WA/SA [waldrip architects/ s.a.] [architecture- los angeles]
Working 9-5, at...
Alberti, Sandro A Modernist Analysis of Postmodernism; 26 February, 2002 [text5]
‘WA/SA’, ‘Aloha8’, and ‘Working 9 to 5, at...’
“Jencks’ pluralist manifesto is no less managerial in tone, no less an obsessive survey of the scene (that places everything within a single picture) [than those he attempts to debunk]… Perhaps the clearest example of this is the chart with which Jencks begins the main body of his argument. It positions every architect and tendency in a system Charles Jencks, blurred and rotated 90 degrees CW. of evolutionary branches. Thus, while insisting on the impossibility of producing a single, totalizing image of modern architecture or even postmodern architecture, Jencks proceeds to produce such an image and even to encourage the reader to use it as a guide to the following text… Furthermore, in the grand tradition of total design, the theorist of pluralism and the discontinuous universe repeatedly invites us into his domestic interior, using a series of articles, special magazine issues, and books to reveal the hyper-designed details of his own ‘thematic house.’” [Wigley, Mark, ‘Whatever Happened to Total Design?’, in Design Arts and Architecture Number 5, Summer 1998]
Indeed, the above-cited quote certainly sums up much of the ‘expectation’ regarding Charles Jencks’ recent presentation at UCLA. Had things changed in the last 4 years? There he was, the ‘father of postmodernism’, elegant, casual-yet-poised… the usual. Difficult to imagine that so much time had gone by since I last saw him, 5 years ago. Back then, as a matter of course for Charles Jencks, he was already pointing towards the future, leaning on the latest paradigm. Since ‘that moment’ (the demolition of PruittIgoe) was manufactured in our collective mediated minds, Mr. Jencks has contributed to the assembly of the post-modern condition based on bits of trends and dosages of various sciences. We could not wait to hear what the latest architectural paradigm could possibly be. And it had better be good, and new, as Mr. Jencks himself warned in his own introduction. At the De-Café, that winter evening, the architectural crowd was moderate. Many faculty members were present, ‘corralled’ at the front rows. Everyone, waiting for prophetic knowledge.
are fictions of fen-om: [www.fen-om.com]
The end of Modernism.
Arte Povera.