Façadism: On the Demolition of the American Folk Art Museum

Similar documents
Chapter two. Research Proposal

ICOMOS Charter for the Interpretation and Presentation of Cultural Heritage Sites

David Lowenthal Fabricating Heritage Narratives: Locale, Region, Nation Dennis Frenchman Designing Local and Regional Heritage Narratives

Michael Fieldman, Architect

Art and Design Curriculum Map

UIA 2017 Seoul UIA 2017 Seoul World Architects Congress

Capstone Design Project Sample

Interpreting our European Heritage: Some Reflections Final Conference Brussels 17 September 2015

ARTI 185 Aesthetics of Architecture, Interiors, and Design Interior Architecture School of Art

4.1 WHAT IS HERITAGE (in Architecture)?

ICOMOS ENAME CHARTER

ICOMOS Ename Charter for the Interpretation of Cultural Heritage Sites

Ihad an extremely slow-dawning insight about creation. That insight is

ICOMOS ENAME CHARTER

Visual Arts Colorado Sample Graduation Competencies and Evidence Outcomes

PROTECTING HERITAGE PLACES UNDER THE NEW HERITAGE PARADIGM & DEFINING ITS TOLERANCE FOR CHANGE A LEADERSHIP CHALLENGE FOR ICOMOS.

Part 1: A Summary of the Land Ethic

According to Maxwell s second law of thermodynamics, the entropy in a system will increase (it will lose energy) unless new energy is put in.

Assessing the Significance of a Museum Object

Appalachian Center for Craft - Clay Studio. How to Write an Artist s Statement

Categories and Schemata

Architecture and Evolutionary Psychology

West Virginia State Museum Lesson Plan

Quantify. The Subjective. PQM: A New Quantitative Tool for Evaluating Display Design Options

Resounding Experience an Interview with Bill Fontana

Dependence of Mathematical Knowledge on Culture

TOURMAKE REACTI NS LEAVE A COMMENT ON THE TOUR FEMALE SHOP

THE RANKINGS The World s Top 225 Music Products Companies Ranked By Revenue

US Army Corps of Engineers Visitor Center Evaluation Strategy

ARCH 384. Architectural Research. Essay VIRGINIE REUSSNER ( ) Exchange Student from EPFL, Switzerland

Sincerely, P. Madeleine Bocaya Bernal Heights resident, homeowner, tax payer and voter

Consultation on Historic England s draft Guidance on dealing with Contested Heritage

O Brien s work. O Brien is a noted designer of lighting, furniture and rugs (with pieces on grand display at his Aero storefront on Broome Street in

observation and conceptual interpretation

2O19. Call for Applications: Performance Space Architecture Exhibition OUR THEATRE OF THE WORLD

FIT OR MISFIT IN THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT

Headquarters: 1270 N. Pontiac Trail, Suite 200 Walled Lake, MI 48390

"Is good design the perfection of an object for commercial success? For the glory of the designer? For beauty? For glamour? For use?

October 22, The Moody Foundation 2302 Post Office St. #704 Galveston, TX RE: Letter of Support for the Museum of Magnetic Sound Recording

ARIEL KATZ FACULTY OF LAW ABSTRACT

Expertise Experitse with creative systems

AP English Literature 1999 Scoring Guidelines

Assessment Schedule 2015 French: Demonstrate understanding of a variety of extended written and/or visual French texts (91546)

Communication Studies Publication details, including instructions for authors and subscription information:

Before the. Federal Communications Commission. Washington, DC

Taubman Centers, Inc. Beverly Center Los Angeles, Calif. March 7, 2016

Continuities and Discontinuities in the Vernacular Architecture

INNOVATION AND AESTHETICS IN BRIDGE ENGINEERING

Reading text A You should spend about 20 minutes answering questions 1 to 10. India slowly gets ready for internet shopping

CHINO VALLEY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE ART HISTORY

[T]here is a social definition of culture, in which culture is a description of a particular way of life. (Williams, The analysis of culture )

Effectively Managing Sound in Museum Exhibits. by Steve Haas

Medieval Art. artwork during such time. The ivory sculpting and carving have been very famous because of the

The Reality of Experimental Architecture: An Interview with Lebbeus Woods By Lorrie Flom

August 14, Re: 22-Unit Condominium Project, Star Theater, 145 N. First Street, La Puente. Dear Mr. Di Mario:

Museum Theory Final Examination

Merchants of Culture Revealed Interview with John B. Thompson. For podcast release Monday, January 24, 2011

