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Deconstructivism

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Deconstructivism



 
 
Deconstructivism in architecture, also called deconstruction, is a development of postmodern architecture
Postmodern architecture

Postmodern architecture was an international style whose first examples are generally cited as being from the 1950s, and which continues to influence present-day architecture....
 that began in the late 1980s. It is characterized by ideas of fragmentation, an interest in manipulating ideas of a structure's surface or skin, non-rectilinear
Rectilinear polygon

File:Rectilinear polygons.svgA rectilinear polygon is a polygon all of whose edges meet at right angles. Thus the interior angle at each vertex is either 90? or 270?....
 shapes which serve to distort and dislocate some of the elements of architecture
Design principles and elements

Design elements and principles are the basic visual toolbox of design tactics in every visual design discipline. The elements form the basic vocabulary of visual design, while the principles constitute the broader structural aspects of the composition....
, such as structure and envelope
Building envelope

A building envelope is the separation between the interior and the exterior environments of a building. It serves as the outer shell to protect the indoor environment as well as to facilitate its climate control....
.






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Deconstructivism in architecture, also called deconstruction, is a development of postmodern architecture
Postmodern architecture

Postmodern architecture was an international style whose first examples are generally cited as being from the 1950s, and which continues to influence present-day architecture....
 that began in the late 1980s. It is characterized by ideas of fragmentation, an interest in manipulating ideas of a structure's surface or skin, non-rectilinear
Rectilinear polygon

File:Rectilinear polygons.svgA rectilinear polygon is a polygon all of whose edges meet at right angles. Thus the interior angle at each vertex is either 90? or 270?....
 shapes which serve to distort and dislocate some of the elements of architecture
Design principles and elements

Design elements and principles are the basic visual toolbox of design tactics in every visual design discipline. The elements form the basic vocabulary of visual design, while the principles constitute the broader structural aspects of the composition....
, such as structure and envelope
Building envelope

A building envelope is the separation between the interior and the exterior environments of a building. It serves as the outer shell to protect the indoor environment as well as to facilitate its climate control....
. The finished visual appearance of buildings that exhibit the many deconstructivist "styles" is characterised by a stimulating unpredictability and a controlled chaos.

Important events in the history of the deconstructivist movement include the 1982 Parc de la Villette
Parc de la Villette

The Parc de la Villette is a park in Paris at the outer edge of the XIXe arrondissement , bordering Seine-Saint-Denis. It was designed by Bernard Tschumi....
 architectural design competition
Architectural design competition

An architectural design competition is a special type of competition in which an organization or government body that plans to build a new building asks for architects to enter differing designs for the building....
 (especially the entry from Jacques Derrida
Jacques Derrida

Jacques Derrida was a France philosophy born in Algeria, who is known as the founder of deconstruction, which was originally a translation of a Heideggerian term from Being and Time, also translated as 'De-structuring'....
 and Peter Eisenman
Peter Eisenman

Peter Eisenman is an American architect. Eisenman's fragmented forms are identified with an eclectic group of architects that have been labeled as deconstructivism....
 and Bernard Tschumi
Bernard Tschumi

Bernard Tschumi is an architect, writer, and educator, commonly associated with deconstructivism. Born of French and Swiss parentage, he works and lives in New York and Paris....
's winning entry), the Museum of Modern Art
Museum of Modern Art

The Museum of Modern Art is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan in New York City, USA, on 53rd Street, between Fifth and Sixth Avenues....
’s 1988 Deconstructivist Architecture exhibition in New York, organized by Philip Johnson
Philip Johnson

Philip Cortelyou Johnson was an influential American architect. With his thick, round-framed glasses, Johnson was the most recognizable figure in American architecture for decades....
 and Mark Wigley
Mark Wigley

Mark Antony Wigley is a New Zealand-born architect, author, and Dean of Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, New York, United States....
, and the 1989 opening of the Wexner Center for the Arts
Wexner Center for the Arts

The Wexner Center for the Arts is a contemporary art Art gallery and "research laboratory" for the arts at The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio, USA....
 in Columbus
Columbus, Ohio

Columbus is the Capital , the largest, and the most populous city of the U.S. state of Ohio. Located near the Geographic centers of the United States, Columbus is the county seat of Franklin County, Ohio, although parts of the city also extend into Delaware County, Ohio and Fairfield County, Ohio counties....
, designed by Peter Eisenman. The New York exhibition featured works by Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry

Frank Owen Gehry, Order of Canada is a Pritzker Prize-winning architect based in Los Angeles.His buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions....
, Daniel Libeskind
Daniel Libeskind

