• Home
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Sing Express News
  • Architecture
  • Design
  • Interiors
  • Technology
  • Trends
  • Projects
  • Collections
  • Education
  • House
  • Restaurant
  • Greenhouse
  • Hotel
Sing Express News
  • Home
  • Interiors
    What Are Colonial-Revival Style Homes?

    What Are Colonial-Revival Style Homes?

    7 Modern Victorian Decorating Ideas That Aren’t Stuffy

    7 Modern Victorian Decorating Ideas That Aren’t Stuffy

    What Is a Duplex?

    What Is a Duplex?

    What Is Shou Sugi Ban (Yakisugi)?

    What Is Shou Sugi Ban (Yakisugi)?

    The Quick Guide to Every Major Decorating Style

    The Quick Guide to Every Major Decorating Style

    18 Kitchen Styles That Will Make an Impact

    18 Kitchen Styles That Will Make an Impact

    24 Classic White Houses With Black Trim Ideas You Have to Try

    24 Classic White Houses With Black Trim Ideas You Have to Try

    This Houston Home Is Like Stepping Inside a Jewelry Box — How They Got the Look

    This Houston Home Is Like Stepping Inside a Jewelry Box — How They Got the Look

    Minimalism Is Officially Out—Why Designers Are Loving a New, Colorful Style This Fall

    Minimalism Is Officially Out—Why Designers Are Loving a New, Colorful Style This Fall

  • Design
    Queen Camilla Puts on Designer Pump She’s Been Wearing for 20 Years for Day 3 of Australia Trip

    Queen Camilla Puts on Designer Pump She’s Been Wearing for 20 Years for Day 3 of Australia Trip

    Pattern Just Launched an At-Home Hair Steamer, and It Makes My Washdays So Much Shorter

    Pattern Just Launched an At-Home Hair Steamer, and It Makes My Washdays So Much Shorter

    Adidas Made the Perfect Samba Collaboration for Formal Events

    Adidas Made the Perfect Samba Collaboration for Formal Events

    The Allure Best of Beauty 2025 Submission Guidelines

    The Allure Best of Beauty 2025 Submission Guidelines

    Rihanna Pairs Her A$AP Rocky-Designed Catsuit With Sharp Amina Muaddi Black Heels

    Rihanna Pairs Her A$AP Rocky-Designed Catsuit With Sharp Amina Muaddi Black Heels

    Ballerina Farm Teams Up With Cecelia New York for a Stylish Take on Farm Boots

    Ballerina Farm Teams Up With Cecelia New York for a Stylish Take on Farm Boots

    Anne Hathaway’s Celebrity Shoe Style [PHOTOS]

    Anne Hathaway’s Celebrity Shoe Style [PHOTOS]

    Behind the Scenes at Allure’s Second Annual Best of Beauty Live

    Behind the Scenes at Allure’s Second Annual Best of Beauty Live

    The best eyelash curler for women over 40

    The best eyelash curler for women over 40

  • Technology
    applenewipad

    Apple just released two new iPads — here’s the one you should buy

    macbook

    The best MacBook for 2025: Which Apple laptop should you buy?

    volkswager

    Volkswagen’s cheapest EV ever is the first to use Rivian software

    Appple

    Apple unveils the M4 MacBook Air with a price drop

    Is the Enron Egg Real? The Micro-Nuclear Reactor That Claims to Power Homes Explained

    Is the Enron Egg Real? The Micro-Nuclear Reactor That Claims to Power Homes Explained

    Apple’s New Smart Doorbell Could Unlock Your Front Door Using Facial Recognition – No Keys or iPhone Needed

    Apple’s New Smart Doorbell Could Unlock Your Front Door Using Facial Recognition – No Keys or iPhone Needed