WHO ARE WE? CANNES FILM FESTIVAL 17 TH TO 28 TH MAY 2017

Chapter 2 Christopher Alexander s Nature of Order

MAKING CULTURE MATTER AT THE WALLACE COLLECTION

Experimental Music: Doctrine

Interview: with Carl Zillich in the frame of the project On Translation/Transparency

What's the Difference? Art and Ethnography in Museums. Illustration 1: Section of Mexican exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Join us for our. A Campaign to Evolve, Elevate, and Inspire

CHAPTER SIX. Habitation, structure, meaning

Emptying the Dump Truck: A Library's Experience with A Large Donation

how does this collaboration work? is it an equal partnership?

How to Write a Paper for a Forensic Damages Journal

Jaume Plensa with Laila Pedro

As We Heard It Report

7 MYTHS OF LIVE IP PRODUCTION THE TRUTH ABOUT THE FUTURE OF MULTI-CAMERA TELEVISION PRODUCTION

GALERIE PARIS-BEIJING PARIS - BRUSSELS - BEIJING

Connected Broadcasting

BUILT WITH PASSION. BUILT BY EMAAR. We are the UAE s premier real estate developer. We have reshaped Dubai s

Second Grade: National Visual Arts Core Standards

Gyorgi Ligeti. Chamber Concerto, Movement III (1970) Glen Halls All Rights Reserved

ANNEXURE 3 KARANGAHAPE ROAD DESIGN GUIDELINES

virtual interiors - Interview with Annett Zinsmeister, Berlin

Morris's view of the history of Industrialism

your place to perform event rental opportunities at the

JAUME PLENSA with Laila Pedro

AP Studio Art 2006 Scoring Guidelines

ORGANIZING SPEECHES SIX SIMPLE STEPS

BAKHTIN, ARCHITECTONICS AND ARCHITECTURE

Object Oriented Learning in Art Museums Patterson Williams Roundtable Reports, Vol. 7, No. 2 (1982),

Its all about objects

The Accidental Theorist All work and no play makes William Greider a dull boy.

FOR LEASE 6759 HOLLYWOOD BLVD, LOS ANGELES, CA CHANDELIER PASSAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION PART OF PLANNED HOLLYWOOD HOTEL RSF AVAILABLE

Edgar Morin, Pierre Nora, Michel Onfray, et al., Des Intellectuels jugent les médias

UMAC s 7th International Conference. Universities in Transition-Responsibilities for Heritage

GLOSSARY for National Core Arts: Visual Arts STANDARDS

Our Penn Station Moment

A C E I T A Writing Strategy Helping Writers Get that A And Avoid Plagiarism

A Step-By-Step Guide to Seeing Juan Muñoz's Many Times at Marian Goodman

Safeguarding the spirit of an historic interior on the basis of the Naragrid

THE ADAPTIVE RE-USE OF BUILDINGS: REMEMBRANCE OR OBLIVION? Stella MARIS CASAL*, Argentine / Argentina

15-06 Morlot Avenue, Fair Lawn, NJ USA Tel: (201) Fax: (201)

Rhetorical Analysis. AP Seminar

Between Concept and Form: Learning from Case Studies

sustainability and quality

Transcription:

Stephen Rustow Façadism: On the Demolition of the American Folk Art Museum As the dust of demolition settles on 53rd Street and all that remains of the Folk Art Museum s former home are the iconic bronze panels whisked away into storage, fragments to be conserved and perhaps displayed in some future MoMA exhibition on lost early twenty-first-century architecture it seems a fitting moment to reexamine the shrill and sadly stunted public debate that preceded the arrival of the wrecking ball. In its form it resembled countless other New York City preservation debates, one part blood sport, one part farce, each side convinced that giving any quarter to the opposition was the surest way of losing everything. But what was really lost was any meaningful discussion of how cities determine what parts of their history have value; what the role of architecture might be in remaking structures that no longer serve their original purpose; and what, in environmental terms, should set the limits between willfulness and waste. Nearly all of MoMA s arguments for demolishing its diminutive neighbor betrayed a failure of imagination that bordered on bad faith. Praising the integrity of the Folk Art s design precisely to condemn it, MoMA systematically rejected the possibility that the building might play any productive part in its expansion plans. [1] With the backhanded compliment characterizing the Folk Art building as a bespoke suit, there was a clear suggestion that its elegant fabric and fit were incompatible with any other program; to alter the suit would have been to ruin it completely. [2] Of Citation: Stephen Rustow, Façadism: On the Demolition of the American Folk Art Museum, in The Avery Review, no. 2 (October 2014), http:// averyreview.com/issues/2/facadism-on-the-momafolk-art-debate. [1] See, for example, Glenn Lowry s remarks at the Architectural League s (link: http://archleague. Expansion), January 28, 2014. Scaffolding goes up to take down the Folk Art facade. 1