Daniel Libeskind, is an United States architect, artist, and set designer of Polish-Jewish descent. He founded Studio Daniel Libeskind in 1989 with his wife, Nina, and is its principal design architect....
, Rem Koolhaas
Rem Koolhaas

Remment Lucas Koolhaas, , is a Dutch architect, architectural theory, urbanist and "Professor in Practice of Architecture and Urban Design" at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University, USA....
, Peter Eisenman
Peter Eisenman

Peter Eisenman is an American architect. Eisenman's fragmented forms are identified with an eclectic group of architects that have been labeled as deconstructivism....
, Zaha Hadid
Zaha Hadid

Zaha Hadid , Order of British Empire is a notable Iraqis in the United Kingdom deconstructivism architect....
, Coop Himmelb(l)au
Coop Himmelb(l)au

Coop Himmelbau is a cooperative architectural design firm primarily located in Vienna, Austria and which now also maintains offices in Los Angeles, United States and Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico....
, and Bernard Tschumi
Bernard Tschumi

Bernard Tschumi is an architect, writer, and educator, commonly associated with deconstructivism. Born of French and Swiss parentage, he works and lives in New York and Paris....
. Since the exhibition, many of the architects who were associated with Deconstructivism have distanced themselves from the term. Nonetheless, the term has stuck and has now, in fact, come to embrace a general trend within contemporary architecture.

Originally, some of the architects known as Deconstructivists were influenced by the ideas of the French philosopher Jacques Derrida
Jacques Derrida

Jacques Derrida was a France philosophy born in Algeria, who is known as the founder of deconstruction, which was originally a translation of a Heideggerian term from Being and Time, also translated as 'De-structuring'....
. Eisenman developed a personal relationship with Derrida, but even so his approach to architectural design was developed long before he became a Deconstructivist. For him Deconstructivism should be considered an extension of his interest in radical formalism. Some practitioners of deconstructivism were also influenced by the formal experimentation and geometric imbalances of Russian constructivism
Constructivist architecture

Constructivist architecture was a form of modern architecture that flourished in the Soviet Union in the 1920s and early 1930s. It combined advanced technology and engineering with an avowedly Communist social purpose....
. There are additional references in deconstructivism to 20th-century movements: the modernism
Modernism

Modernism, in its broadest definition, is modern thought, character, or practice. More specifically, the term describes both a set of cultural tendencies and an array of associated cultural movements, originally arising from wide-scale and far-reaching changes to Western culture in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century....
/postmodernism
Postmodernism

Postmodernism literally means 'after the modernist movement'. While "modern" itself refers to something "related to the present", the movement of modernism and the following reaction of postmodernism are defined by a set of perspectives....
 interplay, expressionism
Expressionist architecture

Expressionist architecture was an architectural movement that developed in Europe during the first decades of the 20th century in parallel with the expressionism visual and performing arts....
, cubism
Cubism

Cubism was a 20th century avant-garde art movement, pioneered by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, that revolutionized European painting and sculpture, and inspired related movements in music and literature....
, minimalism
Minimalism

Minimalism describes movements in various forms of art and design, especially visual art and Minimalist music, where the work is stripped down to its most fundamental features....
 and contemporary art
Contemporary art

Contemporary art can be defined variously as art produced at this present point in time or art produced since World War II. The definition of the word contemporary would support the first view, but museums of contemporary art commonly define their collections as consisting of art produced since World War II....
. The attempt in deconstructivism throughout is to move architecture away from what its practitioners see as the constricting 'rules' of modernism such as "form follows function
Form follows function

Form follows function is a principle associated with modern architecture and industrial design in the 20th century. The principle is that the shape of a building or object should be primarily based upon its intended function or purpose....
," "purity of form
Purism

Purism was a form of Cubism advocated by the France Painting Am?d?e Ozenfant and the architect Charles-Edouard Jeanneret ....
," and "truth to materials
Truth to materials

Truth to materials is a tenet of Modern architecture , which holds that any material should be used where it is most appropriate and its nature should not be hidden....
."

