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Theory-and for Whome?
Author: Dr. Nold Egenter
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____________________________________________________________
THEORY-AND FOR
WHOM? Some notes regarding the
construction and function of theories in the field of vernacular architecture
by
Nold Egenter
__________________________________________________________
The
present paper contains some reflections about the methodological validity
of theoretical approaches in the domain of vernacular architecture. A
similar argument is used here as in the case of Rykwert's 'On Adam's
House in Paradise' which uses historical materials in the narrower sense
(Bible) in attempting to understand the history of ideas regarding the
'primordial hut'. The argument against Rykwert was, that, if the origins
of constructive behaviour in fact are an anthropological question going
back millions of years, then the narrow historical method can not
provide any factual explanations. It only discusses some subjective
speculations, because there is not enough depth to clarify the factual
conditions. Similarly here. The disciplines of the humanities are a product of
medieval and post-medieval Europe. If vernacular architecture is taken
as a formation of prehistorical sedentarism with its roots in the
paleo-, meso- and neolithic periods, then we can not understand its
aesthetic expression using the aesthetic values of Renaissance society! Within
the anthropological framework, scientific disciplines are a very late
method for describing things and we are not usually aware to what extent
these disciplines contain certain standards which are projected on a
tradition with much deeper roots. If, on the other hand we try to
reconstruct the evolution of vernacular architecture based on its own immanent
criteria, we might gain new insights into ways of life which are quite
different from ours today. This might also help us to construct more
realistic positions about our own architecture and the way we conceive
space today. In other words: we might learn from vernacular architecture
instead of simply judging it.
___________________________________________________
.INTRODUCTION:
In regard
to the world congress on architecture (UIA) held recently in Berlin, Rolf
Lautenschläger writes in the Berlin paper TAZ (29.7.02 :17): "Without global
ecological responsibility no house can be built anymore and no city can be
planned anymore. At the world congress of architecture the main theme was
criticism about one’s own work." Evidently, a turning point has occurred. The
UIA congresses of 1996 (Barcelona) and Beijing (1999) still celebrated the great
star-designers. Probably events like the results of the conferences on
environments and cities in Rio (1992), Istanbul (1996) and Berlin (2000) had
some impact on the world of architecture. "It was really remarkable,"
Lautenschläger writes, "this time at this triannual top meeting of this
profession there were no self-assured architects or planners speaking of their
many new buildings, their futuristic constructions or megacities, but they had
come to this place to criticise their own work. One could nearly think that, to
some extent, they were ashamed to be architects." At the moment, the main
discussions are largely focussed on environmental problems. However, this
turning point could eventually also mean that the domain of architecture will
become more aware of the importance of architectural theories.
'SPIRITUAL' THEORY
OF ARCHITECTURE:
However this is not meant in the sense of what is propagated by Jurg
Pahl's recent book on the 'Architectural Theory of the 20th Century'
(1999). It uses some sort of neo-medieval fundamentalism to construct
theories. A hyper-idealisation of architecture! Some sort of a
quasi-theological type of architectural doctrine is the result. Any monstrosities
can be legitimised with these kind of arguments. Pahl defines
architecture in the following way (we disentangle the arrangement to elucidate
its lack of sense).
Architecture =
1) aesthetisation, the
process of visualizing ideas about the dwellings of humans living in
sedentary ways
2) a gestalt-related articulation of
a)
technical possibilities,
b) individual or social functions,
c)
religious confessions,
d) claims of political groups or military force ,
and
e) other social or individual needs and interests of temporary
actuality.
Summed up the definition is rather banal:
visualising ideas of dwellings for settlers in view of needs of types a) - e).
Thus architectural theory provides some sort of a spiritual or mental
basis which creates conceptions of architecture of temporary actuality.
According to Pahl such theories can be used strategically in three
ways, "utopian", "affirmatively" (or
"defensively") and "critically" which implies that they are
fabricated for some personal strategy! The highly diluted idealism, from which
architecture can satisfy needs, is extremely arbitrary in the
ingredients. The matter functions like a recipe, which may be fixed by tradition
to some extent, but for the rest allows quite arbitrary combinations.
