Reference and reverence
῀ design 19
We worship the concept of heritage – especially in motoring – but, asks Stephen bayley, what is it exactly? And does it stifle creativity? Or is it the springboard for future design? Illustration Pierluigi Longo
Look at the new Land Rover DC100 concept and you can see 60 years of design heritage. Glittery and modern under Frankfurt’s coruscating lights, it is recognisably derived from the ancient Series I that the then chairman of the Rover Company, Maurice Wilks, first drew in the sand of an Anglesey beach in 1948. But what exactly is heritage? This is a short but not simple question. An easy answer: heritage is the sum total of what’s worthwhile from the past. And the texture of that sum total is very diverse: TS Eliot said its composition was so varied that boiled cabbage and 19th-century Gothic cathedrals might both be included. If he’d been writing today, he’d have said Neapolitan-style pizza and a Nissan Qashqai (like Land Rover, two favourite, if foreign-flavoured, British products). But our judgement about what’s worthwhile is compromised by a phenomenon known as survival bias. Evidence is corrupted by frivolous taste and serious logical error. This means heritage is only ever a poorly cropped and slightly blurred picture of history: we preserve only what we like. Heritage is really the here and now. The past was in fact rather different. Or was it? This mind-warping exercise in fallacy gets stranger still when you consider ‘design heritage’. Notions of change and permanence are in continuous competition for the designer’s attention. At the same time, designers hold hilariously opposing beliefs: first, that they have the responsibility (and sometimes the talent) to
change things and, second, a belief that their own work has permanent validity. Or put it this way: should we pass it on or make it up? Do we invent the new or learn to live with the past? This question of tradition or innovation bothers culture, as well as the motor trade. The most profound example: the antique gods of Greece and Rome never really died – they were just re-designed and re-wardrobed for Christianity. And, in architecture, was it a question of Gothic Revival or Gothic Survival? Has the pointed arch ever gone away? Or take what we patronisingly call
cues and proportions that readily evoke (get it?) the 1970 Range Rover. McGovern can list them for you: a clam-shell bonnet with castellations at its corners, round lights, prominent creases, a floating roof above an airy glass-house, commanding posture. So concerned are car designers about heritage that, with a Magic Marker determinedly clenched in their jaws, they dutifully speak of ‘DNA’, even if few of them are fully tutored in the arcana of genetics. DNA contains the instructions passed on from one generation of humans
Heritage is only a poorly cropped and slightly blurred picture of history: we preserve what we like ‘primitive’ societies – by which is meant societies without cathedrals or Land Rovers: they believe in the myth of the perpetual return, that is, that history is not linear, but circular, and we always come back to where we started. Progress is a delusion. For advanced students of the heritage paradox, car designers provide rich research material. Land Rover’s designer is a twinkly-eyed and spiffily dressed Brummie Irishman called Gerry McGovern. His last project was the Evoque – a masterpiece of industrial design that is uncompromisingly of the moment, but also has details,
to the next. Significantly, it reproduces itself. It is this unstoppable hereditary material that gives people their personalities – and certain cars a special sense of settled gravity. In a turbulent age, it is key that two of the most successful cars of the 21st century artfully ape their ancestors: while technically utterly distinct, both the Mini and Fiat Cinquecento cleverly suggest originals from 1957 and 1959 in a kind of homage to the security of history. But this sort of heritage has a business value beyond the numberless calculations of nostalgia. Any new Porsche looks
almost indistinguishable from its predecessor; truly, only experts can tell. But this powerfully – and arrogantly – suggests the original design was so nearly perfect that only subtle refinements are ever possible. In this way, the consumer is flattered that he is not so much buying a car as contributing to a tradition and investing in heritage. For this noble privilege, he cheerfully pays a premium. Philosophers as well as geneticists and car designers have their say on heritage traffic. At about the time the original Mini and Cinquecento appeared, Gilbert Simondon wrote: ‘Artefacts evolve using themselves as the point of departure: they contain the conditions for their own development.’ That’s both beautiful and true. It confirms what designers have always known: that objects have life, of sorts. You can check this on an iPhone. Sir Jonathan Ive’s astonishing campaign for Apple is the ultimate in modern design. But Ive readily acknowledges that his inspiration is the disciplined, systematic, geometrically pure designs Dieter Rams made for Braun in the Fifties and Sixties. Nothing, perhaps, is ever truly new, but rather just a repetition, an echo or a reflection of the past. Looking back to find the future? In matters of design, heritage is stylishly paradoxical. Q Stephen Bayley is an author and broadcaster of whom Tom Wolfe said, ‘I don’t know anybody with more interesting observations about style, taste and contemporary design.’ stephenbayley.com