Christian Philipp Muller: Architekturmuseum Basel.The architect, painter, and set designer Hans Poelzig Hans Poelzig (30 April, 1869 Berlin – June 14, 1936 Berlin) was a German architect, painter and set designer active in the Weimar years. His mother was the daughter of a countess, and Hans Poelzig took her maiden name. (1869-1936) is one of the most enigmatic figures of early-twentieth-century architecture. Dissonant dis·so·nant adj. 1. Harsh and inharmonious in sound; discordant. 2. Being at variance; disagreeing. 3. Music Constituting or producing a dissonance. at first glance, Poelzig's work--industrial buildings before World War I; the expressive, fantastic forms such as the Grosses Schauspielhaus in Berlin (1919); the stage sets made between 1920 and 1923; and, finally, the more economically executed and functional residential and office projects of "Studio Poelzig," which he ran with his second wife, Marlene, in the '20s--defies any facile (language) Facile - A concurrent extension of ML from ECRC. http://ecrc.de/facile/facile_home.html. ["Facile: A Symmetric Integration of Concurrent and Functional Programming", A. Giacalone et al, Intl J Parallel Prog 18(2):121-160, Apr 1989]. categorization. "In the Taste of the Times: The Work of Hans and Marlene Poelzig from a Contemporary Perspective" is Christian Philipp Muller's most recent artistic project; shown first in Berlin and Frankfurt, then in Basel, it is also an occasion to thematize fundamental questions of the temporal and spatial specificities of architecture, design, urban planning urban planning: see city planning. urban planning Programs pursued as a means of improving the urban environment and achieving certain social and economic objectives. , and, not least, artistic methods. With the Poelzigs, this took the form of a partnership that melded aspects of various movements--Expressionism, the People's Theater movement (Volkstheaterbewegung) around Max Reinhardt Max Reinhardt may refer to:
prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the catalogue essay by Alexander Alberro and Nora M. Alter, "represents a form of cultural pragmatism that accommodates the taste of the particular context," though, of course, this "taste" could allow for many levels. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Those who are familiar with Muller's previous work will know that the question of taste--as a cultural construct, as a way of life, and as a matter of what Pierre Bourdieu Pierre Bourdieu (August 1, 1930 – January 23, 2002) was an acclaimed French sociologist whose work employed methods drawn from a wide range of disciplines: from philosophy and literary theory to sociology and anthropology. called "distinction"--has been a central topos to·pos n. pl. to·poi A traditional theme or motif; a literary convention. [Greek, short for (koinos) topos, (common)place.] Noun 1. in his artistic thought of recent years, for example, in projects like Hudson Valley
The Hudson Valley refers to the canyon of the Hudson River and its adjacent communities in New York State, generally from northern Westchester County northward to the cities of Albany and Troy. Tastemakers, 2003, or Tauschwerte (Exchange Values), 2002. Equally consistent is his interest in architecture and the question of how the ideals of artistic and urban-planning designs are modified by their users and the demands of the times, reflected here for instance in the only-partial realization of Poelzig's plans around 1927 for the urban renewal of the stables quarter around Berlin's Bulowplatz, today Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz and home of the Volksbuhne (People's Theater). In his artistic encounter with Hans and Marlene Poelzig, Muller combines these strands of his own work into a materially rich, dense, and yet theatrical presentation, divided into six "chapters" by way of full-scale, two-dimensional stage backdrops (one could see, for example, the silhouette of an illuminated column from the Grosses Schauspielhaus). In Basel, viewers entered the exhibition by way of a biographical chapter on the Poelzigs only to find themselves, on entering the next room, onstage, facing rows of chairs. Muller's use of light underscored this theatricality, a successful paraphrase of Poelzig's understanding of "architecture as illusion"--as a Gesamtkunstwerk of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed. See also: Color , form, light, language, and movement. Muller provided a wealth of detail: archival photographs, sketchbooks, a series of interviews, and a video in which Muller himself (as he has often done) slips into the role of a cultural tourist, scrutinizing various buildings in search of Poelzig's traces. "In the Taste of the Times" afforded a vivid view into the creativity and (self-) stagings of the Poelzigs--and into the world of Christian Philipp Muller. --Astrid Wege Translated from German by Sara Ogger. |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion