Saturday, May 28, 2005
Food fer Thought
Uber-Catholic E. Michael Jones, in his book Living Machines: Bauhaus Architecture as Sexual Ideology (Ignatius Press, 1995), argues that Bauhaus architecture was influenced by sexual immorality. According to Ken Burns's documentary on F. Lloyd Wright, people have felt menaced or oppressed within some Wright buildings - one woman almost went crazy - and the organized serial-killing clique in the horror/suspense novel The Straw Men live in a gated community of Wright-inspired houses that reflect their hunter-gatherer ethos. They are of the earth, not in it, to paraphrase the Wright quote at the opening of the novel. From their houses, they can observe without being observed. Of course, Wright was an egotistical, selfish man when it came to relationships. Did the darkness in his psyche come out in his buildings? Is architecture a reflection/extension of self?
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5 comments:
If this is true, we're in SERIOUS trouble living in this "house of problems"!
I dunno, but the good news is: the more you renovate the less effect the architect has on you! ;D
Does it mean the house is "possessed", if we can't get the @#$% paint to stick to it?
Not unless green slime is involved.
How 'bout ant's nests and slimy black shit?
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