Last week I travelled up to the Canadian Centre of Architecture, in Montreal, to review
Architecture in Uniform, a new exhibition on architecture and World War II, curated by Jean-Louis Cohen. That review is forthcoming (in
AR), but for the moment let it be said that this fascinating, disturbing, and provocative show was absolutely worth the trip. Among its discoveries: the modernist landscape architect Dan Kiley designed the courtroom of the Nuremberg Tribunal.
One of the principal contentions of the show is that the war led to the "definitive supremacy of modernism in architecture." Cohen makes a convincing argument for this, but one could argue the opposite is true, as well. One of the final pieces in the show is a model of Bucky Fuller's ill-fated Dymaxion House, a modernist vision of the future that, as Cohen notes, went "nowhere at all." This message is inescapable in Montreal, where the carcass of Fuller's US Pavilion (now, the "Biosphere") sits on the former site of Expo '67, a relic of Fuller's dream of a techno-utopia. That vision never materialized, but a trip out to the pavilion is still a pleasure, and comes with the added bonus, if you travel underground, of a passage through the Jean-Drapeau metro station, a masterpiece of brutalist structure and design by architect Jean Dumontier.
Comments [3]
04.20.11
01:29
Shoji Sadao told me he thought Fuller's greatest weakness as a designer in practical terms was his assumption of the economies of scale reducing unit costs to near-universal affordability. To me, this makes sense in light of Bucky's reaching maturity about the same time Henry Ford started mass-producing Model Ts. It was the obsession of that generation and an interesting lens through which to view their works.
04.25.11
05:54
04.25.11
08:41