    Humanoid Robots Revolutionize BMW’s Production Line

    Humanoid Robots Revolutionize BMW’s Production Line

    Xiaomi

    Xiaomi – Innovation Beyond Expectations

    Tech Takeover: Meet Galbot, the Humanoid Robot Revolutionizing Household Chores

    Tech Takeover: Meet Galbot, the Humanoid Robot Revolutionizing Household Chores

  • Projects
    ecome

    LLMH Group Joins Forces with Leading E-Commerce Platforms Through MarketInt Asia

    Redact-A-Chat is an old-style chatroom that censors words after one use

    Redact-A-Chat is an old-style chatroom that censors words after one use

    Ecobee smart home users can now unlock Yale and August smart locks from its app

    Ecobee smart home users can now unlock Yale and August smart locks from its app

    The Xbox Wireless Headset receives microphone and battery life upgrades

    The Xbox Wireless Headset receives microphone and battery life upgrades

    WhatsApp will soon let users add contacts from any device?

    WhatsApp will soon let users add contacts from any device?

    The next-gen Roomba Essential robovacs have self-emptying docks and double the suction

    The next-gen Roomba Essential robovacs have self-emptying docks and double the suction

    Netflix and TED are hopping on the daily word game bandwagon

    Netflix and TED are hopping on the daily word game bandwagon

    NASA’s newest telescope can detect gravitational waves from colliding black holes

    NASA’s newest telescope can detect gravitational waves from colliding black holes

    Qualcomm and Google team up to help carmakers create AI voice systems

    Qualcomm and Google team up to help carmakers create AI voice systems

No Result
View All Result
Sing Express News
No Result
View All Result
Home Architecture
For a Master of Brutalist Provocations, a Modest Museum Appraisal

For a Master of Brutalist Provocations, a Modest Museum Appraisal

October 22, 2024
in Architecture
0
332
SHARES
2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The first museum survey of modernist architect Paul Rudolph dwells in the margins of his polarizing works, many of which now exist only on paper.

Nothing remains of the cabanas that Paul Rudolph designed for the Sanderling Beach Club in Sarasota, Florida. A series of white, low-slung structures with vaulted ceilings that the architect designed early in his career in 1952, the huts were wiped out after Hurricane Helene reached Central Florida on Sept. 26.

While the destruction of the modernist beach club is only a footnote in the devastation caused by the storm, it’s a loss for the postwar school of architecture known as Sarasota Modern. It’s also a loss for fans of Rudolph, a modernist architect who reached the height of his profession in the 1960s but found his influence and reputation fade before the end of the decade.

Many of Rudolph’s finest works belong to such footnotes: structures that were demolished, renovated beyond recognition or never realized in the first place. The architect, who died in 1997, took on the conventions of modernist design, rebelling against what he described as the “goldfish bowls” of glass skyscrapers and urging a return to the primal texture of “caves.” Rudolph won fame with his sweeping plans for Brutalist megastructures that sometimes operated on the scale of cities, but when tastes changed the public lost interest just as quickly. With many of his ideas abandoned to neglect or confined to filing cabinets, Rudolph’s drawings represent the best measure of his work.

That’s one message in a new survey of Rudolph’s work on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. “Materialized Space: The Architecture of Paul Rudolph” touches on all the significant periods of the designer’s output, from his early projects in Florida to his radical tenure at Yale to his retreat to projects in Asia. With another one of Rudolph’s buildings gone, the case for reframing his work seems that much stronger. Rudolph has never been the subject of a standalone museum show, according to curator Abraham Thomas, and the Met hasn’t put on a modern architecture survey in 50 years.

The exterior of Sarasota High School.
The folded concrete planes of Sarasota High School, completed in 1960, were a sign of things to come.Photographer: Jeff Greenberg/Universal Images Group Editorial

Yet the show never quite makes an argument for what the audience needs to know about Rudolph now, or why his admirers have so passionately fought for his buildings even as their owners call for the wrecking ball. “Materialized Space” considers Rudolph’s work as texts, asking viewers to indulge in the marginalia, but the Met’s modest presentation fails to summon the drama of the work that it cites.

