Tag: alternative histories (project)

Alternative Histories: Point Supreme Architects on Adolfo Natalini

Alternative Histories: Point Supreme Architects on Adolfo Natalini

Alternative Histories: General Architecture on Emil Hoppe

Alternative Histories: General Architecture on Emil Hoppe

Task We look upon the drawing of Emil Hoppe as a first draft of a building. The draft has travelled through time and it Is now our task to continue the work from our position. Continuation must be understood as something in between mere acceptance and rejection. For this task… Read More

Alternative Histories: Traumnovelle on Michael Gold

Alternative Histories: Traumnovelle on Michael Gold

The Atom People The sublime despair of not belonging to our own planet’s ecosystems After the apocalypse, the overheated planet Earth is uninhabitable. Humankind creates a new underground city thanks to a machine producing infinite energy. People of this utopian city vow to learn from the errors of the past… Read More

Alternative Histories: Philip Christou on Le Corbusier

Alternative Histories: Philip Christou on Le Corbusier

When asked to participate in ‘Alternative Histories’, I was pleased to be offered the large, elegant drawing by Le Corbusier of his proposal for the Bhakra Dam near Chandigarh, India. I remember seeing this drawing with Florian Beigel years ago in the Drawing Matter archive, and again in an important… Read More

Alternative Histories: Flores i Prats Architects on Alberto Ponis

Alternative Histories: Flores i Prats Architects on Alberto Ponis

We have reflected directly on Alberto Ponis’s drawing without separating ourselves from it, looking for clues about where we could enter with the scissors and fold out the paper with our hands, making the house and the landscape that we saw drawn appear at the same time. We took the… Read More

Alternative Histories: Dow Jones Architects on Robbrecht en Daem

Alternative Histories: Dow Jones Architects on Robbrecht en Daem

Our starting point is a drawing by Robbrecht en Daem dated 2000: a sketch in red ink of a small pavilion which sits on a platform and is approached by a path raised off the ground. The pitched roof and the space of the platform create a horizontal emphasis, and… Read More

Alternative Histories: Bernd Schmutz on Jules Hardouin-Mansart

Alternative Histories: Bernd Schmutz on Jules Hardouin-Mansart

Tripartite Typology Instead of a particular style or authorship, Jules Hardouin Mansart’s drawing seems as if anonymous, characterised by a strong typological rigour. We have projected its composition of three double units into a deep roof volume with varying facades, gables and profiles, built as a painted model which explores… Read More

Alternative Histories: Doorzon Interieurarchitecten on Stefano de Martino

Alternative Histories: Doorzon Interieurarchitecten on Stefano de Martino

Stefanie Everaert and Caroline Lateur

The first things to catch our eye in the beautiful drawing by Stefano de Martino were three or four small brightly coloured surfaces integral to the composition, and its abstraction provided an advantage. Our search for spatial qualities made us transform the abstract drawing into a small, three-dimensional object –… Read More

Alternative Histories: NP2F Architectes on Mario Sironi

Alternative Histories: NP2F Architectes on Mario Sironi

Mario Sironi’s work touched us in its relation to an elementary geometry. He participated with other artists and architects in the construction of a minimalist and sober aesthetic. We drew a parallel with a pragmatic approach to define our production – solving complex problems with simple moves and clear geometries.… Read More

Alternative Histories: Lütjens Padmanabhan On Michael Graves

Alternative Histories: Lütjens Padmanabhan On Michael Graves

In our office we use a thermos tea pot designed by Michael Graves in 1994. The pot is a joyful, exuberant object made of greenish, bluish plastic. Because of its clunkiness, it remains visible in the midst of our office chaos; it has a presence in friendly dialogue with the models… Read More

Alternative Histories: Johan Celsing Arkitektkontor on Erik Gunnar Asplund

Alternative Histories: Johan Celsing Arkitektkontor on Erik Gunnar Asplund

Model The cast-epoxy model developed from reflections on Gunnar Asplund’s work of the mid-1930s. The yellowish tone of the epoxy touches on the soft curvatures and almost bodily character of Asplund’s shapes during these years. Some of his shapes are interpreted as sensual membranes that may adjust to the structure,… Read More

Alternative Histories: Office Winhov on Burnham & Co.

Alternative Histories: Office Winhov on Burnham & Co.

