Skyscrapers used to be Art Deco and neo-Gothic, so what happened?
Though early examples exist elsewhere, the skyscraper was truly born in America. And nobody shaped its development more than Louis Sullivan (1856-1924).

His greatest achievement was to synthesise older architectural ideas with an entirely new type of building.
Modern construction methods and technologies made them possible, but it wasn't obvious how skyscrapers should look.

Sullivan lamented the "overeducated" architects who produced things like the New York Times Building. His Wainwright Building is a much more elegant formulation: New York Times Building (1889)Wainwright Building (1891)
In an 1896 essay called "The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered" Sullivan outlines his design principles.

Though the famous "form (ever) follows function" maxim is attributed to him - and he was the first to put it like that - it is an old architectural idea.
Nor does it mean what we usually think.

Sullivan's point wasn't that architecture should be functionalist, excluding aesthetic considerations, but that aesthetic principles must be suited to the form of the building at hand.

Which, for skyscrapers, Sullivan saw as loftiness.
In any case, Sullivan's style dominated for decades, and was the foundation for the many great Neo-Gothic and Neo-Classical skyscrapers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries in America, even for the more futuristic Art Deco of the 1930s.

So what changed? Woolworth Building, New York (1913)Tribune Tower, Chicago (1925)
Well, in 1893 a disgruntled Austrian architect called Adolf Loos (1870-1933) came to the World's Fair in Chicago, where he saw Sullivan's skyscrapers.

Remember that Europe in Loos' time was dominated by revivalist styles, whether Neo-Gothic, Neo-Classical, or Neo-Byzantine:
Loos had seen the future, but what struck him most about America were its grain silos and water towers, which he saw while living in the countryside.

He considered them perfectly rational architecture, focussed on utility and nothing else, devoid of useless ornamentation.
Loos returned to Europe and started designing things like the Steiner House, in Vienna. It may look modern, but it was built in 1910.

He believed ornamentation was a waste of money, time, and labour. It was irrational and ill-suited to the modern, industrial, machine age.
In his influential essay "Ornamentation and Crime" Loos said:

"I have reached the following conclusion which I give to the world: the evolution of culture is equivalent to the removal of ornamentation from utilitarian objects."

He took Sullivan's maxim to the extreme.
Parts of Germany and Central Europe had already seen attempts to reconcile modern materials, methods, and social needs with architecture, as in Behrens' 1909 AEG Factory, which appears like a form of industrial classicism, complete with stylised columns and pediments.
But Loos' more radical style triumphed.

His belief in functionalist architecture, devoid of ornament and colour, totally utilitarian and rational in nature, wielded a huge influence over an entire generation of European architects. Villa Mueller, Prague by Adolf Loos (1928)
For example, Le Corbusier (1887-1965) shared Loos' extreme views and based his famed treatise "Towards an Architecture" on Loos' ideas from Ornamentation and Crime.

The architecture of Le Corbusier seems like a more stylish version of what Loos was doing. Ville Savoye by Le Corbusier (1931)
The Bauhaus Design School, founded in 1919 by Walter Gropius, also took much from Loos.

Encouraged by the German government, they sought to unify all crafts and arts together and reconcile them with mass production to create both quality and quantity for the public. The Weißenhof Chair by Mies van der Rohe (1927)
In 1927 the Deutscher Werkbund invited Bauhaus architects - including Gropius, Mies, and Behrens - along with Le Corbusier, to design a housing estate.

It was intended as an example of how to build cheap and efficient housing - and it prophecised the future.
Underlying all of this was a futuristic urge, for Europe had been devastated by WW1 and its traditional architecture symbolised that.

They wanted to build a better world, hence their interest in urban planning. Consider Le Corbusier's model for a reconstruction of Paris:
Everything changed in 1933 when, under pressure from the Nazi regime and its attacks on anything avant-garde or modernist, the Bauhaus School was closed.

Its architects left Germany and took their ideas around the world, especially to America, where Gropius taught at Harvard. John F. Kennedy Federal Building in Boston, designed by Grop
In the 1930s, of course, the Art Deco was still in vogue in America. But the Modernists didn't like it. Consider what Le Corbusier wrote about Art Deco, echoing Loos' belief that ornamentation was irrational.

And he was right - Art Deco turned out to be a short-lived movement. American Radiator Building (1924)
These modernist ideas - whether of Le Corbusier, Bauhaus, or the Scandinavian functionalists - had collectively become known as the International Style.

And in the postwar decades it became the style of the new world, one of global population booms and economic progress...
One of the leading members of the Bauhaus - and the final director of the school - was Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886-1969).

He, like Sullivan, wanted to create a style suited to the modern age no less than the classical had been to the ancient and the Gothic to the Medieval.
Mies settled in Chicago, and in 1958 he designed Seagram Building, the ultimate statement of this International Style and a far cry from those old Neo-Gothic and Art Deco towers.

His glass-clad skyscrapers would become *the* ultimate modernist form.
Mies, more than any other, understood the potential of glass.

It could be mass-produced on an industrial level and used as a curtain-wall to clad large buildings cheaply. And, inspired by Loos, he believed that such structural materials had an innate aesthetic quality. Chicago Federal Center (1974)
A wave of such skyscrapers appeared all around the world.