New Haven Parking Garage
Curator Abraham Thomas describes Rudolph’s two-block-long parking garage for New Haven, Connecticut, as an “ode to concrete.”Photographer: Ezra Stoller/Esto

First and foremost, it’s a drawing show. The exhibit firmly identifies Rudolph as a draftsman, and moreover a designer whose decisions about massing and materials flowed from the page. There’s a display of his pens and pencils along with his triangles, templates and other drawing tools: standard fare for this kind of monograph. Instead the show’s structure sets it apart. It moves in reverse chronological order, beginning with late 1980s drawings and models for unbuilt towers in Hong Kong, Jakarta and Singapore and proceeding (loosely) toward late 1940s designs for built and unbuilt homes around Sarasota Bay.

In this presentation, the Yale Art and Architecture Building — a 1963 Brutalist building that stands as one of his best-known works — isn’t the fulcrum of a career framed on one side by ferocious ambition and on the other by whispers of failure, but rather another point in an unbroken line of concepts driven by graphite pencil.

And no wonder, really, why the Met would take this approach. Rudolph’s drawings just work: They showcase both the scale of his thinking and the reach of his experiments. One 1966–68 drawing shows Rudolph’s proposal for a public housing complex in Fort Lincoln, then a greenfield site in northeast Washington, DC, that was being developed as a Great Society project after the riots. The architect’s isometric drawing reveals row upon row of housing modules piled up like shipping containers: simple and elegant in its geometry, but typical of the arrogance of housing experiments during the urban renewal era. A ground-level perspective drawing of the same complex, however, shows cantilevers that form terraces, skybridges that connect buildings and stairwells that might have been stoops. Rudolph’s “New Town” proposal was never built, but the drawings make it clear that his conviction to design homes — not just housing units — was sincere.

TK
A 1972 perspective drawing of Rudolph’s City Corridor shows the city-sized scale of his Lower Manhattan Expressway solution.Courtesy of the Museum of Modern Art

Rudolph’s drawings make even his most hostile ventures seem like arguments worth hearing out. “Materialized Space” includes several artifacts related to one particularly maniacal scheme known as the City Corridor. More of a provocation than a plan, this urban terraforming proposal was the Ford Foundation’s answer to Robert Moses’ push for a Lower Manhattan Expressway. Where Moses wanted to pave paradise for an urban highway, Rudolph would have erected a mountain range instead: a two-mile-long building, fully concealing a freeway below ground and a bottle society above.

Rudolph’s ideas for a line city would make the Saudi funders of Neom blush. Still, for a conceit that another designer might have treated as a folly, Rudolph embraced the proposal as a platform detailing his vision for modular construction, urban transit and public space. And of course, sculptural form.

Archival materials help to give a sense for how these ideas landed with the public. Heaping examples of news articles and magazine covers convey how Rudolph climbed to the top — however briefly — although these documents compete with the drawings for the viewer’s attention. There are almost no photos on view, which makes a tweedy kind of sense: Photographs aren’t primary texts, images bring their own judgments to bear, and so on. But the catalog that accompanies the show reveals a missed opportunity for the exhibit. An interior photo of Rudolph’s (since demolished) Burroughs-Wellcome Company Headquarters in North Carolina, paired with a 1970–72 perspective drawing of the space, testifies to the integrity of the architect’s process, for a building that was bulldozed in 2021.

The Met might have found a smaller gallery for “Materialized Space” — but it would have been a broom closet. The compact presentation tends to flatten drawings of Manhattan megalopolises and Florida bungalows as same-same. More room might have helped the curator, Thomas, achieve some of the things he is trying to do to reach new audiences. There’s a video, for example, that includes clips from popular movies and shows with locations designed or inspired by Rudolph, including The Royal Tenenbaums (which features a scene shot at his townhouse 23 Beekman Place) and Loki (whose production design and set for the Time Variance Authority borrows liberally from UMass Dartmouth). Put it behind a curtain with a bench — instead of in the center of the gallery — and Brutalist-curious visitors might be able to watch it.