Evidently Pahl, who earlier had worked under Scharoun, had
manoeuvred himself into the clutches of the neo-scholastic art historians
and their post-modern architectural fundamentalism. Referring to
Hermann Bauer, Georg Germann and semiotics, he presents illustrations
showing the triangular structure of the evaluation of art and architecture
in the postmodern framework. This looks like a confession of being a
follower of post-modern fundamentalism in architectural theory. In the
first two triangles drawn according to Bauer and Germann, the evaluation
of works of art, or of architecture, are based on art-theory and
'spiritual' history in the first case (art), respectively on architectural
theory and the history of ideas and social history in the second case
of architecture (the third triangle is related to semiotics which is not
important here). In this way, the building as such is tricked away
historistically. The objective content of architecture, the empirical
source of the archi-tekton's conventional knowledge disappeared from
architectural evaluation! Architecture is now exclusively produced by the
history of ideas raised to a 'history of theories', the accumulated text
materials of endless 'architectural theorists'. Somehow, an
'Einsteinisation' of architectural ideas has taken place!
This has far
reaching consequences! We do not need to compare the bundle pillars of
Ancient Egypt with the Ionian column anymore, finding out that they had
similar roots (W. Andrae). We have to assume now that there were great
architects, who with their great spiritual capacity, had 'invented' the
styles of Ancient Egypt, as Spiro Kostof (1977) tries to tell us.
Furthermore, we do not need the history of the dome as an architectural form
anymore. We can now assume that domes were created by the super-brains
of ingenious God-like designers who calculated them with mathematical
proportions as Wittkower maintains for the Renaissance. And not
surprisingly Pahl immediately adds the 'Our Father' of this spiritual type of
architectural theory: the veneration of the saint sanctified by the high
priests of art: Marcus Vitruvius Pollio. Just as in the Middle Ages,
his work is mentioned in the Latin language: 'De Architectura Libri
Decem'.
Architecture is becoming a kind of religion, and nobody
has noticed.
We have mentioned Pahl's book here as an
indicator. It shows just how precarious the present architectural theory
constructed by art historians really is. It obscures the fundamental
theoretical ideas to guarantee a kind of absolute design-liberalism. Anything
goes! However, this absolute arbitrariness has to be questioned
profoundly by another type of architectural theory which is firmly based on
empirically founded scientific methods.
ARCHITECTURAL THEORY AS EMPIRICALLY FOUNDED
SCIENTIFIC THEORY
Scientific theories today - and that
implies empirically supported theories - always have a basic field of
objective phenomena, which can be verified objectively and in the same way
by different human subjects. I have written extensively about this
problem of a scientific architectural theory in the first volume of
'Architectural Anthropology' - Research Series (-> Egenter 1992 :19-88).
Here we focus on the particular topic of vernacular architecture and its
relation to theory.
Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World (EVAW)
and
architectural ethnology
One of the most important events
in the recent history of architectural research is unquestionably the
publication of the 'Encylopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World',
edited by Paul Oliver (1997). It documents the results of a completely
new global architectural research which has developed over the last
20-30 years. Over 750 specialists from more than 80 countries have
contributed their knowledge to it. Over 2,500 pages in three volumes with over
1,700 photos and 1,000 line drawings including plans, diagrams, etc.
The first volume is chiefly theoretical, with over 100 different
approaches and concepts. Volumes 2 and 3 geographically document traditional
architecture found globally in 7 main continental areas and in nearly 100
sub-zones. Unquestionably, this is the first time, that we have
relatively complete and dense information for a cultural phenomenon badly
neglected before: traditional dwellings and settlements. Now they are
documented all over the non-urban parts of the inhabited surface of the
globe. At different levels, the Encyclopedia allows a complex picture. It
covers cultural, geographical, climatic and environmental aspects. At
the same time, it gives - as said before - a rather complete picture of
the subject matter. In this sense, the Encyclopedia is a milestone not
just for ethnology and architecture, but also for numerous other
disciplines.