History, context & influences


Modernism and postmodernism

Scl
Deconstructivism in contemporary architecture
Contemporary architecture

Contemporary architecture is the architecture being made at the present time. It also includes that of the last few decades, from the 1980s to the present....
 stands in opposition to the ordered rationality of Modernism
Modern architecture

Modern architecture is a set of building styles with similar characteristics, primarily the simplification of form and the elimination of Ornament ....
. Its relationship with Postmodernism
Postmodern architecture

Postmodern architecture was an international style whose first examples are generally cited as being from the 1950s, and which continues to influence present-day architecture....
 is also decidedly contrary. Though postmodernist and nascent deconstructivist architects published theories alongside each other in the journal Oppositions
Oppositions

Oppositions was an architectural journal produced by the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies in the years 1973 to 1984. Many of it articles contributed to architectural theory and many of its contributors became distinguished members within the architectural field....
 (published 1973–84), that journal's contents mark the beginning of a decisive break between the two movements. Deconstruction took a confrontational stance toward much of architecture and architectural history
Architectural History

Architectural History is the main journal of the Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain .The journal is published each autumn....
, wanting to disjoin and disassemble architecture. While postmodernism returned to embrace— often slyly or ironically—the historical references that modernism had shunned, deconstructivism rejects the postmodern acceptance of such references. It also rejects the idea of ornament as an after-thought or decoration. These principles have meant that deconstructivism aligns itself somewhat with the sensibilities of modernist anti-historicism.

In addition to Oppositions, another text that separated deconstructivism from the fray of modernism and postmodernism was the publication of Robert Venturi
Robert Venturi

Robert Charles Venturi, Jr. is an award-winning American architect and founding principal of the firm Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates. Robert Venturi and his wife and partner, Denise Scott Brown, are regarded among the most influential architects of the twentieth century, both through their architecture and planning, and theoretical w...
's Complexity and Contradiction in architecture (1966). A defining point for both postmodernism and for deconstructivism, Complexity and Contradiction argues against the purity, clarity and simplicity of modernism. With its publication, functionalism
Functionalism (architecture)

Functionalism, in architecture, is the principle that architects should design a building based on the purpose of that building. This statement is less self-evident than it first appears, and is a matter of confusion and controversy within the profession, particularly in regard to modern architecture....
 and rationalism
Rationalism (architecture)

The intellectual principles of Rationalism are based on architectural theory. Vitruvius had already established in his work De Architectura that architecture is a science that can be comprehended rationally....
, the two main branches of modernism, were overturned as paradigms according to postmodernist and deconstructivist readings, with differing readings. The postmodern reading of Venturi (who was himself a postmodernist) was that ornament and historical allusion added a richness to architecture that modernism had foregone. Some Postmodern architects endeavored to reapply ornaments even to economical and minimal buildings, an effort best illustrated by Venturi's concept of "the decorated shed." Rationalism of design was dismissed but the functionalism of the building was still somewhat intact. This is close to the thesis of Venturi's next major work, that sign
Sign

A sign is an entity which signifies another entity. A natural sign is an entity which bears a causal relation to the signified entity, as thunder is a sign of storm....
s and ornament can be applied to a pragmatic architecture, and instill the philosophic complexities of semiology
Semiotics

'Semiotics, also called semiotic studies or semiology, is the study of sign processes , or signification and communication, sign and symbols, both individually and grouped into sign systems....
.

Vitra002a
The deconstructivist reading of Complexity and Contradiction is quite different. The basic building was the subject of problematics and intricacies in deconstructivism, with no detachment for ornament. Rather than separating ornament and function, like postmodernists such as Venturi, the functional aspects of buildings were called into question. Geometry was to deconstructivists what ornament was to postmodernists, the subject of complication, and this complication of geometry was in turn, applied to the functional, structural, and spacial aspects of deconstructivist buildings. One example of deconstructivist complexity is Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry

Frank Owen Gehry, Order of Canada is a Pritzker Prize-winning architect based in Los Angeles.His buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions....
's Vitra Design Museum in Weil-am-Rhein, which takes the typical unadorned white cube of modernist art galleries
Art gallery

An art gallery or art museum is a space for the art exhibition, usually visual art. Paintings are the most commonly displayed art objects; however, sculpture, photographs, illustrations, installation art and objects from the applied arts may also be shown....
 and deconstructs it, using geometries reminiscent of cubism and abstract expressionism. This subverts the functional aspects of modernist simplicity while taking modernism, particularly the international style, of which its white stucco skin is reminiscent, as a starting point. Another example of the deconstructivist reading of Complexity and Contradiction is Peter Eisenman
Peter Eisenman

Peter Eisenman is an American architect. Eisenman's fragmented forms are identified with an eclectic group of architects that have been labeled as deconstructivism....
's Wexner Center for the Arts. The Wexner Center takes the archetypal form of the castle
Castle