This was a universal approach indifferent to local architectural tradition or even climate, a functional and rational style suited to the modern age and devoid of any ornamentation or colour.

Modernism triumphant. UN Headquarters designed by Oscar Niemeyer, Le Corbusier, HaChałubińskiego 8 (1978)Royal Hotel Copenhagen (1960)Torre Ejecutiva Pemex (1982)
Variations and offshoots appeared, especially in the form of Brutalism.

Oscar Niemeyer in Brazil and Le Corbusier in India were both given the chance to design planned cities, where they experimented with unpainted concrete. Itamaraty Palace by Oscar Niemeyer (1970)Palace of Assembly in Chandigarh by Le Corbusier (1962)
Of course, even the International Style has now been replaced by a wave of more expressive, playful, and dynamic skyscrapers; gone are the sleek slabs of glass.

But the ideas of Loos, Le Corbusier, the Bauhaus, and Mies endure; their principles remain triumphant.
If you found this interesting then you may also like my free weekly newsletter, the Areopagus.

It features seven short topics every Friday, including architecture, history, art, and rhetoric.

Consider joining 50k+ other readers here:
culturaltutor.com/areopagus

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with The Cultural Tutor

The Cultural Tutor Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @culturaltutor

Jan 11
Is cinema the greatest modern art form?

Artists aren't less talented than they were in the past, it's just that they're making films instead of paintings... Image
Modern art might charitably be described as controversial - for a huge number of reasons.

But much modern art was never supposed to be "liked"; it has always been about provoking, challenging, and questioning.

Perhaps why it can so often seem like a bad joke. Image
Which might lead some to despair that art isn't what it used to be.

But maybe we're looking in the wrong place. Painting is only *one* form of art, after all, and there are many others which continue to flourish, achieving both popular appeal and artistic greatness... The Creation of Adam from t...
Read 22 tweets
Jan 9
The Great Wave off Kanagawa, created by Hokusai in 1831, is one of the world's most famous paintings.

But why are there more than 100 different versions of it in galleries all around the world?

Because it isn't actually a painting...
The Great Wave off Kanagawa comes from a series called Thirty Six View of Mount Fuji, created in 1831 by the master Katsushika Hokusai.

It is but one of thousands of beautiful different designs produced by the prolific Hokusai.

Here are four more from that 1831 series. Asakusa Hongan-ji Temple in the Eastern CapitalSunset across the Ryōgoku bridge from the bank of the SumidFine Wind, Clear MorningThunderstorm Beneath the Summit
The Great Wave is a woodblock print in the Japanese ukiyo-e style.

The artist would create an ink drawing on paper, to be pasted onto a wooden block as a guide for the engraver. This engraving was then used to print multiple, coloured copies of the original design. The Woodblock Printing Process by Kunisada (1857)Keyblock for a print by Utagawa Yoshiiku, from 1862
Read 26 tweets
Jan 8
Bridges represent some of the greatest achievements of human engineering and architecture. Here are 12 of the most extraordinary:

1. Millau Viaduct, France (2004) - the world's tallest bridge.
2. Menai Bridge, Wales (1826)

The world's first major suspension bridge.
3. Chenab Bridge, India (2022)

Rising 359 metres above the Chenab River, this is the highest rail bridge in the world.
Read 12 tweets
Jan 7
What happened to art?
This might not be going where you think, because these works of art are taken out of context - and context explains much.

Michelangelo didn't just wake up and decide to paint the Creation of Adam - he was commissioned by Pope Julius II to paint the Sistine Chapel in 1508.
And Raphael, too, was commissioned to paint a set of rooms in the Apostolic Palace, in the Vatican.

He was tasked with creating a vision of the Renaissance in three parts, and did so: one for the philosophers and scientists, one for the artists, and one for Christianity. The Stanza della Segnatura in the Apostolic Palace, painted
Read 21 tweets
Jan 5
Why did Claude Monet paint the same water lilies in his garden more than 250 times?

Well, for Monet, they were different every time...
When the Impressionists broke free from the French artistic establishment in the 1870s, their guiding principle was that painting should be done outdoors.

Rather than in the studio, under carefully orchestrated lighting, as was done in the Parisian Academies of the 19th century:
So Manet, Monet, Sisley, and Bazille (soon joined by Renoir, Pissarro, and others) rejected the neoclassical teachings of the Academy, based on the ideals of the Renaissance.

For them, works by painters like Cabanel and Bouguereau were facsimiles, not realistic at all. The Birth of Venus by Alexandre Cabanel (1863)
Read 21 tweets
Jan 4
Why Gollum and the Mona Lisa are more similar than you think: Image
The year is 1305. A painter from the Italian city state of Florence called Giotto has just changed the course of art forever.

His frescoes for the Scrovegni Chapel depicted people in three-dimensions, in a three-dimensional world: Image
It might not look like much, but before Giotto European art hadn't been about portraying reality as we perceive it.

It was almost exclusively two-dimensional, depicting people without any weight or depth such that many figures could somehow occupy the same space. Mary Magdalen announcing th...
Read 25 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(