Within the framework of architecture the work reveals
the insight that the term architecture was understood in an extremely
one-sided, and thus limited, way, in addition to highly diluted ways.
Evidently, the one-sided importance of aesthetics in the domain of
architecture is a pre-modern survival of its former historically dominant
dimension. Modern and post-modern architecture have conserved something
quite outdated of their former "history of the art of building"
(in German: Bau-Kunst-Geschichte, an outdated synonym for the term
architecture) as well as its elitist position in society (key terms:
pyramids, temples, palaces and cathedrals). In the view of these
Eurocentrically pompous architectural ideals, traditional architectural forms had
no place.
Evidently present architectural theories are highly
problematic. Their main defect: a shocking lack of knowledge. These
crippled theories project Eurocentric rationalisms into our daily habitat.
This is increasingly also the case in other parts of the world, in
non-European cultures. In the latter case, the increasingly frequent
intrusions into culturally different environments produce a new architectural
colonialism, which creates poisonous blood in many countries (e.g.
India). Maybe this will change. Architects from different regions of the
world will become aware that there are many other ways to conceive
architecture other than the Euro-Western rationalisms and their blindness for
social dimensions (-> Aga Khan Foundation; -> Indonesia).
Maybe some ethnologists and anthropologists will join this empirical
side of architectural research, thus becoming also part of the process
of questioning the idealistic attempts to maintain a highly abstracted
"spiritual theory of architecture" and to contradict it with
the results of empirical theories.
What does it mean for
architectural theory, this enormous amount of material gathered by the
Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture? The most important question exists
in its relative position in a wider theoretical framework. In his
introduction, Paul Oliver has discussed the idea of a 'vernacular' related
to architecture. He emphasised its precision in view of other
specifications, e.g. 'traditional'. In analogy to language, where it means 'local
language', it is a relatively new word for many, but it is
theoretically open. It facilitates free interpretations. On the other hand, this
openness can also be seen as a shortcoming. With its approximatively 100
potential approaches there is not much hope for an 'intersubjectively'
shared theoretical insight. Some of these access gates consist of
interesting reflections which, however, indicating this and that, do not
really touch on the problems. It is therefore questionable whether this is
the ideal ground for the build-up of effective research programmes. In
the following we shall resume and discuss some (or one) of the
contributions of the theoretical part.
EVAW - THEORETICAL ASPECTS OF VERNACULAR
ARCHITECTURE:
In his contribution titled 'Aesthetic', Henry Glassie presents
his own ideas about vernacular beauty. Essentially, he derives his
concept from the theory of information and projects it onto vernacular
architecture. Loyal to Eurocentric essentially Platonic concepts, he coins
the first subtitle as 'The idea of the aesthetic' and then defines it
as something generally abstracted from the totality of a culture. Its
meaning comes from producing feelings (pleasure, displeasure). Glassie
does not give a clear principle. Architectural communication disposes of
utilitarian and aesthetic components, Glassie says, and what is
important in the dialogue between 'sender' (that is the 'creative' vernacular
builder) and 'receiver' (for instance the student of ethnology!) is to
find out about the intentions of the 'creative' builder. Under the
second subtitle 'Expression', we also find Eurocentric concepts. Ornament,
decoration, it is the Eurocentric idea that beauty in this context
results from decoration, or, that decoration is merely an 'application'.
Furthermore, it sounds strange to see the word 'creative' used here and
to hear about 'intentions'. All those researchers who have worked among
traditional societies in this field will agree that vernacular builders
never use this word. They would say that they do things just as their
ancestors did, or as their fathers or mothers or grandparents had shown
them, etc. The artist as a creative and inventive subject is an
Eurocentric Renaissance myth which is generally not valid in traditional
societies.
The worst error happens to Glassie with the Japanese
teahouse. He interprets it as a vernacular aesthetic architectural form.
However, this is a secondary 'primitivisation'. In fact, the Japanese
teahouse is culturally a highly refined form with its own clearly
written history. It emerged at the end of the 14th century around two schools
(Noami, noble Higashiyama-school and Shuko, civil Nara-/ Sakai-school).