A castle is a defensive structure seen as one of the main symbols of the Middle Ages. The term has a history of scholarly debate surrounding its exact meaning, but it is usually regarded as being distinct from the general terms fort or fortress in that it describes a residence of a monarch or noble and commands a specific defensive territor...
, which it then imbues with complexity in a series of cuts and fragmentations. A three-dimensional grid, runs somewhat arbitrarily through the building. The grid, as a reference to modernism, of which it is an accoutrement, collides with the medieval antiquity of a castle. Some of the grid's columns intentionally don't reach the ground, hovering over stairways creating a sense of neurotic unease and contradicting the structural purpose of the column
Column

File:National Capitol Columns - Washington, D.C..jpgA column in structural engineering is a vertical structural element that transmits, through physical compression, the weight of the structure above to other structural elements below....
. The Wexner Center deconstructs the archetype of the castle and renders its spaces and structure with conflict and difference.

Deconstructivist philosophy

Castelveccio Eisenman
The main channel from deconstructivist philosophy to architectural theory
Architectural theory

Architectural theory is the act of thinking, discussing, or most importantly writing about architecture. Architectural theory is taught in most architecture schools and is practiced by the world's leading architects....
 was through the philosopher Jacques Derrida
Jacques Derrida

Jacques Derrida was a France philosophy born in Algeria, who is known as the founder of deconstruction, which was originally a translation of a Heideggerian term from Being and Time, also translated as 'De-structuring'....
's influence with Peter Eisenman
Peter Eisenman

Peter Eisenman is an American architect. Eisenman's fragmented forms are identified with an eclectic group of architects that have been labeled as deconstructivism....
. Eisenman drew some philosophical bases from the literary movement Deconstruction
Deconstruction

Deconstruction is a term used in philosophy, literary criticism, and the social sciences, popularised through its usage by Jacques Derrida in the 1960s....
, and collaborated directly with Derrida on projects including an entry for the Parc de la Villette
Parc de la Villette

The Parc de la Villette is a park in Paris at the outer edge of the XIXe arrondissement , bordering Seine-Saint-Denis. It was designed by Bernard Tschumi....
 competition, documented in Chora l Works. Both Derrida and Eisenman, as well as Daniel Libeskind
Daniel Libeskind

Daniel Libeskind, is an United States architect, artist, and set designer of Polish-Jewish descent. He founded Studio Daniel Libeskind in 1989 with his wife, Nina, and is its principal design architect....
 were concerned with the "metaphysics of presence
Metaphysics of presence

The concept of the metaphysics of presence is an important consideration within the area of deconstruction. The deconstructive interpretation holds that the entire history of philosophy of Western philosophy and its language and traditions has emphasized the desire for immediate access to meaning, and thus built a metaphysics or ontotheology...
," and this is the main subject of deconstructivist philosophy in architecture theory. The presupposition is that architecture is a language capable of communicating meaning and of receiving treatments by methods of linguistic philosophy. The dialectic of presence and absence, or solid and void occurs in much of Eisenman's projects, both built and unbuilt. Both Derrida and Eisenman believe that the locus, or place of presence, is architecture, and the same dialectic of presence and absence is found in construction and deconstruction.

According to Derrida, readings of texts are best carried out when working with classical narrative structures. Any architectural deconstruction requires the existence of a particular archetypal construction, a strongly-established conventional expectation to play flexibly against. The design of Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry

Frank Owen Gehry, Order of Canada is a Pritzker Prize-winning architect based in Los Angeles.His buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions....
’s own Santa Monica residence, (from 1978), has been cited as a prototypical deconstructivist building. His starting point was a prototypical suburban house embodied with a typical set of intended social meanings. Gehry altered its massing, spatial envelopes, planes and other expectations in a playful subversion, an act of "de"construction"

In addition to Derrida's concepts of the metaphysics of presence and deconstruction, his notions of trace and erasure, embodied in his philosophy of writing and arche-writing found their way into deconstructivist memorial
Memorial

A memorial is an object which serves as a memory of something, usually a person or an event.Popular forms of memorials include landmark objects or art objects such as sculptures,statues or fountains ....
s. Daniel Libeskind envisioned many of his early projects as a form of writing or discourse on writing and often works with a form of concrete poetry
Concrete poetry

Concrete poetry, pattern poetry or shape poetry is poetry in which the typographical arrangement of words is as important in conveying the intended effect as the conventional elements of the poem, such as meaning of words, rhythm, rhyme and so on....
. He made architectural sculptures out of books and often coated the models in texts, openly making his architecture refer to writing. The notions of trace and erasure were taken up by Libeskind in essays and in his project for the Jewish Museum Berlin
Jewish Museum Berlin

The Jewish Museum Berlin , in Berlin, Germany, covers two millennia of German Jewish history. World-renowned architect Daniel Libeskind designed the museum, which opened to the public in 2001....
. The museum is conceived as a trace of the erasure of the Holocaust, intended to make its subject legible and poignant. Memorials such as Maya Lin's Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Vietnam Veterans Memorial

The Vietnam Veterans Memorial is a national war memorial in Washington, D.C. It honors members of the Military of the United States who fought in the Vietnam War and who died in service or are still unaccounted for....
 and Peter Eisenman's Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe
Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe

The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe , also known as the Holocaust Memorial , is a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold....
 also reflect themes of trace and erasure.

