Strange Harvest Resurrection

After a massive and mysterious death, Strange Harvest has been rebooted from its digital grave. Everything should be here still … though perhaps not in exactly the right places. Old links, for example, no longer work (unless someone out there is a WordPress expert and can get some kind of redirect going), a few images seem out of place and I’m sure there are a few other creaky issues. Please do let me know if things aren’t quite working.



Show & Tell: ‘My Blogspot’ by Paul Davies

Image: ‘Paul 17th March’. Retro Modern Triptych, Photographs by Julie Cook
Equipment: Polaroid camera; Vintage (best they ever made). Film by Impossible.

At the same time I grabbed my first Le Corbusier drawing off the postman, I was fitting a special postbox to the right of the front door to make his life easier. He seems very pleased anybody gives a damn, we are quite the buzz of the sorting office, and also, over the following week, the volume of post has increased.

Pictured is my actual blogspot, my bad Merzbau, my stationary psychic geography, my cabinet, my erotic landscape, my Breton, Barthes and Baudrillard, my Dan Mod, So Cal, Arch Ed home; my space and the hub of my E-bay world with such infrastructural consequences. There is a temptation to list this landscape, weekend magazine style, but I’ve done that, and it’s not worth it. I did it as a student; it wasn’t worth it then either. But, the Belgian Alpine Hut Money Box with attached Lesney Motorcycle Sidecar may be psychologically significant. I have a thing about alpine huts and alpine vistas and motorcycles. I am scared of heights, snow and like OHMSS and motorcycles and alpine cheese (but no longer ride motorcycles) and once wrote a (very good) unpublished and now sadly lost piece called ‘Obliterated in Antwerp’. Behind the acropolian hut, there are hookers cards from Las Vegas artfully arranged. They are the bane of my aesthetic life. I just can’t seem to do anything with them, but keep trying. That particular arrangement in a 6”x4” has stood the test of time, but changed frames.

The lights and furniture are almost all from Rocket Gallery. They were all bought while drunk in the afternoon, which in my opinion is the best way to buy any major item. It is effortless at the time, and it’s a surprise when you go and pick it up. Since the gallery is excellent, and I like to think over the years we have developed a certain rapport, there was little risk. The three pinups are Kimberley in Browns (c1999), Fiona Richmond smoking a fag on the Costa Brava (c1974) and the Playboy calendar from 1969 and must represent erotic milestones. One of the girls in the calendar looks like my aunt might have done, lounging by the pool in Houston while I was eight. There are also many things that have been ordered to do a thing called decoupage on a full size poster of a cocktail waitress from Reno on the front of the new pantry door. Will this ever happen? I feel I am very unlikely to do it, but have to maintain the faith that I might.

The postman calls again, endless precious trash for the box, I have forgotten where it all comes from. E-bay is, after all, a worldwide recycling bin, and I guess what we do is recycle ourselves, perhaps adding improvements, embellishments, and as our fresh (hollow lead 1950’s) red indians hold up the cowboys on the bathroom’s superhighway, it’s like Christmas every day.

I am not convinced of the stages of man (sacraments, stations, whatever) but at least the first two before middle age must be about doing things, the first manly escapology, and the second production of some kind. The third may well be acquisition of objects often referent to the period when you were doing things so swimmingly, with a bit of luck done in something you haven’t had before, a home. If people generally understood this less of them might die at twenty-seven, and old people’s home space standards would be a lot larger, and they’d have enormous letter boxes.

Paul Davies was born on Mersea Island, Essex in 1961, studied architecture at Bristol University and the Polytechnic of Central London, found himself enthralled by Las Vegas through the nineties and now teaches History and Theory at London SouthBank University and the Architectural Association. He married photographer Julie Cook in 2001 and his blog Architecture and Other Habits has been running since 2009, and noting his most hit on blogs by far are those on LA Woman and KISS, he tries to keep up his diverse appreciation of whatever we are doing.



