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Monographs
on the subject of architects who are still in good health are commonly
regarded as the equivalent of monuments to
people who are still alive - they supposedly put their subjects on a divine
pedestal and stamp their buildings and designs with the mark of
'eternity'. Brodsky's Oblako ('Cloud') Bar
and Ice Pavilion no longer exist, and yet you'll find them in the journal
you're now holding, and this gives them a kind of 'immortal' glory.
However,
periodicals such as our own cannot afford to sacrifice
immediate relevance to current issues to a memorializing impulse. In the present
case this immediate relevance is not simply a matter of the
fact that Brodsky has been chosen to
represent Russia with a one-man show
at this year's Venice Bien-nale. An
equally important consideration is that by devoting an entire issue to Brodsky we are
able to examine a question of persistent pertinence - the role of
personality (and the personal) in contemporary
architecture. Does modern architecture have room for genuinely personal statement? And if so, then in what
form, in what format, and in the name of
what greater good?
By its very
nature architecture is collective. This is true both of the process by which
architecture is created and of how it is
perceived. During its realization, an architectural project passes
through many different hands, but this does not mean that
the quality of the final product suffers.
Gothic cathedrals are no less attractive for the fact that they
were built by dozens of unknown craftsmen.
But is it possible for a heartfelt statement to be
anonymous in our day? Ideas which once seemed unshakeable truths
have lost their authority. And consequently
the commonly accepted rules for formalizing such ideas have lost their
legitimacy. That to which creators
could subordinate their individuality
in the past has gone. Now architects are called upon to 'talk' on their own behalf. And it's for this that you
need the ability to be yourself. After all, no one's going to empathize with a
bad actor. Brodsky is someone with whom we
empathize. We empathize with his
architecture just as we previously empathized with the 'paper' works he
produced together with llya Utkin and with
his art installations. With the latter, Brodsky's buildings and designs
share a thematic similarity and a formal
continuity. But there are also differences. And these differences are not
just a matter of the fact that Brodsky now
employs different means of self-expression. The nostalgic note which imbued his
non-architectural, artistic, work is gone. Like an ecologist fighting to save
wild animals under threat, Brodsky discovers objects and meanings which
have been with suspicious constancy thrown out of
our everyday lives and conserves them in
graphic and sculptural images. You get the impression that as the twilight thickens he's hurrying to
bring out into the light of day murky fragments of the past.
When people spend time in the half-dark,
their gaze loses focus - giving rise to a kind of 'idealistic fuzzi-ness'
(Sloterdijk) typical of both those who live in the past and the shortsighted,
and thanks to which even that which
is most worthless seems poetically sublime.
Architectural projects model the future
rather than the past. The danger of
reconstructing the past, however beautiful it may have been, is that you turn it into theatre and so come into conflict
with the natural course of our lives.
Brodsky avoids this conflict. His
architecture makes the language of art more abstract and so more modern, while
preserving a typical 'twilight'
accent. In his work tokens of the past refer both to our own historical
way of life but also to more distant ages, cultures, and countries;
and, though they take on nostalgically charged imagery, they are not opposed to the
present day. They flow smoothly into
the present, peacefully taking their
place by its side. The tranquility of this coexistence is a heart-warming sight:
modernity ceases to be perceived as a drama in which all movement in a
forwards direction is devalued by numerous
losses. A state of pacification sets in -that feeling which it is the job
of architecture, unlike other arts, to
generate
Alexei Muratov editor-in-chief
CONTENTS
NEWS
- In brief
- Ekaterinburg: architectural panorama
- European recipies for Moscow
- Architectural chanson
- Big sport adventure
- Europe will occupy a small square
- Lenivets allows no fuss
- Special view
- Driven to the corner
- Moscow and Samara. Two guides
- Chronicles of a festival
- Initiation to
architects
- Interior Capital
Awards 2006
- Canon's new models
- Finnish technologies in Russia
- Champion of the year
- Training with Autodesk
- Drops, collection by Viva Ceramica
- New white light
- Lighting for the Svede skyscraper
- Simes information tour
- Let your footprints glow
- High fashion shop opened home interiors department
- Kurortproekt -
- Ice Palace in Kolomna
- Mosproekt-2 -
- Velich Country Club sports and health centre
ALEXANDER BRODSKY
- Editorial
- Portrait of an architect and/or/as an artist
- It still amazes me that 1 became an architect
- Important facts
- Inhabited locality
BIENNALE
- The beginning of movement
SELECTED WORKS
- House near Tarusa
- Cloud Cafe. Klyazminskoe Reservoir rest area
- The house of Marat Guelman 106
- Sports ground. Klyazminskoe Reservoir rest area
- House in the Green Cape housing estate
- Pleasures of imagination
- 95° Restaurant at Bukhta Radosty (Bay of Joy)
- Ice pavilion at Klyazminskoe Reservoir
- House on a headland
- Ulitsa OGI Restaurant
- About a friend
- Pavilion for vodka ceremonies. Klyazminskoe Reservoir rest area
- House for Elderly Footballers
- Apshu Cafe
- Pavilion and canopy at a golf course
- Great Egyptian museum in Giza. Competition project
- Moscow Duma and City Government complex in the Moscow City. Competition project
MONITOR
- XYZ Tea pavilion.'Lisya nora' (Fox hole) shooting sport club
- Atrium House in suburban Moscow
- Totan Kuzembaev Architectural Studio Yacht Office. Pirogovo Resort
- Art Eco Floating House in Samara
TEXTS
- The heritage of Le Corbusier belongs to all mankind
- Fragments from the book'Le Corbusier and the mystique of the USSR:
- Theories and projects
for Moscow 1928-1936'
- Why is the quality of construction in Russia so poor?
- Social housing in
Berlin in the 80-90-s: Back to the city
MOSCOW HIGH RISES
- On peculiarities of new skyscrapers
- Capitalgrad by the
'Capital Group'
- We call the 'Russia' tower a vertical city
- No one builds so high in Europe yet
TECHNOLOGY
PROJECT RUSSIA CATALOGUE
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