Constructivism and Russian Futurism

Another major current in deconstructivist architecture takes inspiration from the Russian Constructivist
Constructivism (art)

Constructivism was an artistic and architecture movement that originated in Russia from 1919 onward which rejected the idea of "art for art's sake" in favour of art as a practice directed towards social purposes....
 and Futurist
Russian Futurism

Russian Futurism is the term used to denote a group of Russian poets and artists who adopted the principles of Marinetti's manifesto. Russian futurism may be said to have been born in December 1912, when the Moscow-based group Hylaea issued a manifesto entitled A Slap in the Face of Public Taste....
 movements of the early twentieth century, both in their graphics and in their visionary architecture, little of which was actually constructed.

Artists Naum Gabo
Naum Gabo

Naum Gabo Order of the British Empire, born Naum Neemia Pevsner was a prominent Russian sculpture in the Constructivism movement and a pioneer of Kinetic Art....
, El Lissitzky
El Lissitzky

, better known as El Lissitzky , was a Russian artist, designer, photographer, typographer, polemicist and architect. He was an important figure of the Russian avant garde, helping develop suprematism with his mentor, Kazimir Malevich, and designing numerous Art exhibition displays and propaganda works for the former Soviet Union....
, Kazimir Malevich
Kazimir Malevich

Kazimir Severinovich Malevich , was a Painting and art theoretician, pioneer of geometric abstract art and the originator of the Avant-garde Suprematist movement....
, and Alexander Rodchenko
Alexander Rodchenko

Aleksander Mikhailovich Rodchenko was a Russian artist, sculpture, photographer and Graphic Design. He was one of the founders of Constructivism and Russian design; he was married to the artist Varvara Stepanova....
, have influenced the graphic sense of geometric forms of deconstructivist architects such as Zaha Hadid
Zaha Hadid

Zaha Hadid , Order of British Empire is a notable Iraqis in the United Kingdom deconstructivism architect....
 and Coop Himmelb(l)au
Coop Himmelb(l)au

Coop Himmelbau is a cooperative architectural design firm primarily located in Vienna, Austria and which now also maintains offices in Los Angeles, United States and Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico....
. Both Deconstructivism and Constructivism have been concerned with the tectonics of making an abstract assemblage. Both were concerned with the radical simplicity of geometric forms as the primary artistic content, expressed in graphics, sculpture and architecture. The Constructivist tendency toward purism
Purism

Purism was a form of Cubism advocated by the France Painting Am?d?e Ozenfant and the architect Charles-Edouard Jeanneret ....
, though, is absent in Deconstructivism: form is often deformed when construction is deconstructed. Also lessened or absent is the advocacy of socialist
Socialism

Socialism refers to a broad set of economic theories of social organization advocating public or state ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods, and a society characterized by equality for all individuals, with a fair or Egalitarianism method of compensation....
 and collectivist
Collectivism

Collectivism is a term used to describe any moral, political, or social outlook, that stresses human interdependence and the importance of a collective, rather than the importance of separate individuals....
 causes.

The primary graphic motifs of constructivism were the rectangular bar and the triangular wedge, others were the more basic geometries of the square and the circle. In his series Prouns, El Lizzitzky assembled collections of geometries at various angles floating free in space. They evoke basic structural units such as bars of steel or sawn lumber loosely attached, piled, or scattered. They were also often drafted
Technical drawing

File:Drafter at work.jpgFile:Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F038800-0010, Wolfsburg, VW Autowerk.jpgTechnical drawing is the discipline of creating Standardization technology drawing by architects, CAD drafters, design engineers, and related professionals....
 and share aspects with technical drawing
Technical drawing

File:Drafter at work.jpgFile:Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F038800-0010, Wolfsburg, VW Autowerk.jpgTechnical drawing is the discipline of creating Standardization technology drawing by architects, CAD drafters, design engineers, and related professionals....
 and engineering drawing
Engineering drawing

An engineering drawing, or Construction drawing, is a type of technical drawing, created within the technical drawing discipline, and used to fully and clearly define requirements for engineering items....
. Similar in composition is the deconstructivist series Micromegas by Daniel Libeskind.

