(Venice, Italy) With the appointment of the dynamic Rem Koolhaas as curator, the Venice Biennale
International Architecture Exhibition has dramatically changed its
modus operandi as it looks forward to 2014. Originally created as an "imitation" of the Art Biennale, the Architecture section of Biennale is evolving into a major exhibition-research project conduc
ted by the curator, and has become the most important event in the world for Architecture. The opening date has been moved up to June 7, 2014, and it will last as long as the Art Biennale, about six months, through November 23, 2014. Instead of the eight months that David Chipperfield, last year's director, had to prepare, Rem Koolhaas will have nearly a year and a half to organize his theme: FUNDAMENTALS.
President Paolo Baratta
explained the evolution of the Architecture Biennale, and
consequently the choice of Rem Koolhaas:
“We are
universally recognized as the most important event in the world for
Architecture. We are the place where Architecture talks about itself
and meets life and society at large. Over the past few years, our
choices of curators and themes have been based on the awareness of
the gap between the “spectacularization” of architecture on one
hand, and the waning capacity of society to express its demands and
needs on the other. Architects are called upon prevalently to create
awe-inspiring buildings and the “ordinary” is going astray --
toward banality if not squalor: a modernity lived badly. We have made
choices oriented towards addressing the issue of this gap.”
In a September 2012 article for The Smithsonian, Nicolai Ouroussoff asked: Why is Rem Koolhaas the World's Most Controversial Architect?
"...Koolhaas’ habit of shaking up established conventions has made him one
of the most influential architects of his generation. A disproportionate
number of the profession’s rising stars, including Winy Maas of the
Dutch firm MVRDV and Bjarke Ingels of the Copenhagen-based BIG, did
stints in his office. Architects dig through his books looking for
ideas; students all over the world emulate him. The attraction lies, in
part, in his ability to keep us off balance. Unlike other architects of
his stature, such as Frank Gehry or Zaha Hadid, who have continued to
refine their singular aesthetic visions over long careers, Koolhaas
works like a conceptual artist—able to draw on a seemingly endless
reservoir of ideas."
Yesterday, January 25, 2013, President Paolo Baratta and Director Rem Koolhass met with the representatives of 40 countries participating in the 14th Exhibition at Ca' Giustinian, Biennale Headquarters, to present the theme: FUNDAMENTALS. Paolo Baratta emphasized: "It is a theme, not a slogan."
Koolhaas has stated:
“Fundamentals will be a
Biennale about architecture, not architects. After several Biennales
dedicated to the celebration of the contemporary, Fundamentals
will focus on histories – on the inevitable elements of all architecture
used by any architect, anywhere, anytime (the door, the floor, the
ceiling etc.) and on the evolution of national architectures in the last
100 years. In three complementary manifestations – taking place in the
Central Pavilion, the Arsenale, and the National Pavilions – this
retrospective will generate a fresh understanding of the richness of
architecture’s fundamental repertoire, apparently so exhausted today.
In 1914, it made sense to talk about a
“Chinese” architecture, a “Swiss” architecture, an “Indian”
architecture. One hundred years later, under the influence of wars,
diverse political regimes, different states of development, national and
international architectural movements, individual talents, friendships,
random personal trajectories and technological developments,
architectures that were once specific and local have become
interchangeable and global. National identity has seemingly been
sacrificed to modernity.
Having the decisive advantage of
starting work a year earlier than the Biennale’s typical schedule, we
hope to use this extra time to introduce a degree of coordination and
coherence among the National Pavilions. Ideally, we would want the
represented countries to engage a single theme – Absorbing Modernity: 1914-2014
– and to show, each in their own way, the process of the erasure of
national characteristics in favour of the almost universal adoption of a
single modern language in a single repertoire of typologies.
The First World War – the beginning of
modern globalization – serves a starting point for the range of
narratives. The transition to what seems like a universal architectural
language is a more complex process than we typically recognize,
involving significant encounters between cultures, technical inventions
and imperceptible ways of remaining “national.” In a time of ubiquitous
google research and the flattening of cultural memory, it is crucial for
the future of architecture to resurrect and expose these narratives.
By telling the history of the last 100
years cumulatively, the exhibitions in the National Pavilions will
generate a global overview of architecture’s evolution into a single,
modern aesthetic, and at the same time uncover within globalization the
survival of unique national features and mentalities that continue to
exist and flourish even as international collaboration and exchange
intensify…
During the press conference, Koolhaas elaborated on the theme. He said he wanted each country to start with World War I and work forward to 2014 and examine what impact history and events had upon architecture, and how we have arrived at the state of globalized architecture we have today. 1914 was not just the beginning of World War I, it was also about the time that Louie Armstrong came on the scene and when Marcel Duchamp started creating his "readymade" art. Each country in the world has been wrestling with globalization in their own way. We used to have Swiss architecture, Italian architecture, Indian architecture. We used to have a majestic ceiling at the Sistine Chapel created by Michelangelo, and now we just have a ceiling. We used to have different types of doors; now we more or less have the same stuff, a boring, contemporary door. What happened?
Koolhaas worked as a journalist and screenwriter before beginning architecture, and someone asked him whether he considered himself an architect, an historian or a sociologist. He said "I'm an amateur in many different professions, but I consider myself a professional writer. This allows me to talk about everything." I loved that answer because it is truly one of the beautiful things about being a writer -- you can be interested in a cornucopia of different topics, and it's okay.
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Interior Seattle Public Library |
Someone asked about the presence of the "star system" -- the so-called "starchitects," an elite club of top architects of which Rem Koolhaas is certainly a member. Koolhaas said that "we did not choose that term," and it was imposed upon them by lazy journalists. He said that it implies an architect that doesn't care, does whatever he wants and takes the money. He said "we are not like that," and that the top architects are more sincere and care deeply about what they do.
Another person asked about the word "nationalism," and did it make sense to emphasize different nations at the Architecture Exhibition. Koolhaas said that the word "national" made sense because it is the way we are organized in the way of space. We all have our own national perspective, and it is interesting how different the reading of the same phenomenon can be. He elaborated by comparing it to "mentality," and how each of our mentalities have been deeply formed by our own individual cultures.
Personally, I think the theme is an exciting one, and the idea of the Venice Architecture Exhibition evolving into a research project will be of enormous benefit to the planet. How different do the years 1914 to 2014 look from the point of view of the United States as compared to Italy? Or Germany? Or China? Or Russia? Or France? Or Argentina? How did we arrive to the point of globalization where we are today? Koolhaas said that earlier in the day the representative from Romania said that Romania was not a modern country. Koolhaas said, "You have light bulbs, don't you? That makes you modern."
And yes, Rem Koolhass is totally cool.
From Wikipedia:
Remment Lucas "Rem" Koolhaas (
born 17 November 1944) is a Dutch
architect,
architectural theorist,
urbanist and Professor in Practice of Architecture and Urban Design at the
Graduate School of Design at
Harvard University. Koolhaas studied at the
Architectural Association School of Architecture in
London and at
Cornell University in
Ithaca, New York. Koolhaas is the founding partner of
OMA, and of its research-oriented counterpart AMO, currently based in Rotterdam, Netherlands. In 2005 he co-founded
Volume Magazine together with
Mark Wigley and
Ole Bouman.
In 2000 Rem Koolhaas won the
Pritzker Prize. In 2008
Time put him in their top 100 of
The World's Most Influential People.
Ciao from Venezia,
Cat
Venetian Cat - The Venice Blog