From reading “From Bauhaus to Our House” by Tom Wolfe, there were so many issues that made me understand a lot more about the history of modern architecture and how the field of study was developed starting from zero. The way I see it, the architectural industry is actually pretty similar to the music industry (it was mentioned in the text but I would like to emphasize more on this). The music industries have labels, while the architects have compounds. The way I see how this can relate to normal life is that there are independent music labels with various genres and there are mainstream music. Even though both of them produce music consistently, they cannot dominate the market at the same time. At one moment, people would choose to listen to one label and start a trend, so whatever music coming out of that label, from any artist new or old, will be appreciated. Then, people will start getting bored and move on to new labels and the cycle would go on and on. It moves pretty fast for the music industry since everything depends on likes and dislikes of what people hear. Music is produce within months or weeks, but on the other hand, architecture needs years of construction to be finished. It seems harder to judge things that are a thousand times your size and you have to go in and out of it all the time.
Nevertheless, the issue of my analysis would be the reason why modernism or theories by Mies and other European architects was such a hit and must be followed internationally, or at least in America even though the structure and design seem to be coming from worker’s houses in European country. I believe that the United States is a very young country with not much confidence of their identity at the time of the end of the First World War. When the Europeans migrated in, it was like being introduced to a whole new music genre, as if hip-hop has just arrived into another continent and every one was mad crazy about it. It was pretty usual to see that happen, but what I thought changed everything was when all the top schools put these architects into the professor’s chair. When that happened, all the architects produced by the United States will have the same thinking or to be nonburgeois. With every new architect having the same thinking or taught to design in a certain way, then the movement seemed to become permanent until a new genre can throw down this system that has been created. That was why modernism was so strong. If this was politics then communist would have spread in USA.
By seeing this happen, we have seen a country that did not get demolished by bombs in wartime learn the thoughts of those who went through such disaster. In my opinion, this nonburgeois idea seems to be very similar to the Socialist politics that has been going on in Europe where everything and everyone is equal. So if we were to apply this same procedure in Thailand’s education, by hiring a group of top thinkers and letting them spread the disease, I guess it might work the same as it did 50 years ago in the USA. However, what bothers me most is how do you teach architects to design in their own ways without any client. Looking at the way we learn design, we must always please our professor and work towards their goal, but what happens when you design something in your own way not caring about the client, how will you be graded?
I also wanted to apply what I’ve learned and analyze it side by side with my studio project. I chose Villa dall’Ava by Rem Koolhaas which resembles the Villa Savoye by Le Corbusier. At first when I did not really understand the history of what was going on, I thought that Koolhaas just used the Villa Savoye as a reference to being a masterpiece since it was close by in the site. As I now understand, it seems like Koolhaas was trying to challenge Le Corbusier’s modernism piece with a new approach to design. Villa dall’Ava had a client that was very demanding in having things done their way. By using some of Villa Savoye’s features, it seems like Koolhaas is saying that modernism can happen by pleasing clients and it should be about analyzing the site and the client’s need. By doing this, you have to put soul into the architecture so that it make’s the clients happy to live in. I believe that by doing this it means much more than to force people to stick up to the heat and not allow them to put curtains up just because you want your building to look good, it seems very communist.
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