Contemporary art

Two strains of modern art, minimalism
Minimalism

Minimalism describes movements in various forms of art and design, especially visual art and Minimalist music, where the work is stripped down to its most fundamental features....
 and cubism
Cubism

Cubism was a 20th century avant-garde art movement, pioneered by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, that revolutionized European painting and sculpture, and inspired related movements in music and literature....
, have had an influence on deconstructivism. Analytical cubism had a sure effect on deconstructivism, as forms and content are dissected and viewed from different perspectives simultaneously. A synchronicity of disjoined space is evident in many of the works of Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry

Frank Owen Gehry, Order of Canada is a Pritzker Prize-winning architect based in Los Angeles.His buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions....
 and Bernard Tschumi
Bernard Tschumi

Bernard Tschumi is an architect, writer, and educator, commonly associated with deconstructivism. Born of French and Swiss parentage, he works and lives in New York and Paris....
. Synthetic cubism, with its application of found art
Found art

The term found art—more commonly found object or readymade—describes art created from the undisguised, but often modified, use of objects that are not normally considered art, often because they already have a non-art function....
, is not as great an influence on deconstructivism as Analytical cubism, but is still found in the earlier and more vernacular works of Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry

Frank Owen Gehry, Order of Canada is a Pritzker Prize-winning architect based in Los Angeles.His buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions....
. Deconstructivism also shares with minimalism a disconnection from cultural references. It also often shares with minimalism notions of conceptual art
Conceptual art

Conceptual art is art in which the concept or idea involved in the work take precedence over traditional Aesthetics and material concerns. Many of the works, sometimes called Installation art, of the artist Sol LeWitt may be constructed by anyone simply by following a set of written instructions....
.

With its tendency toward deformation and dislocation, there is also an aspect of expressionism
Expressionism

Expressionism is the tendency of an artist to distort reality for an emotional effect; it is a subjective art form. Expressionism is exhibited in many art forms, including painting, literature, theatre, film, Expressionist architecture and Expressionism ....
 and expressionist architecture
Expressionist architecture

Expressionist architecture was an architectural movement that developed in Europe during the first decades of the 20th century in parallel with the expressionism visual and performing arts....
 associated with deconstructivism. At times deconstructivism mirrors varieties of expressionism, neo-expressionism
Neo-expressionism

Neo-expressionism was a style of Modernism painting that emerged in the late 1970s and dominated the art market until the mid-1980s. Related to American Lyrical Abstraction it developed in Europe as a reaction against the conceptual and minimalism art of the 1970s....
, and abstract expressionism
Abstract expressionism

Abstract expressionism was an American post?World War II art movement. It was the first specifically American movement to achieve worldwide influence and also the one that put New York City at the center of the art world, a role formerly filled by Paris....
 as well. The angular forms of the Ufa Cinema Center by Coop Himmelb(l)au recall the abstract geometries of the numbered paintings of Franz Kline
Franz Kline

Franz Kline was an American painter mainly associated with the Abstract Expressionism painters who were centered, geographically, around New York, and temporally, in the 1940s and 1950s; but not limited to that setting....
, in their unadorned masses. The UFA Cinema Center also would make a likely setting for the angular figures depicted in urban German street scenes by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner was a Germany Expressionism Painting and printmaker and one of the founders of the artists group Die Br?cke or "The Bridge", a key group leading to the foundation of Expressionism in 20th century art....
. The work of Wassily Kandinsky
Wassily Kandinsky

Wassily Wassilyevich Kandinsky was a Russian Painting, printmaker and art theorist. One of the most famous 20th-century artists, he is credited with painting the first modern abstract art works....
 also bears similarities to deconstructivist architecture. His movement into abstract expressionism and away from figurative work, is in the same spirit as the deconstructivist rejection of ornament for geometries.

