The
development I want to trace through the emergence of modern architecture is
materials. The advancement in
technologies and new materials led to new abilities to create larger spans and
different forms. Different materials led
to varying characteristics between styles, resulting in a strong contrast between
1880 and 1930. The difference is design
comparing before and after steel was easily accessible is amazing to
study. Within these modern architecture
movements, materiality is one of the main contributors to change.
Beginning
in the Arts and Crafts movement, wood was dominant. Everything was detailed in
decorated hand crafted wood. The
ideology behind the Arts and Crafts movement did not allow for the advancement
and use of new technologies. The
acceptance of industrialization being evil prevented this movement from
carrying into the future. I think there
are a lot of sound ideas from this movement, but its inability to adapt new
technologies limits it. If this movement
carried the same concepts with the new materials, I think there would have been
a lot of promise for the movement.
Imagine what hand crafted steel or concrete could look like. It is hard to even visualize because we are
so used to the machine made materials.
We know of some examples of how flexible concrete can be. Maybe with some effort, a same methodology
can be achieved with steel. For the Arts
and Crafts movement, I feel the ideology is strong but it is limited by the
material strictness.
http://www.achome.co.uk/architecture/pictures/wm1.jpg
The thought
I had above about the Arts and Crafts movement can start being seen in the Art
Nouveau movement. The use of iron metal work
is roughly what I was describing was missing from the Arts and Crafts
movement. By accepting industrial
methods of production, the Art Nouveau movement was able to create more unique
shapes that could be mass produced. This
allowed the iron forms to be used more frequently during the time period. Back to my idea of the materials being what
created new architectural movements; I believe the characteristics of metal are
what defined this movement. The ability
to create thin, flowing, and nature inspired forms allowed the characteristics
of the Art Nouveau movement to be shown.
This movement would not have been the same using wood or concrete. I believe the movement was brought about and
accepted due to the characteristics of the metal used.
http://urban.csuohio.edu/~sanda/pic/travel/belgium/brussels/brus01/an/horta/907brushorta901.jpg
The
Amsterdam Expressionism movement was also based around a material. The strongest characteristic of this movement
is the way it used brick in a fluid or plastic way. This façade method characterized the entire
movement. Again, like the other
movements already discussed, this characteristic only works with brick. The modularity of brick allows for infinite number
of small changes creating a large effect on the façade. Other materials at the time would not allow
for the plasticity that brick provided.
Thus again, the materials used defined the characteristics of a
movement.
http://www.iamsterdam.com/~/media/Oud/Amsterdam_School.jpg?mw=510&crop=1
The next
movement that falls into my idea of materials defining movements is the Bauhaus
movement. This movement was all about
transparency, clean and simple forms, and structure being expressed. These characteristics are all accomplished
with the use of steel and glass.
Transparency can be created with the less massive steel structure with
glass fitting between the columns.
Simple forms are created with the grid work needed to make steel
structure most successful. Steel
structure is also one of the easiest structures to architecturally express
within the design. No other material has
all of these characteristics the way steel does.
http://classconnection.s3.amazonaws.com/80/flashcards/1506080/jpeg/dessau_05-0041335843454386.jpeg
From all
of the examples I discussed above, I go back to my idea of movements came about
because of new materials. I don’t think
materials were chosen based on the characteristics desired, but rather the other
way around. The materials chosen defined
the modern architectural movements.
Movements died out once the next material was available to be used for
production. Once iron was controllable,
wood was no longer as desirable due to the forms iron could make. When brick was able to be used to make these
plastic forms, iron was no longer as useful or special so architecture went to
the plastic brick. The same is true for
once steel was understood and available.
No one needed plastic brick forms once steel forms were available. This method of advancement from one movement
to the next makes me believe material choice is the main decider in the
characteristics and ideology behind that movement.
This
makes me wonder what the next movement might be. What material can come around that can trump
what steel currently does for us. Maybe
it is a new use of steel. We discussed
in class the use of digital fabrication.
This allows for all sorts of new materials to be created to serve basics
functions called for by digitally fabricated forms.
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