SCI-Arc lecture, this motto would precede FAT’s most extraordinary re-configuration of metaphors, which the British design team understands to be ever-present. A kitsch garden with a metal
It’s living; it’s sport!
Diana bridge.