Both lines are enriched in the aesthetical and ontological sense as
'the way of tea' (chado), combined with ideals of Zen-Buddhism and Daoism
and perfected for use in court by the famous teamasters Sen no Rikyu
and Kobori Enshu during the 16th and 17th centuries.
Maybe
vernacular aesthetics are best represented by what Glassie cites from Boas
as "the aesthetic impulses of technology." However, this idea
is not developed further, and it is dissolved rather superficially.
Form is not produced functionally. Glassie refers to the mysterious
reserve of vernacular aesthetics, which he again presents in Eurocentric
dimensions of decoration, symmetry and so on.
Furthermore, what
Glassie interprets as the results of such studies of vernacular aesthetics is
not convincing. It leads to what architects like Mackintosh or Le
Corbusier have shown us with their study of vernacular Scotland or their
Balkan and Turkey journeys respectively. Its main area of concern is
finding suitable traditional forms to create new formal syntheses for modern
architecture. Everybody will agree that after the rather embarrassing
'death of modernism' (Jencks) we do not need anymore this type of formal
bricolage. Our search goes deeper. We are looking for something, which
has to do with man and culture in the deepest sense. We are looking for
forms and their relationships which express a worldview. We are looking
for a 'deep structure' which again makes forms meaningful to us. We are
looking for forms that enable man to spiritually and physically
identify with them (Egenter 2001).
What is lacking in Glassie’s
contribution on the 'Aesthetic' theme is shared by other contributions to
the theoretical part of the Encyclopedia. Most 'approaches' are views
from outside which reflect standard disciplinary conceptions, but which
often have not much to do with vernacular architecture. The theme is
adjusted, but it does not show the way to go forward. Thus, the
Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture introduces fairly new, quantitatively
enormous and theoretically very important material into today’s
architectural discussion. However, the theoretical integration of this material,
as proposed in the first volume, is probably not the ideal solution.
However, can we deal theoretically with vernacular architecture
in quite different ways? Instead of viewing it from outside, from
various disciplines or from exterior theoretical fields, could we start to
deal with it from the inside? For instance, we could question the
narrow-minded approach of the art historian focussed on Vitruvius and other
written sources as an anachronism. Evidently, architecture has its roots
much deeper in time, its forms have a much older 'history'. We can not
find the primordial hut in the Bible as Rykwert's book 'On Adams House
in Paradise' has suggested (1972 ). Evidently the origins of human
building are an anthropological problem.
Consequently, do we have
to define architecture anthropologically today? Individual
architectural fields would then be organized and described within the framework of
an architectural anthropology (Egenter 1992, 1995, 2001). This produces
new approaches and methods. Architecture is no longer studied by
established disciplines like the history of art. Or, of anthropology in the
way Reimar Schefold describes it in his short history of research in the
Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture. Phenomena like the symbolic
meanings attached to buildings are not considered as primarily social or
ideological projections on architectural form, but are derived from
architectural processes themselves, that is with parameters like
materials, construction, form and their developments through time and various
cultures. We could even ask: can we construct a fully fledged
anthropology with architecture itself and can we explain the evolution of culture
by reconstructing the evolution of constructive behaviour and its
developments into architecturally demarcated settlements (Yerkes 1929,
Wilson 1988)? Does the architecturally demarcated spatial organisation of
the habitat tell us more about the main characteristics of man and about
the development of culture than any other contemporary concept, e. g.
the so-called 'toolmaker' idea (Egenter 2001)? However, all this is only
possible on condition that we do not rely on medievo-scholastically
prejudiced disciplines, but put architecture and all its aspects at the
centre of our research.
VERNACULAR ARCHITECTURE
IN THE WIDER FRAME OF
ANTHROPOLOGY
If, as indicated above, vernacular architecture is set
into a wider anthropological framework, new perspectives can be gained.
New phenomena will emerge, like, for instance, the routine
nest-building behaviour of the great apes (Egenter 1983) or, as indicated above,
the phenomenon of 'semantic architecture' (Egenter 1994 a, b).