Obscure Design Typologies: Courtroom Docks



So Lonely: The Architecture of Hugh Grants Face

A short trailer for the So Lonely Valentines Day special at the AA.

Here is Hugh Grants face in the throws of turning down Julia Roberts in the classic Rom Com Notting Hill. Slow mo-ed and zoomed in, we can see how his face is the ne pas ultra vehicle of the British romantic comedy.

Now, I have to say, I’m fascinated by Hugh Grants face. Seeing it giant sized and glowing from bus shelter adverts is always a remarkable vision of a surreal landscape. Its a fleshy landscape that has become one of the key territories of the contemporary Rom Com. From 4 Weddings through Notting Hill to Love Actually and onwards, Grants strange mug is a device – perhaps the perfect field onto which the contemporary myth of romance is projected.

So the question is why? What is it in the architecture of Hugh Grants face that crystalises the cultural narrative of British romance? How do the the folds of his face, the flop of his foppish hair, the stammer of his delivery articulate recognisable characteristics of modern love and lovelessness?

In the coquettish tilt of his head and the way he uses his fringe is encoded a certain element of Princess Diana. Yet there is also something of the stammering, emotionally retarded aristocratic manner of Prince Charles too. If Grant is both Charles and Diana, he encapsulates a particularly British narrative of (forlorn) popular romance.

Yet there is also the detached way that he expresses himself. It is simultaneously an expression of and distancing from emotion, as though he knows we don’t believe the narrative that he is acting out, that we know more than the conventional narratives of contemporary romantic love that he peddles can possibly provide. His face is the abile to construct an image of the romantic but simultaneously express the absurdity of that construction … Anyway. More tomorrow night …

Here’s the blurb for the talk:

So Lonely
Architectural Association, 36 Bedford Square
Date: 14/2/2012
Time: 18:00:00

Venue: New Soft Room
It’s Valentine’s Day. You’re all alone. No one to watch Love Actually with, for the 17th time. You’ll have to eat that dehydrated cupcake by yourself, after your microwave ‘meal For one’. You’re so very lonesome tonight. But, you know what? Sometimes loneliness is power not weakness.

Join Shumon Basar and Sam Jacob as they trawl through a hidden history of loneliness that includes Hugh Grant’s bitter face, Howard Hughes in the Desert Inn, Jesus Christ, North Korea, Edo-era Japan and French existentialists – as well as the conspiratorial evil commonly referred to as, ‘rom coms’. Plus some sad songs performed by Tamara Barnett-Herrin.

Tamara Barnett-Herrin is a London-based vocalist, songwriter and performer. She was the lead vocalist with the UK electronica act Freeform Five and has contributed vocal performances for various artists including Lindstrom, Mylo and Shinichi Osawa. Her new solo album, Born to Burn, is released in February by Bubbletease Communications. She has collaborated extensively with the Swiss artist Mai-Thu Perret at Migros Museum Zurich, Theatre de l’Usine in Geneva and the Performa Festival, New York.

Shumon Basar is a writer, editor, curator and director of the AA’s Cultural Programme as well as the live-magazine, Format. Translated By, the AA show he co-curated with Charles Arsene-Henry, has toured to CCA Kitakyushu, and goes to Salt, Istanbul in April. He is also directing Global Art Forum_6 at Mathaf, Doha and Art Dubai in March.

Sam Jacob is a director of London-based architecture office FAT, where he has been responsible for a range of projects spanning architecture, design and masterplanning. He is contributing
editor for Icon, columnist for Art Review and contributes to many other publications. He teaches at the AA and is Professor of Architecture at UIC. He writes and edits strangeharvest.com, samjacob.com & www.fat.co.uk



Versioned Chairs at Send To Print

Versioned Thonet No. 14 Chair

Micheal Thonet / Sam Jacob / Lionel Eid / Kit Bencharongkul

I’m showing Versioned Chairs at the Aram Gallery as part of their Send To Print show on 3D printing.

