




版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领
文档简介
1、Not So SimpleThe New Classical Landscape"Minimalist Gardens," by Peter Walker, Spacemaker Press, Washington, D.C. and Cambridge, MA, 1997, distributed by Watson-Guptil Publications and Hearst Books International, pp. 207, $35.By Carter B. HorsleyPeter Walker is one of the great design poet
2、s of the 20th Century as the more than 280 color illustrations and photographs in this large and handsome paperback testify. More than 30 of Walker's projects are presented in considerable detail.Both his own essay and an accompanying essay and project notes by Leah Levy illuminate much of the a
3、rtistic, philosophic and intellectual foundations of his designs, but the illustrations really need little exposition. Walker's projects are brilliant integrations of the natural and man-made environments that are distinctly modern and abstract, at times mysterious and sometimes awesome. "M
4、inimalist" is an inappropriate adjective to describe this work for it is far too rich in beauty and power to be less than grand.But one must respect the artist's own interpretation and here Walker is wonderfully incisive, not only about his own oeuvre, but about much of modern architecture
5、and, in particular, the "Minimalist" era/school.While none of the projects are in New York, almost all offer exciting clues to the thrilling potential cityscapes that can and should be wrought.Any intelligent mayor should appoint Walker as the city's "Master Designer," with p
6、owers over all development and planning. Walker, of course, is not the only great environmental designer. Others are Martha Schwartz and Michael Heizer.In her essay on Walker's work, Levy finds traces of the Nazca Lines in Peru and Stonehenge in England in some of his work "an awareness of
7、and quest for connection with earthly and celestial mysteries": "There are many instances when the work focuses on the enigmatic qualities of nature represented by the sound of water, the stasis and weight of stone, rustling changes by the wind, blocks and patterns of shifting color, shimm
8、ering and magical mists, and elusive light."She also finds that "the classical order of seventeenth century French gardens, especially those of Andre Le Notre, serves as strong precedent to individual elements of Walker's approach," adding that "His intuitive as well as intel
9、lectual affinity with patterns, rhythms , and order, and a to a kind of Cartesian synthesis, is apparent throughout his work."Not surprisingly, also she finds the influence of Zen gardens: "An underlying philosophical distillation of the complex to achieve the simple is evidence in both di
10、stinct components and the unifying wholeness of many of his gardensThe work of garden makers of the mid-twentieth century, especially Thomas Church and Isamu Noguchi, was particularly inspiring to Walker in his formative years."Her brief but pithy essay tries to place Walker in his proper and s
11、elf-proclaimed "minimalist" niche: "Since its most crucial years in the 1960's, minimalism, arguably the first truly American art, has become a loosely used catchall term absorbed into the culture to refer to styles that are non-figurative, non-referential, geometric, or merely of
12、 few and simple parts. But the term minimal art was coined to refer to and identify a very specific point in time, approximately 1963-1968, and a small collection of individual artists working primarily in New York City" Levy proceeds to relate some of Walker's work to that of such artists
13、as Gordon Matta-Clark, Christo, Richard Serra, Walter de Maria and Robert Smithson, Maya Lin, Siah Armanjani and others. Walker's own essay is much more rewarding for its provocative insights into Modern architecture and the Minimalist temperament. "As a late second-generation modernist tra
14、ined in the 1950's. I was denied, along with a generation of my peers in the design disciplines, an integrated view of architectural history because our professors, including Gropius and Giedion and their followers, did not present the full historic information that they themselves had been give
15、n by their teachers, and thus did not grant us the opportunity to make our own ideological choices. I have, therefore, not had the historic perspective that the educated professional of a hundred years ago might reasonably expect.Until recently little debate or theoretical refinement had occurred in
16、 modernism, leaving the legitimate ideas of modernism unseparated from those that perhaps should have been discarded. Most criticism related to modernism has come in the form of denunciation from postmodernists. Abstraction had removed most of the expressive content and narrative from modernists des
17、ign, and references to nature were generally missing from 'internationalist' thinking. Social, democratic, or economic purpose had largely replaced metaphor, though how a dialogue with the users would be achieved was not clear. Without this dialogue, or even an agreed-upon language, what