Conversation piece in blue Daniel Hudson Burnham’s buildings are based on a classical order of well-proportioned elements with a strict load-bearing tectonic expression – a familiar architectural language still spoken today. But, as with all languages, this tectonic language gradually transforms as the context in which it is spoken changes. The… Read More

Alternative Histories: Studio Thys Vermeulen on Sergison Bates

Alternative Histories: Studio Thys Vermeulen on Sergison Bates

Folly  The drawing we received was a pencil drawing showing a vertical elevation of Sergison Bates’s Tower House in Nutley. This proposal for a vertical country house, as explained by the architects, refers to the memory of an old water tower that stood on the same spot. Unlike the lightness… Read More

Alternative Histories: Rloaluarnad on Mario Sironi

Alternative Histories: Rloaluarnad on Mario Sironi

The model is a theatre within a city block.  A small volkshuis, a fun palace – a public interior with the shed as its inspirator. Meeting wall to wall with its neighbours, the theatre is a black box within the city block; to the rear is a light, interchangeable structure, clad… Read More

Alternative Histories: Descloux Engelschall on Louis-François Trouard

Alternative Histories: Descloux Engelschall on Louis-François Trouard

the duplicity becomes entity.the backside becomes frontside.the theatrical becomes ordinary.the disguise becomes a dress.the barracks become dwellings.the chimera becomes concrete.the rock becomes textile.the drapes become stone.the boulder becomes the domino.the domino becomes history.the tent remains. – Descloux Engelschall, 2018

Alternative Histories: Roz Barr Architects on John Freeman

Alternative Histories: Roz Barr Architects on John Freeman

John Freeman’s drawing for an arch at Fawley Court led to an intriguing insight: this study could have been part of the mausoleum or gothic folly he built on the grounds. Freeman was an amateur architect and a dabbler. The garden buildings and the mausoleum at Fawley Court show influences… Read More

Alternative Histories: Schneider Türtscher on Álvaro Siza

Alternative Histories: Schneider Türtscher on Álvaro Siza

Accumulation – arranged, adjusted, rearranged and painted / grey cardboard, corrugated cardboard, spruce sticks, pencil, glue, acrylic paint white, acrylic paint red, clear lacquer / 20 x 22.8 x 14.3 cm.  – Claudio Schneider, Michaela Türtscher

Alternative Histories: East Architecture on Otto Wagner

Alternative Histories: East Architecture on Otto Wagner

Otto Wagner’s self-initiated design for the Capuchin Church and Imperial Crypt in Vienna reveals a powerful civic pride and belief in the role of architecture to improve lives. His monument was more than a symbol of mass and space; its claddings and dressings were dramatically intended for social effect. The… Read More

Alternative Histories: Taka Architects on Peter Märkli

Alternative Histories: Taka Architects on Peter Märkli

Peter Märkli’s sketch of the plan for Haus Kuehnis seems to describe a compact building with a different front and back and interior rooms made specific through spatial divisions, decoration and architectural order. We know Markli’s house – with its stout singular form and enigmatic approach to order and decoration… Read More

Alternative Histories: Ryan W Kennihan Architects on John Nash

Alternative Histories: Ryan W Kennihan Architects on John Nash

1. The architecture of John Nash (1752-1835) may be said to oscillate between two distinct approaches depending on location. On the one hand, he creates an architecture in the city that is ordered, symmetrical, proportioned and rational (see Park Crescent, Hanover Terrace or the garden front of Buckingham Palace), on… Read More

Alternative Histories: Stephen Bates on Henry Thomas Cadbury-Brown

Alternative Histories: Stephen Bates on Henry Thomas Cadbury-Brown

Reading Jim Cadbury-Brown’s transcript of ‘Ideas of Disorder’ delivered at the Architectural Association in 1959, it is clear just how far he had moved from his functionalist modern movement origins towards a more expressive and instinctive idea of what architecture could be and mean. The drawing of a first scheme… Read More

Alternative Histories: 31/44 Architects on William Butterfield

Alternative Histories: 31/44 Architects on William Butterfield

Dear Sir William, Thank you for forwarding your drawing concerning the proposed alterations to Heath Court, Otter-St-Mary. It is indeed an exciting project. We heard rumour that (y)our client is actually the wealthiest family in Britain. We understand that came with a certain expectation of what their home would be… Read More

Alternative Histories: Carmody Groarke on Haus-Rücker-Co

Alternative Histories: Carmody Groarke on Haus-Rücker-Co

Ashtray Our interest in Haus-Rücker-Co’s drawing lies less in the technological implications that created the artificial environment and focusses instead on the spatial tension created between Mies van der Rohe’s Haus Lange and the heart-shaped bubble that surrounds it. The drawing removes reference to the context, within and outside the… Read More

Alternative Histories: Conen Sigl Architekten on Giuseppe Chiantarelli

Alternative Histories: Conen Sigl Architekten on Giuseppe Chiantarelli

Pompeiian Mausoleum for Extinct Animals (Associations about a mural painting of the Casa Pseudourbana in Pompeii) The painted structure on the plaster makes the wall appear as filigree and light – crumbled plaster shows the massive masonry behind, the actual construction of the wall. With a little bit of paint,… Read More