Versioned Le Corbusier LC2

Le Corbusier / Pierre Jeanneret / Charlotte Perriand / Sam Jacob / Insoo Hwang / Wataru Sawada

Versioned Chairs explores five canonical chairs through acts of translation. Starting with a photograph of the original chair, this was first translated into a textual description. The text was then translated into sketches, drawn by a group who had no idea of the original subject. One of each sketch was then digitally modeled and then returned to a 3D form through rapid prototyping. These outputs are many times removed versions of their originals. Versioned Chairs exploits the limitations of different media it moves from photograph to text to sketch and back to 3D, their misreadings and mistranslations often entirely unrecognisable from their original source.

Versioned 250lc Barcelona Chair

Mies van der Rohe / Sam Jacob / Henry Lim / Minh Van

Versioned EA 117

Charles & Ray Eames / Sam Jacob / Lionel Eid / Lionel Eid

Versioned Tom Vac

Ron Arad / Sam Jacob / Lionel Eid / Akhil Bakhda

More on Versioned Chairs here.

The show, which also features work by Assa Ashuach, Riccardo Bovo, Michael Eden, Freedom of Creation­­, Jump Studios, Markus Kayser, Dirk vander Kooij, Chau Har Lee, PearsonLloyd, Chloe McCormick & Nicholas O’Donnell-Hoare, Serie, Superfusionlab, Silvia Weidenbach and Unfold is introduced:

Send to Print / Print to Send offers an impression of uses of 3D Printing* in the design industry today. This timely exhibition shows work by designers and organisations who are developing the capabilities of this technology. In addition it will include examples of the increasingly important role 3D Printing plays in the design process, particularly during the complex prototyping stages.
Featuring pieces from the studios of both established and emerging designers, The Aram Gallery uses this exhibition as a way to examine how designers’ processes are developing to accommodate new technological advances. We offer our visitors an idea of what 3D Printing is, and how it is being contemporaneously used. This exhibition is not intended as an exhaustive overview, but a cross-disciplinary pick and mix of examples.

Send To Print
13th Jan – 25th Feb 2012
Aram Gallery
110 Drury Lane (near Aldwych)
Covent Garden
London
WC2B 5SG



Helvarial



Half Timbered Fields



Untitled Brick Wall

A few images of a piece I contributed to a show last month at FFAR in Stockholm as part of a show curated by San Rocco ‘The Even Covering of the Field’ along with Matilde Cassani and Ignacio Uriarte. The piece is a wall drawing of bricks, drawn at 1:1. It is a life size drawing of an everyday construction material and basic construction method in which the brick and its repetitive coursing is rendered as a decorative pattern rather than structure or envelope.

Special thanks to Pier Paolo Tamburelli and his steady hand.



Those Who Walk Through Walls & Other Hertzian Tales

I have two pieces out concurrently that in some way speculate on the architectural space of broadcast and communication technology. In a sense, they describe the beginning and the end of what we could call the ‘Hertzian dream’ of liberation from the physical realm into new worlds whose fluid possibilities of geography, time, ownership and identity might offer freedoms that our material domain denies. The other end of this story is the creep of corporate media into our most intimate and private spaces and into the very structures that are intended to maintain civil society, and the privatisation of communicational space.

The first piece is in Domus on phone hacking, News International and the way in which realms of private and public were distorted through the technologies of the mobile phone as well as the collapse of the spatial organisation and distinction between corporations, government, police, and our own intimate privacies. It was written back in the summer, so may have dated a little with such a fast-paced and sprawling story.

The second is in Perspecta 44: Domain and on the development of radio, the construction of the BBC as a Hertzian empire and the architecture of the electromagnetic spectrum.