18、9;democratic design' might mean is a question whose answer still escapes me." Explaining that his primary interests have been exploring "the extension of the building form to create a setting (read pedestal) for the precious object, the building, and the transition from this setting to
19、 the surrounding existing landscape, Walker maintains that the 1960''s work of the artists, Frank Stella, Carl Andre, Sol LeWitt, Donald Judd, Dan Flavin, Robert Morris, and other seemed to me to analytically reaffirm and revive the simplicity, formal strength, and clarity that had been the
20、best part of my educational entrance intro modernism."However, Walker continues, "Modernism has yet to develop an articulate body of landscape theory, though one can see in the few masterworks explorations of various formal approaches dawn from the several artistic styles or combinations o
21、f them, such as constructivism or surrealismand de Stijl, Bauhaus and CIAM viewed open space and nature as quantitative and 'empty' space in which to set buildings, rather than objects qualitative design acts and its function was considered to be a neutral environment."For Walker, minim
22、alism in the landscape "continues to imply an approach that rejects any attempt to intellectually, technically, or industrially overcome the forces of nature." "It suggests," Walker insists, "a conceptual order and the reality of changing natural systems with geometry narrat
23、ive, rhythm, gesture, and other devices that can imbue space with a sense of unique place that lives in memory."Minimalism in landscape architecture, Walker continues, "opens a line of inquiry that can illuminate and guide us through some of the difficult transitions of our time": &qu
24、ot;the simplification or loss of craft, transitions from traditional natural materials to synthetics, and extensions of human scale to the large scale, in both space and time, of our mechanically aided modern life. And minimalism in this context suggests an artistically successful approach to dealin
25、g with two of the most critical environmental problems we currently face: mounting waste and dwindling resources." "Fragmentation, marginalization, and discontinuity" prevail in the modern landscape, but Walker wishes to apply "reduction and focus" with the ultimate goal of
26、achieving "mystery rather than irony.""Open space is equally important, or perhaps even more crucial to civic, cultural, and modern social life than interior space. The designed landscape can be as capable of commemorative expression or mystery as any facade or other architectural for
27、m or dimension. It is the public open space formed for function only, filled with purposeful but artistically bereft roads, parking, and service spaces, for instance, that carries the message of indifferent ugliness, thereby tarnishing the hopes of modernism to the degree that modernism is felt to h
28、ave in fact failed. A large part of that failure lies in site planning and open space areas, the public realm of cities and towns."Open space us a very complex medium to influence, subject as it is to the constant multiple changes of daily, seasonal, and maturing cycles and complicated by sound
29、, odor, temperature, and precipitation. Of all the arts, it most nearly compares with the complexity of human life.Is the landscape too wild for man to conquer, or cope with? Walker believes it is not and points to the work of Luis Barragan, Isamu Noguchi, Roberto Burle Marx, Dan Kiley and Lawrence
30、Halprin as significant landscape artists.Walker has collaborated with many major architects such as Frank Gehry at the Herman Miller Inc. facility in Rockland, Calif., Cesar Pelli at the Plaza Tower and Town Center in Costa Mesa, Calif., Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and Leandro V. Locsin at the Ay
31、ala Triangle in the Makati District in Manila, The Philippines, Murphy/Jahn at the Hotel Kempinksi at the Munich Airport Center, Moshe Safdie at the Cambridge (Mass.) Center Roof Garden, Ricardo Legorreta and Mitchell/Giurgola at IBM Solana at Westlake and Southlake, Texas, and Arata Isozaki at the Center for the Advanced Science and Technology in the Hyogo Prefecture in Japan.His design for a mist generating monument at IBM Solana is one of his finest, a broad
温馨提示
- 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
- 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
- 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
- 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
- 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
- 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
- 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。
最新文档
- 广西社会工作者成绩复核流程及办理指南
- 小学生作文辩论课件
- 《铸智慧殿堂》课件
- 《构建物联网》课件
- 专职安全生产管理人员(C类)模拟试题含答案(附解析)
- 配电线路工专业模考试题与参考答案解析
- 2024年11月预防医学考试题(附答案解析)
- 11月财务报表管理模拟试题(附参考答案解析)
- 航空物流中的航空货运标准化与规范化考核试卷
- 互联网生活服务行业智能硬件应用考核试卷
- 2025年北京市朝阳区高三二模-政治+答案
- 温州市普通高中2025届高三第三次适应性考试物理试题及答案
- 《光纤激光切割技术》课件
- 10.信息光子技术发展与应用研究报告(2024年)
- 2025年下半年商务部外贸发展事务局第二次招聘8人易考易错模拟试题(共500题)试卷后附参考答案
- 2024年山西杏花村汾酒集团有限责任公司招聘笔试真题
- 《行政法与行政诉讼法》课件各章节内容-第一章 行政法概述
- 浙江2025年浙江省地质院本级及所属部分事业单位招聘笔试历年参考题库附带答案详解
- 2025年广东广州中物储国际货运代理有限公司招聘笔试参考题库含答案解析
- 2025-2030中国屏蔽泵市场运行态势分析及运营动态规划研究报告
- 海外安保面试题及答案
评论
0/150
提交评论