Several artists in the 1980s and 1990s contributed work that influenced or took part in deconstructivism. Maya Lin and Rachel Whiteread
Rachel Whiteread

Rachel Whiteread, Order of the British Empire is a United Kingdom artist, best known for her sculptures, which typically take the form of castings, and first woman to win the Turner Prize....
 are two examples. Lin's 1982 project for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Vietnam Veterans Memorial

The Vietnam Veterans Memorial is a national war memorial in Washington, D.C. It honors members of the Military of the United States who fought in the Vietnam War and who died in service or are still unaccounted for....
, with its granite slabs severing the ground plane, is one. Its shard-like form and reduction of content to a minimalist text influenced deconstructivism, with its sense of fragmentation and emphasis on reading the monument. Lin also contributed work for Eisenman's Wexner Center. Rachel Whiteread's cast architectural spaces are another instance where contemporary art
Contemporary art

Contemporary art can be defined variously as art produced at this present point in time or art produced since World War II. The definition of the word contemporary would support the first view, but museums of contemporary art commonly define their collections as consisting of art produced since World War II....
 is confluent with architecture. Ghost (1990), an entire living space cast in plaster, solidifying the void, alludes to Derrida's notion of architectural presence. Gordon Matta-Clark
Gordon Matta-Clark

Gordon Matta-Clark was an United States artist best known for his site-specific artworks he made in the 1970s. He is famous for his "building cuts," a series of works in abandoned buildings in which he variously removed sections of floors, ceilings, and walls....
's
Building cuts were deconstructed sections of buildings exhibited in art galleries.

1988 MOMA exhibition

Prag Ginger U Fred Gehry
Mark Wigley
Mark Wigley

Mark Antony Wigley is a New Zealand-born architect, author, and Dean of Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, New York, United States....
 and Phillip Johnson curated the 1988 Museum of Modern Art
Museum of Modern Art

The Museum of Modern Art is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan in New York City, USA, on 53rd Street, between Fifth and Sixth Avenues....
 exhibition
Deconstructivist architecture, which crystallized the movement, and brought fame and notoriety to its key practitioners. The architects presented at the exhibition were Peter Eisenman
Peter Eisenman

Peter Eisenman is an American architect. Eisenman's fragmented forms are identified with an eclectic group of architects that have been labeled as deconstructivism....
, Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry

Frank Owen Gehry, Order of Canada is a Pritzker Prize-winning architect based in Los Angeles.His buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions....
, Zaha Hadid
Zaha Hadid

Zaha Hadid , Order of British Empire is a notable Iraqis in the United Kingdom deconstructivism architect....
, Coop Himmelblau, Rem Koolhaas
Rem Koolhaas

Remment Lucas Koolhaas, , is a Dutch architect, architectural theory, urbanist and "Professor in Practice of Architecture and Urban Design" at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University, USA....
, Daniel Libeskind
Daniel Libeskind

Daniel Libeskind, is an United States architect, artist, and set designer of Polish-Jewish descent. He founded Studio Daniel Libeskind in 1989 with his wife, Nina, and is its principal design architect....
, and Bernard Tschumi
Bernard Tschumi

Bernard Tschumi is an architect, writer, and educator, commonly associated with deconstructivism. Born of French and Swiss parentage, he works and lives in New York and Paris....
. Mark Wigley wrote the accompanying essay and tried to show a common thread among the various architects whose work was usually more noted for their differences.

Computer-aided design

Wfm Stata Center
Computer aided design is now an essential tool in most aspects of contemporary architecture, but the particular nature of deconstrucivism makes the use of computers especially pertinent. Three-dimensional modelling and animation (virtual and physical) assists in the conception of very complex spaces, while the ability to link computer models to manufacturing jigs (CAM - Computer-aided manufacturing
Computer-aided manufacturing

Computer-aided manufacturing is the use of computer-based software tools that assist engineers and machinists in manufacturing or prototyping product components....
) allows the mass production of subtly different modular elements to be achieved at affordable costs. In retrospect many early deconstructivist works appear to have been conceived with the aid of a computer, but were not; Zaha Hadid
Zaha Hadid

Zaha Hadid , Order of British Empire is a notable Iraqis in the United Kingdom deconstructivism architect....
's sketches for instance. Also, Gehry is noted for producing many physical models as well as computer models as part of his design process. Though the computer has made the designing of complex shapes much easier, not everything that looks odd is "deconstructivist."

Critical responses

Since the publication of Kenneth Frampton
Kenneth Frampton

Kenneth Frampton , is a British architect, critic, historian and the Ware Professor of Architecture at the Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation at Columbia University, New York....
's
Modern Architecture: A Critical History (first edition 1980) there has been a keen consciousness of the role of criticism within architectural theory. Whilst referencing Derrida as a philosophical influence, deconstructivism can also be seen as having as much a basis in critical theory
Critical theory

In the humanities and social sciences, critical theory is the examination and critique of society and literature, drawing from knowledge across social sciences and humanities disciplines....
 as the other major offshoot of postmodernism, critical regionalism
Critical regionalism