Here, a cut-up experiment between the two:

A little after midday on 12 December 1901, three bursts of electromagnetic radiation traveled above the Atlantic ocean at 186,000 miles per second—beep beep beep—from Poldhu, in the south-western corner of England, to the hilltop cabin of Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi in St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada. Three beeps that spelt ’s’ in Morse code, delivered in Marconi’s headset with an induction coil and spark. These beeps were radio transmissions connecting two geographically distant people who, just before lunch and breakfast respectively, experienced something unique: the sound of one kind of geography collapsing, and another nascent geography flickering into existence.

While Marconi’s dematerialized beeps sped across the Atlantic, proto-Modernists had their eye on the tail end of the Industrial Revolution. They were enamored with tThe formal characteristics of new machines, vehicles, and industrial structures became the mainstays of the Modernist source book, and part of the pseudo-functionalist quasi-logic of Modernist rhetoric. But it is possible that there was a subtext to Modernism that eluded this rhetoric. A subtext born of wireless communication that reaches out to us across a century of exponential developments in communication technology.

With Marconi’s radio in mind, those canonical Modernist concerns of the open plan and the glazed curtain wall may not just be accidents of evolution in construction technology. Perhaps they are the first signs of an architecture that seeks to respond to the new experiences of wireless communication. Connecting places that once were separate, dissolving physical boundaries between rooms and the things that go on in them, topologically blurring relationships between the inside and the outside in ways that echo the electronic dissolution of space. Maybe Modernism is an architecture made by and for people who dream of being everywhere, all the time, simultaneously. Maybe this Modernist subtext, submerged under the grand narrative of the industrial, is at the heart of understanding contemporary space, born at the beginning of the 20th century. ‘S’ spelled the origin of a new formulation of domain: a blank space, a white noise, pristine and immaterial that was everywhere, all at the same time.

This buzzing network of connections between one place and another creates and dissolves in equal measure, forming an alternative, invisible geography in flux. It reshapes relationships formed by geology and history into unstable and ethereal formations.

We see this everywhere-at-the-same-time quality as an emergent architectural condition through the 20th Century. We see it when we look at the Maison Domino in its open frame where down is the same as up and here is the same as there. We see it too in that quality of the Farnsworth House described by Peter Smithson as ‘Ruburb’ by which he meant the concertina-ing of rural and urban into a simultaneous experience. Or in the horizontal continuousness of the Johnson Wax building, or that strand of super-horizontal spatiality developed by Norman Foster first in Willis Faber Dumas where escalators become so integral to the spatial logic that difference between floors – such a fundamental architectural distinction between here and there – is erased. Each of these (amongst may other examples) might be read as attempts by architecture to enact the spatialities first experienced in 19th Century laboratories.

The rhetoric of transparency seems to derive from an architectural condition. More specifically, its corrective quality echoes architecture’s own interest in transparency. For modernist architecture, the idea of transparency challenged traditional notions of interior and exterior, and in doing so reconfigured the relationship between public and private. Dissolving the barrier of the wall, so it might be argued, dissolved the hierarchies of the old order— actually and rhetorically. Transparency then is an architectural strategy that makes public, and thus apparently accountable, the private spaces once concealed within neoclassical or Beaux-Arts solidity. Transparency then, is part of modernism’s rhetoric of truth. And it is this simplistic notion of transparency that is mobilised in current political discussion.

If we are looking either to understand or extend the metaphor of “transparency” as used in contemporary political discussion, perhaps we should learn from architecture’s own experience of the limits of transparencies in ideological operation. Think perhaps of Dan Graham’s pavilions, or perhaps in SANAA’s conception of transparency. Here, the idea of transparency becomes more complex. The glass surface, once employed because of its see-through-ness, amplifies other characteristics. Manipulations of curve, angle, lighting, and so on, so that its properties of reflection become the spectacle, promoted over direct transparency. Rather than seeing through, we find ourselves looking at an image of ourselves and our circumstance reflected back, sometimes clearly, sometimes as a distorted or ghostly image.