While there are some popular handholds in “Materialized Space,” including the video and a collection of objects collected by Rudolph, Thomas is laser-focused on a narrow (and intriguing) theory about the architect’s process. Rudolph was one of just a few “name on the door” architects of the era who had a hand in every production drawing, the curator writes in a catalog essay. Thomas finds a direct correlation between Rudolph’s drawings and choice of building materials, noting that his interest in highly textured materials flowed from his drawings of light and shadow, not the other way around. “These perspective views, elevations, and sections often acted as more effective advocates for his architectural vision than the finished buildings,” Thomas writes.

A 1958 perspective section drawing for the Art and Architecture Building at Yale University, now known as Rudolph Hall.Courtesy of Yale University Library
Paul Rudolph
Orange A-frames support the installation of “Materialized Space.”Photographer: Eileen Travell

Which is not to say that “Materialized Space” is an exhibit for insiders, exactly. Rudolph’s life outside of the drafting table goes largely unexplored. “Materialized Space” offers a thorough presentation on Rudolph’s immersive interiors, which critics tied to his sexuality, at times dismissively. Rudolph was gay and remained closeted his whole life. Historian Timothy Rohan finds a positive narrative connection between Rudolph’s dazzlingly soft interiors and his fortress-like building schemes, while “Materialized Space” makes no mention of his sexuality, focusing squarely on the compositions.

Neither does “Materialized Space” dip into the hottest debates over the fate of the architect’s most controversial built projects. Threats to Rudolph’s Orange County Government Center building in Goshen, New York, captured headlines for the better part of a decade before it was partially demolished in 2015. Today it stands as an architectural chimera, halfway preserved and entirely desecrated, the worst sort of compromise and a powerful cautionary tale. The project’s mentioned just once in the catalog.

Maybe it’s asking too much to expect the Met to recreate one of Rudolph’s criminally overlooked (and mostly disappeared) interior designs, or to suffuse the exhibit with the notorious paprika-colored carpet of the Yale architecture building that now bears his name. There are surely ways to bring a Gen Z audience into the Brutalist fold that are worth considering. Still, it’s not a huge ask that a show billed as a major survey should have a strong point of view about why the work matters now — and enough room to express it. To find it in this survey, viewers need to read between the lines.

https://www.bloomberg.com
Previous Post

Modern Arched Rowhomes Nod to London’s Victorian-Era Railroad Heyday

Next Post

Sydney Central Train Station Is Now an Architectural Destination

Next Post
Sydney Central Train Station Is Now an Architectural Destination

Sydney Central Train Station Is Now an Architectural Destination

Sarah Jessica Parker and Cynthia Nixon Film ‘And Just Like That’ Season 3 In Dries Van Noten and Alexander McQueen Heels

Sarah Jessica Parker and Cynthia Nixon Film ‘And Just Like That’ Season 3 In Dries Van Noten and Alexander McQueen Heels

Kim Kardashian’s Best Shoe Moments Through the Years

Kim Kardashian's Best Shoe Moments Through the Years

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sing Express News

Stay informed with Sing Express News – your source for the latest updates on global events, business, culture, and more. Explore our categories for in-depth coverage.

Recent Posts

  • What’s on Premium: April 2025
  • New York City mayor urges a judge to rule in his corruption case so he can start campaigning
  • Vance and wife to tour US military post in Greenland after diplomatic spat over uninvited visit

Follow Us

Facebook Twitter Google+ RSS

Our partners

Marketint Asia

Brand Trust Worthy

© Copyright 2024 Sing Express News 

  • Home
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Interiors
  • Design
  • Technology
  • Projects

Copyright© 2024 Singexpressnews