Critical regionalism approach to architecture that strives to counter the placelessness and lack of meaning in Modern Architecture by using contextual forces to give a sense of place and meaning....
. The two aspects of critical theory, urgency and analysis, are found in deconstructivism. There is a tendency to re-examine and critique other works or precedents in deconstructivism, and also a tendency to set esthetic issues in the foreground. An example of this is the Wexner Center. Critical Theory
Critical theory

In the humanities and social sciences, critical theory is the examination and critique of society and literature, drawing from knowledge across social sciences and humanities disciplines....
, however, had at its core a critique of capitalism and its excess, and from that respect many of the works of the Deconstructivists would fail in that regard if only they are made for an elite and are, as objects, highly expensive, despite whatever critique they may claim to impart on the conventions of design.

The Wexner Center brings vital architectural topics such as function and precedent to prominence and displays their urgency in architectural discourse, in an analytical and critical way. The difference between criticality in deconstructivism and criticality in critical regionalism, is that critical regionalism
reduces the overall level of complexity involved and maintains a clearer analysis while attempting to reconcile modernist architecture with local differences. In effect, this leads to a modernist "vernacular." Critical regionalism displays a lack of self-criticism and a utopia
Utopia

Utopia is a name for an ideal community or society, taken from the Utopia written in 1516 by Sir Thomas More describing a fictional island in the Atlantic Ocean, possessing a seemingly perfect social system-politics-legal system....
nism of place. Deconstructivism, meanwhile, maintains a level of self-criticism, as well as external criticism and tends towards maintaining a level of complexity. Some architects identified with the movement, notably Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry

Frank Owen Gehry, Order of Canada is a Pritzker Prize-winning architect based in Los Angeles.His buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions....
, have actively rejected the classification of their work as deconstructivist.

Guggenheim Bilbao Jan05
Critics of deconstructivism see it as a purely formal exercise with little social significance. Kenneth Frampton
Kenneth Frampton

Kenneth Frampton , is a British architect, critic, historian and the Ware Professor of Architecture at the Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation at Columbia University, New York....
 finds it "elitist and detached." Other criticisms are similar to those of deconstructivist philosophy—that since the act of deconstruction is not an empirical process, it can result in whatever an architect wishes, and it thus suffers from a lack of consistency. Today there is a sense that the philosophical underpinnings of the beginning of the movement have been lost, and all that is left is the aesthetic of deconstruction. Other criticisms reject the premise that architecture is a language capable of being the subject of linguistic philosophy, or, if it was a language in the past, critics claim it is no longer. Others question the wisdom and impact on future generations of an architecture that rejects the past and presents no clear values as replacements and which often pursues strategies that are intentionally aggressive to human senses.

See also

  • Günther Behnisch
  • Constructivism (art)
    Constructivism (art)

    Constructivism was an artistic and architecture movement that originated in Russia from 1919 onward which rejected the idea of "art for art's sake" in favour of art as a practice directed towards social purposes....
  • Deconstruction
    Deconstruction

    Deconstruction is a term used in philosophy, literary criticism, and the social sciences, popularised through its usage by Jacques Derrida in the 1960s....
  • Structuralism (architecture)
    Structuralism (architecture)

    Structuralism as a movement in architecture and urban planning evolved around the middle of the 20th century. It was a reaction to Congr?s International d'Architecture Moderne , which had led to a lifeless expression of urban planning that ignored the identity of the inhabitants and urban forms....
  • Futurism (art)
    Futurism (art)

    Futurism was an art Art movement that originated in Italy in the early 20th century. It was largely an Italian phenomenon, though there were parallel movements in Russia, England and elsewhere....
  • Russian futurism
    Russian Futurism

    Russian Futurism is the term used to denote a group of Russian poets and artists who adopted the principles of Marinetti's manifesto. Russian futurism may be said to have been born in December 1912, when the Moscow-based group Hylaea issued a manifesto entitled A Slap in the Face of Public Taste....
  • Post-modernism
  • Novelty architecture
    Novelty architecture

    Novelty architecture is a type of architecture in which buildings and other structures are given unusual shapes as a novelty, such as advertising, notoriety as a landmark, or simple Eccentricity of the owner or architect....
  • Vorticism
    Vorticism

    Vorticism was a short lived United Kingdom art movement of the early 20th century. It is considered to be the only significant British movement of the early 20th century but lasted fewer than three years....
  • Thom Mayne
  • Vlado Milunic
    Vlado Milunic

    Vlado Milunic is a Czech Republic architect with Croatian origin living in Prague. He was teaching at the Czech Technical University in Prague....
  • Wexner Center


External links