The contemporary interpretation of transparency is then very different to its modernist root. Rather than assume an idealised positive effect, it presents transparency as a problem, suggesting that as much as we might see through, we also end up looking in the opposite direction, that as soon as we train our gaze on a subject through something, it becomes framed, obscured and mediated by the very mechanism that is allowing us to look. The phone hacking scandal also sets into relief the way in which communication and media have radically altered traditional spatial and organisational principles. An entity like News Corp constructs a continuous space that extends from the voicemails of Milly Dowler to clandestine discussions with Prime Ministers, to the hectoring rhetoric of a Sun headline to the apparent respectability of a Wall Street Journal leader, to geostationary satellites, to its nasdaq stock listing and far beyond.

This corporatised media space both extends and challenges Marshall McLuhan’s understanding of media as an extension of our nervous system. He argues that, for example, TV is an extension of our optic nerve and radio extends our ears. This anthropomorphic image of distended sensory organs suggests a naturalisation of media: that TV cameras, microphones, broadcast installations, the electromagnetic spectrum and the full array of broadcast technologies are in effect no different from our own bodies, and that contemporary media is, in effect, an inevitable techno-biological evolution.

In casting media as an extension of human sense, McLuhan attempts to position media as a natural condition of the human habitat. Yet media is an entirely unnatural invention, pure culture rather than an inevitable consequence of technobiological determinism. Media, as Rupert Murdoch understands it, is not natural but something that must be continuously constructed.

McLuhan is right though to describe media as a spatial phenomenon. It performs spatially by collecting and distributing information that distorts our experience of geography. Media forms connections, relationships, adjacencies; it alters distances in time and space and collapses geography. Its techniques of assembly and editing (the jump cut, fade and juxtaposition, for example) and its sequencing of experience into genre and schedule remake the world in its own image. Think for example of the corporate slogans: Microsoft’s “Where do you want to go today” or Starbucks “Geography is a flavour”. These trademarked mantras suggest the physical world reorganised by technology, media and experience; they propose that the base architecture of the planet is no longer a function of cosmology and geology but of the techniques and effects of media.

This effect then allows an entity like News Corp to exist—this is the ecosystem that it both inhabits and generates. It is also the condition that traditional spatial organisations find themselves within, subsumed by the flows and currents of globalised corporate media. The scandals that have rocked such fundamental institutions in the UK are a function of the tension between these two conceptions of space, the effect of erosion on the static edifices of traditional governance by the dynamic flows of contemporary media.

Elements of News Corp’s empire—the Sun, the News of the World, Fox News, and so on—operate as entities that while presenting themselves as sources of information are in fact a form of partisan politics, leveraged lobbying and devices that attempt to influence political policy in ways that often serve Murdoch’s self-interested commercial interests (in the uk this is evidenced most explicitly by News Corp’s agenda against the BBC and the euro). Against this hyperprocessed media, we might cite Wikileaks as its polar opposite. Here, its information dumps of pure, unrefined information exist without the contextualisation, analysis, editing or framing that traditional media bring to bear.

Though they may be entirely different types of information, Wikileaks and News Corp’s phone hacking suggests there is a crisis in the ability to construct a functioning architecture of the state within the field of modern media. Both obliterate the boundary between the public and private— be it state secrets or a celebrity’s extra-marital shenanigans. Both suggest a transformation of the idea of the private driven by the technologies of media and communication.

Increasingly data is cached on remote servers protected by encryption and passwords. These distant servers are always accessible through the omnipresent “cloud”. Here we begin to perceive the pretzel logic of contemporary media space: that our private data already exists everywhere. This is a radical counterintuitive spatial inversion, a prolapse of the traditional relationship of public and private.

We’ve come along way since James Clerk Maxwell’s ‘A Dynamical Theory of the Electomagnic Field’ published in 1864. Here, Maxwell demonstrated that electric and magnetic fields travel through space in the form of waves, and at the constant speed of light.

