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  • For thousands of years, the most common building materials have been stone, brick and wood.

  • They have also been the most charming, ageing beautifully and suggesting a special kind

  • of nobility and strength.

  • When modernist architecture was born in the early 20th century, traditional materials

  • quickly gave way to the three quintessential modern ingredients: concrete, steel and sheet

  • glass.

  • The result has in far too many cases appeared brutal, uncaring and alienating.

  • The buildings have not aged well either.

  • Could modern architects not learn to work with traditional materials while retaining

  • the forms and the spirit of our own times?

  • This is the question so beautifully answered by one of the greatest of all modernists,

  • the American architect Louis Kahn.

  • Kahn was born in Russia in 1901 and emigrated with his parents to the US at the age of 3.

  • As a young man he studied architecture at the University of Pennsylvania, but his career

  • truly blossomed in the 1950s after a trip to Rome led him to a new appreciation of the

  • beauty of Roman architecture.

  • Kahn’s major contribution to modern architecture was to include ancient elements in his work

  • without losing the innovation and clarity of modernism.

  • He reminded the Modernists that they could be in dialogue with their most illustrious

  • predecessors.

  • One symptom of this successful rehabilitation of the old was Kahn’s affection for symmetry,

  • which many modern architects had come to view as authoritarian, unimaginative and conformist.

  • Kahn designed the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California as a complex of buildings, identical

  • on either side of a central fountain – a symmetry characteristic of what is known as

  • the Beaux-Arts style.

  • Kahn was unperturbed by this apparent regression.

  • If people want to see Beaux-Arts it’s fine with me,” he said.

  • “I’m as interested in good architecture as anybody else.”

  • Like a city planner for 19th-century Paris or Berlin, Kahn used identical rows of buildings

  • to draw the viewer’s eye to the centre of his design, and out beyond it.

  • The fountain that runs through the centre of the Institute aligns with the path of the

  • sun on both the autumnal and vernal equinox.

  • Kahn used symmetry not as an aesthetic default but with great intentionality, to provide

  • one with a sense of balance, focus, and momentum.

  • Kahn also managed to create a sense of grandeur in his designs rarely seen in modern architecture.

  • We might gape at the height of a skyscraper, but it rarely instils the sense of awe that

  • a great cathedral does.

  • Kahn managed to reintroduce a feeling of magnificence into modern works.

  • In the Yale Centre for British Art, he draws the viewer’s eyes upward to the high windowed

  • ceiling, much as though it were the dome of a church.

  • Even the staircases create a sense of lofty space and height.

  • Rather than resorting only to steel, concrete, and glass, Kahn regularly sought out a wide

  • variety of older and more sensory materials.

  • He worked with the best consultants to find new uses for ceramic, copper and especially

  • brick.

  • Kahn liked cleverly to juxtapose older and newer materialslike oak with concrete.

  • We tend to associate oak with traditionVictorian smoking rooms and solemn librarieswhile

  • concrete reminds us of impersonal factories and remote, futuristic buildings.

  • But put together, the two mediums demonstrate strikingly different, yet remarkably complementary

  • virtues.

  • The wood gives off a feeling of warmth and domesticity while concrete provides a sense

  • of strength and stability.

  • The combination subtly promises a reconciliation between the old and the new and between comfort

  • and security.

  • Kahn was drawn to the idea of making buildings that would feel like monumentsat a time

  • when most modern architects firmly rejected monuments as both authoritarian and sentimental.

  • In 1938 the architectural critic Lewis Mumford had declared, “if it is a monument it is

  • not modern; if it is modern it cannot be a monument.”

  • But Kahn rather liked the feeling of authorityand was confident enough in his democratic

  • credentials not to mind borrowing from some of the moves of more dictatorial regimes.

  • After his important trip to Rome, he wrote, “I finally realise that the architecture

  • of Italy will remain as the inspirational source of the works of the futurethose

  • who don’t see it that way ought to look again.

  • Our stuff looks tiny compared to it.”

  • His most substantial building was perhaps the National Assembly in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

  • Though recognisably modern, it also seems in some ways eternal in its massiveness, evoking

  • memories of cathedrals, the great mosques and even the pyramids.

  • Many of Kahn’s buildings feel luxuriousbut this isn’t the luxury of glitz or

  • gold of an oil rich kingdom, rather the luxury of buildings that aspire to still be around

  • in 600 years time; a luxury of eternity.

  • The Kimbell Art Museum in Texas uses travertine marble, white oak and concrete arranged in

  • three 100-foot bays, each fronted by an open, barrel-vaulted portico.

  • It’s possibly the most beautiful building in the world.

  • When Kahn died in 1974, he was the most famous architect in the United States, and he remains

  • deeply influential to this day.

  • His ultimate importance lay in his ability to transcend dogmatic modernism and return

  • the best elements of traditional architecture to their rightful place in the canon.

  • He reminds us that the real goal of buildings isn’t so much to shock, dazzle or confuse

  • as to be the equals of the venerable buildings we have long loved in the ancient world.

For thousands of years, the most common building materials have been stone, brick and wood.

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ART/ARCHITECTURE - Louis Kahn

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    Summer 發佈於 2022 年 01 月 17 日
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