Architectural research will develop into a new type of cultural research,
particularly if the anthropology of space described by O. F. Bollnow (1963) is
considered basic for the evolution of human organisation of space.
However, these approaches are described comprehensively in the framework of
other studies (Egenter 1992, 1994a, b, 1995, 2001). We just want to
give some references here. These should show how this approach opens new
aspects suggesting new parameters in regard to a scientific theory of
architecture. In addition, we can reconstruct the evolution of human
culture in the sense of increased control of the environment by means of
architectural demarcation.
TRADITION AND PROGRESS :
Vernacular architecture is
chiefly a traditional development of agrarian societies which have
settled, and thus dwell permanently in the same place. Unquestionably,
nomadic hunters and collectors also knew huts and houses, but sedentary life
and the perennial existence in the same location produced specific
parameters which are expressed in the way dwellings are built. Hunters and
collectors mostly used monocellular or polarly structured bicellular
house forms, relatively small in their dimensions and mostly round or
square, or sometimes rectangular, in their plans (Egenter 1991b). In
contrast to this, the houses of agrarian societies become larger and more
complex in their spatial articulations, their relationship with the
ground becomes increasingly important. The outer forms may vary according to
the materials and techniques used, but the plans are extremely
conservative because they are also used in toposemantic rites related to
certain fixed points (Ränk G. 1959/ 51Egenter 1991a). The same is valid
at the level of the settlements. Ancient order concepts like the
'place-related access-axis' or the 'materially conditioned vertical
proportion' which prove effective for the protection of the settlements, gain
great importance. These orders are preserved into the monumental history
of architecture. In the traditional substrate, they are preserved
through cyclical rites and cults (Egenter 1994a). Since they refer to the
settlement foundation, the cyclic tradition produces a new time
dimension, 'the Once and the Now'. The demarcations gain great importance and
structure the order of the settlement socially, politically and legally.
A new type of chiefdom is introduced by the dominant function of the
village-founder's houseline. It provides the basis for later social
hierarchy in the early states (Egenter 1990, 1994a, 1994b, 1995, 2001).
In short, reconstructions in the field of agrarian vernacular
architecture will greatly advance our knowledge of transformative
processes between the agrarian village cultures and the early city-states. They
will also show to what extent our urban ideas about the rural world of
agrarian cultures were tremendously prejudiced. We will become aware
that traditional architecture had very positive aspects. By involving the
population in local architectural forms, festivities and rites, it
created a high degree of local identification which disappeared with the
arrival of historically founded religions, urban administration and their
universal claims.
From the beginning, the city has placed all
the emphasis on its own history. As a superstratum, it always devalued
the layer where it came from and thus created a tension which can still
be felt today as the rural-urban dichotomy. It prevents objective
scientific positions in regard to rural types of life and particularly in
regard to rural architecture (see the position of folklore studies among
other disciplines of the humanities, or the value of 'vernacular
architecture' in the conventional teaching of architecture, or 'popular art'
in the theories of art!). Evidently the most important event in the
whole of human history, the transition of rural village cultures and
settlement clusters to towns and cities, a process which has been repeating
itself for at least 4-5,000 years with more or less similar parameters,
is not really shown in the general theory of culture. Our knowledge is
restricted to the early city cultures of early civilizations, but for
the rest, the origins of towns and cities remain within the history of
the individual cultures. In so far as the vernacular domain exposes new
important material, which shows the house and settlement-related
criteria of local agrarian society and their adjustment to urban influence
zones, it offers possibilities for reconstructing this important cultural
threshold in a far better way than is being done today (Egenter 2001).
Sustainability and the vernacular in
architecture
Traditional societies are also the
perfect example of what we are searching for as 'sustainable' societies
today. They did not change considerably over hundreds, even thousands
of years. We owe them our present life. Evidently they had a high
autonomy. How did they live, what enabled them to exist closely together,
what protected them? Archaeology and prehistory give us very fragmentary
answers to such questions (Egenter 1997). Maybe, as Gordon Childe has
suggested, we should make our reconstructions in the vital field of
ethnology using our new sources of 'vernacular architecture' and then try to
verify our hypotheses in the domain of prehistory. Did traditional
architecture play an important role in the sense that it mediated a high
degree of identity, allowing all these local populations to live over a
long time in the same place (Egenter 2001)? Perhaps we could use part of
their structural conditions to balance our overheated developments?