course, this conveniently ignored the fact that MoMA s own original bespoke suit, by the renowned tailors Goodwin and Stone (and hailed at its opening in 1939 as the world s first purpose-built building for the display of modern art), had been nipped, tucked, resized, repurposed, and resurfaced on six different occasions over the last seventy-five years. MoMA s arguments were ultimately seconded by its latest architects, Diller Scofidio + Renfro, who, in a subtle shift of metaphor, publicly cited the obdurate qualities of the Folk Art s design as a reason for its demise. [3] This strategy of blaming the victim was particularly surprising coming from designers who had elsewhere been so inventive in adapting complex, difficult urban fragments to new uses: From Lincoln Center to the High Line, DS+R has become the go-to firm for transforming sows ears into silk purses. But the Folk Art s defenders did their cause little good with exaggerated claims of their own, and while no doubt well-intentioned, at times the hyperbole loaded on the poor little building seemed enough to crush it without any help from MoMA. Folk Art was heralded as an architectural gem, a beautiful and inventive jewel, and an acknowledged masterwork among dozens of other encomiums. [4] This deafening insistence on the exceptional architectural quality of the Folk Art building seemed to deliberately ignore what an awkward space it had always been for presenting art and how poorly it had served its visitors. [5] Nevertheless, the consensus claim among the Folk Art s supporters was that the building deserved to be kept, in its entirety, exclusively because of its great architectural merit. The implicit principle, that only buildings of architectural merit should be preserved, was a profoundly anti-urban argument that misunderstood the very structure and significance of the city, a riotous collection of mostly indifferent individual buildings that together, miraculously, form an ensemble of great quality and meaning. Worse still, this masterpiece argument insisted on peerless artistic value as the threshold for public concern about the built environment, an impossibly high standard that ultimately debases our sense of what architectural value is. Hoisted by the petard of such preservationist rhetoric, any old thing we want to save must be a masterpiece precisely because we want to save it. In the end, this instrumentalized logic undermines the very standard of quality it professes to uphold. [2] Barry Bergdoll in an interview with New York Times reporter Robin Pogrebin (April 22, 2013) was the first to use the term bespoke in reference to Folk Art; it was subsequently picked up by Liz Diller in several public presentations of DS+R s new plans to replace the building. [3] Liz Diller, in her prepared remarks at the Architectural League s (link: http://archleague. Expansion), January 28, 2014. [4] Gem : Justin Davidson, Julie Iovine, and Martin Filler; jewel : Cathleen McGuigan; masterwork : Jospeh Giovannini and Julie Iovine. [5] Jerry Saltz was virtually the only critic to temper the debate with an evaluation of Folk Art s shortcomings as a space of display; see his early articles on the proposal to demolish AFAM in New York magazine and several postings on the magazine s blog Vulture. Media coverage praises Folk Art s architectural ingenuity. 2