Between 1886 and 1888 the physicist Heinrich Hertz produced the first transmissions of radio waves through free space. His interest was theoretical, remarking that If Hertz was only interested in theoretical physics, demonstrating the existence and qualities of the electromagnetic spectrum, Marconi’s was a more commercial-minded approach. Marconi’s claims as a scientist are shaky at best, but his skill was in assembling and improving existing components into a unified system. It wasn’t the science, but his vision of what might be communicated and why – the content of the buzzes and bleeps. It is of little consequence that Maroni’s Poldhu – St. John’s transmission might only have been random atmospheric noise mistaken for a signal. It was the idea of what could be constructed in the space of wireless communication. In this is the suggestion that invisible parts of atmosphere can be colonised. And that the electromagnetic spectrum was a place, within which ideas of ownership and control would have to be invented.

The total Marconisation of the earthly radio spectrum is evidenced by its regulation and its transformation into real estate. Sections of the spectrum are auctioned off in chunks by government to communications companies. Analogue broadcasting is turned off to open up space for other opportunities. The spectrum, over-dense with communication: emergency services, military, TV, radio, telephone and so on. The electromagnetic spectrum is transformed from Hertzian free space into an echo of property, imagined into a state where it operates as an invisible natural resource. Regulation projects the legalities of earthly spatiality into the atmosphere. In doing so it turns physical characteristics of the atmosphere – vibrations in the electromagnetic spectrum – into a politicized spatial entity.

This invisible model of the earth surrounds us everywhere, all the time. Like any model it both represents and proposes. In its frictionless omnipresence, it both models and acts as the conduit for globalised economy. This domain envelops the planet like a secondary atmosphere, an ecosystem which supports other forms of life, a medium and conduit for connectivity. This is the domain with which trade and economics operates: the ships and airoplanes moving goods from one place to another. The spatiality of radio space mimics – or parallels – that of globalization, each an agent of the other. Globalisation flattens our spherical horizon into a single space where people, goods, ideas and money move with frictionless ease. Under these conditions, narrative, symbolism, capital, value and meaning are released from the physical constraints of geography and architecture.

The phone hacking scandal exposed the failures of traditional institutions to maintain boundaries, distinctions and thresholds against the spectrallike entity of contemporary corporate media. It has demonstrated their inability to control the pervasive flows that have ghosted through their structures, distorted their operation, and bent their purpose. The radically transforming nature of information, media and communication and the rise of corporate entities challenge the very idea of the state, threatening to dissolve its body into their flux. They are phenomena that have altered the dynamics of contemporary power and democracy profoundly, have remapped its topography and spatial organisation and transformed the ecosystem within which democracy attempts to exist.



Obscure Design Typologies: Gorilla Enclosures

The Gorilla Enclosure as design typology presents a concentrated version of architecture as a total design project: design not of discrete objects but as the design of environment.

One could think of the enclosure as a kind of imaginary world, an island contained within cage, glass, fence or wall. Inside, they operate both as a habitat, and as a representation of habitat. Sometimes deploy environmental scenography in attempts to mimic authentic gorilla habitat. In others, the environment is more abstract where, say a space frame operates both as structural enclosure and as a technological iteration of tree top canopy.

In them we see the tension inherent in our contemporary relationship to issues of environment and nature. On one hand an idealised vision, on the other the necessarily synthetic nature of this idealised vision. And while these are exceptional conditions – wild animals held, most often, within the heart of the civilised urban – they are also revealing about the design of habitat in general terms. ‘Environment’ is figured both as a image – a cultural condition – and as a landscape into which are embedded the possibilities of occupation (here that might be swinging on a rope, climbing a tree – but also think of the ways the possibilities and limitations of occupation are designed into our everyday landscapes). That they often seek to naturalise their artificial nature also serves as a neat précis of the way all design makes the imaginary seem an inevitable part of our environment.