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bollnow, O. F.
1963
Mensch und Raum. Stuttgart, Kohlhammer.
http://home.worldcom.ch/~negenter/010K_ImploBollnDEF.html
Egenter, Nold
1983
Affen Architekten (Ape Architects -
The 'Primordial Hut' of architectural theory and the nestbuilding
behaviour of the higher apes) In: Umriss, Nr.2/:2-9
http://home.worldcom.ch/~negenter/00AA2_Apes_Nests0_TT.html
1990
Architectural Anthropology - Why do we need a general
framework? Paper read at the International Conference 'First World,
Third World - Duality and Coincidence in Traditional Dwellings and
Settlements'. Oct 4-7 1990 Univ. of Calif. Berkeley. http://home.worldcom.ch/~negenter/061aFramewrkTX_E1.html
1991a
The Japanese House - Or, why the Western architect has
difficulties to understand it. In: 'Deutsche Bauzeitung' 12/1991 http://home.worldcom.ch/~negenter/410aJapHouseIntro1.html
1991b
In der oberen Hälfte unserer Stube wohnt der
Bär, der Herr der Wildnis - Haus und Weltbild der Ainu In:
Bärenfest - Vom Dialog mit der Wildnis: die Ainu Hokkaidos, Japan. Thomas
Kaiser (ed.), Völkerkundemuseum der Universität Zürich
:55-75 (English: http://home.worldcom.ch/~negenter/015AcrobatArchives/N_IntPublic/MasterOfWild.PDF
1992
Architectural Anthropology - The Present Relevance
of the Primitive in Architecture - Research Series vol. 1; Structura
Mundi, Lausanne http://home.worldcom.ch/~negenter/015AcrobatArchives/AA1.PDF/AAA.PDF
1994a
Architectural Anthropology - Semantic and Symbolic
Architecture. An architectural-ethnological survey into hundred
villages of central Japan. Structura Mundi, Lausanne
http://home.worldcom.ch/~negenter/015AcrobatArchives/SSA.PDF/SSA2.PDF
1994b
Semantic architecture and the interpretation of
prehistoric rock art: An ethno-(pre-)historical approach. In: Semiotica
100-2/4 (1994) :201-266 http://home.worldcom.ch/~negenter/4570_SemioIntro.html
1995
Antropologia arquitectonica: un nuevo enfoque antropologico.
In: Mari-Jose Amerlinck, Hacia una antropologia arquitectonica.
Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico :27-128
1997
On the
Archaeology and Prehistory of Architecture and Habitat - Some Research Problems
in the Framework of wider Anthropological Horizons http://home.worldcom.ch/~negenter/231aBauerIrm_TT_E_D.html
2001
The Deep Structure of Architecture: Constructivity and
Human Evolution. In: Amerlinck, Mari-Jose (ed.), Architectural
Anthropology, Bergin-Garvey, Westport, London, :43-81
http://home.worldcom.ch/~negenter/503aGobAmerliIntro.html
Kostof, Spiro (ed.)
1977
The Architect - Chapters in the
History of the Profession. Oxford Univ. Press. New York, Oxford
Oliver, Paul
1997
Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture
of the World. Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Cambridge University
Press
Ränk G.
1949/51
Das System der
Raumeinteilung in den Behausungen der nordeurasischen Völker; ein Beitrag zur
nordeurasischen Ethnologie. 2 vols. Stockholm
Rykwert, Joseph
On Adam's House in Paradise. The Idea of the Primitive Hut in
Architectural History. The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Wilson,
J. P.
1988
The Domestication of the Human Species. New Haven.
CT: Yale Univ. Press
Yerkes R. W. and A. W. Yerkes
1929
The Great Apes. New Haven, CT: Yale Univ. Press
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Author : Dr. Nold Egenter
Date: 11/18/2002, |
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