And then there was a third voice in the debate, audible mostly in its silence, wondering what all the fuss was about. After all, here was a private owner making complex decisions about the best use of private property; what was the public dimension of such a discussion? And in many ways, the implications of this unvoiced question were the most important of all: What should be the public obligations of private institutions as they plan their growth from one generation to the next? Does the public good play any role and if so, how should it be defined? And by what mechanisms does the public protect the built heritage of the city, which is its urbanity as much as its history? One source of confusion came from an insistence on considering buildings as works of art and curiously, both MoMA and its critics advanced the same flawed notion that buildings have a kind of timeless consistency and balance that suffers irrevocably if any part of the whole is altered. Yet no building remains the same over time: the adaptation of interiors to changing demands in use; the slow degradation of materials, their renewal and replacement; the gradual evolution of the surrounding urban context, all of these normal events over a building s life slowly erode any notion of immutable artistic integrity. And so, we had the wrong kind of discussion about the Folk Art s future either/or, kept or demolished whereas the discussion we needed to have would have acknowledged a much wider range of positions, more or less, limited change to extensive replacement. Such a discussion might have introduced some nuance in acknowledging that the exterior of any building shapes public space and that public space has a different and more widely shared importance than private use. Thus, considered as an urban artifact, we might have agreed that not all parts of the Folk Art building had the same significance: massing, exterior form, and especially façade arguably mattered more than interior volumes and past programs. We might also have acknowledged that the Folk Art was a mixed achievement: an ambitious, quirky project with some beautifully crafted spatial moments as well as some dark, cramped and clumsy ones; a highly idiosyncratic building, which briefly fulfilled its original program and then became a kind of lavish ruin. Yet none of this would have diminished its claim to conservation and intelligent reuse. On the contrary, the reason we should have considered saving some part of the Folk Art was precisely because it didn t rise to the level of an undisputed masterwork; the real question was how much of it could be kept and to what purposes it might have been put. And, arguably, those purposes should have reflected a host of considerations beyond MoMA s expansion plans the character of 53rd Street, the increasing homogeneity of Midtown, the value of collective memory and how to establish a hierarchy between these competing claims. But such questions couldn t be intelligently asked until the idea of Folk Art as an untouchable masterpiece was abandoned. MoMA s architects glibly dismissed as façadism the possibility of keeping some part of the Folk Art s exterior while substantially changing the spaces inside, an intellectually shallow response that ignored the reality of how urban spaces change over time. [6] New York abounds in buildings where exterior form persists even as internal use is transformed beyond [6] Liz Diller used this term to characterize the design of Folk Art in her response to questions at the Architectural League s (link: http://archleague. Expansion). 3

recognition: from the manufacturing lofts of SoHo, remade first as artist s studios and then as luxury condos, to school buildings reinvented as museums and correctional facilities. And then there are the countless examples in European cities, which, with much more history to spare, are consistently more careful about editing urban detritus with a view to reuse: Think of Scarpa s showroom for Olivetti inserted behind the sixteenth-century arcade of Piazza San Marco in Venice, or the same architect s sequence of modern galleries fashioned in the ruins of Verona s Castelvecchio, to take only the most obvious examples. Or consider the transformation of Paris over the last thirty years, where a train station, a slaughterhouse, a government ministry and a seventeenth hôtel de ville were all successfully transformed into museums. Were we really expected to believe that MoMA was incapable of turning a museum into a museum? But beyond this purely architectural logic, the most compelling consideration in the discussion we didn t have is ecological. We can no longer justify (if we ever could) the wholesale destruction of a twelve-yearold building that would cost well over a thousand dollars a square foot today. [7] And though MoMA s board has pockets deep enough to write off even this kind of extravagance, if one considers the Folk Art building in terms of the material and human ecology of the city, the calculations change. Think of the Folk Art as entrained energy and mass; as hundreds of thousands of Btu s spent fabricating its materials; as tens of thousands of designer-hours of creative effort and worker-days of careful construction; and as thousands of cubic yards of unrecycled landfill. Consider it, in short, in terms of the fullness of its environmental history, as embedded social investment, to be reaffirmed or squandered: Seen in this light, the façadism argument for demolition collapses under its own weight. Finally, perhaps the flaw in the arguments on both sides came not so much from thinking of buildings as works of art but as the wrong kind of art. In place of sculptural masterpieces, Cubist collage, Dada ready-mades, Surrealist exquisite corpses and Mertzbau would all seem to be better models, as they start with the premise that materials and forms that have already been given meaning in the past may have still other, unknowable meanings in the future. This represents not just an ecology of materials but of signification, the understanding that regardless of what we intend, history recycles [7] The published cost of the original AFAM project in 2001 was $32 million for 40,000 square feet of space. See, for example, American Folk Art Museum Puts Down Healthier Roots, New York Times, (April 2, 2013), (link: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/03/ arts/design/american-folk-art-museum-putsdown-healthier-roots.html text: http://www.nytimes. com/2013/04/03/arts/design/american-folk-artmuseum-puts-down-healthier-roots.html). Scarpa s adaptive design of the Castelvecchio Museum in Verona [1973]. 4

meanings in much the same way it does landscapes, built or natural. Such an approach to urban history extends not simply to materials and forms but to ideas, to finding a way of preserving and engaging meaning in a constantly evolving ecosystem of larger and smaller fragments. Sometimes this will lead to imagining new uses for intact old buildings; sometimes to altering old buildings to fit changed programs; and occasionally, to wholesale demolition and replacement. But most of the time, if we take our cities seriously, it will mean fashioning a shifting continuity among the pieces that chance has left us, a renewed equilibrium that answers to urban and urbane values, which is to say, public ones. 5