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- <text id=89TT3030>
- <title>
- Nov. 20, 1989: A Crazy Building In Columbus
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 20, 1989 Freedom!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DESIGN, Page 84
- A Crazy Building in Columbus
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Peter Eisenman, architecture's bad boy, finally hits his stride
- </p>
- <p>By Kurt Andersen
- </p>
- <p> Peter Eisenman spent his 30s and 40s being the angriest,
- most intellectually convoluted, infuriating major architect in
- America, a really terrible enfant terrible. Both his innumerable
- theoretical essays and his few buildings (four houses in two
- decades) seemed pretentious and willfully opaque, caricatures
- of neomodernism. One Eisenman house had a column in the bedroom
- that precluded a bed, another a hole in the floor and a stairway
- that ran from the ceiling halfway down a wall. The architect
- used to say he would not dream of living in one of his houses
- ("Art and life are two different things").
- </p>
- <p> But all that has changed. "I was a killer, a trained
- killer, and you can't keep that up," Eisenman, 57, says today.
- "Peter Eisenman is ultimately a friendlier person -- kinder,
- gentler. People are going to like my buildings more." In fact,
- he suddenly has lots of plum commissions -- an office building
- in Tokyo, a research complex at Pittsburgh's Carnegie Mellon
- University, the Columbus convention center. Meanwhile, he will
- bask this week in the celebrations surrounding the dedication
- of his first major building, the $43 million Wexner Center for
- the Visual Arts at the Ohio State University in Columbus.
- </p>
- <p> For Wexner, Eisenman teamed up with the far more
- conventional Columbus architect Richard Trott ("I went in for
- the touchdown, and Dick was the blocking back who knocked guys
- over"). The building is certainly the best work of his career,
- an intense, almost out-of-control collage of materials and
- forms. "There's no question that this is my most completely
- realized building," he says. "In a sense it's my first
- building." He still would not want to live in any of the houses
- he's designed (his home is an 18th century cottage in Princeton,
- N.J.), but the new building in Columbus is another matter. "I'd
- love to work in Wexner," Eisenman says.
- </p>
- <p> As would anyone who does not mind being tricked and teased
- by the architecture at almost every turn. The new building (paid
- for mainly by O.S.U. alumnus and Columbus-based retailer Leslie
- Wexner) may have been the perfect project for this
- hyperintellectualizing bad boy to prove himself on: it was
- conceived by the university as both a museum and a seedbed for
- avant-garde art, from Anselm Kiefer paintings to Pina Bausch
- performances to a new video installation that displays images
- from the building's surveillance cameras. Did the university
- want a fin-de-siecle monument to erudite monomania, inspired
- nervousness, the intriguing lunatic gesture? Eisenman was the
- man for the job. "I get weepy that O.S.U. took this risk," he
- says. "It wasn't Harvard or Yale or Princeton. It's a great
- thing about America that people in Columbus, Ohio, are building
- this crazy building."
- </p>
- <p> The Wexner Center is, appropriately, both grand and zany,
- yet unlike earlier Eisenman designs, it does not seem
- meanspirited. And it works. The site, shrewdly chosen by the
- architects, is the 48-ft.-wide space between a tidy 1979
- concrete cube of a recital hall and a huge, Albert Speerish
- auditorium built in 1956. The new construction knits these
- clunky boxes into a tightly woven, slightly mad-looking but
- altogether sensible complex. The four soaring exhibition
- galleries, with a gridded glass ceiling and gridded glass wall,
- are deluged in natural light.
- </p>
- <p> But that does not mean the building is easy to understand
- or like. Running its whole, three-city-blocks length is a
- permanent, jungle gym-like white steel scaffolding. The faux
- scaffold is inspired: it defines a long outdoor walkway, it
- plays tricks with perspective (Does the thing tilt up? Down? Are
- its beams parallel?), and its evocation of construction in
- progress makes the Wexner Center seem perpetually unfinished,
- excitingly open-ended.
- </p>
- <p> Like all of Eisenman's work, the Wexner Center is an
- obsessive meditation on the grid, modernism's elemental unit.
- For starters, Eisenman has lined up the building with the
- Columbus city grid rather than the campus grid -- an off-kilter
- tilt of 12 1/4 degrees. Within the complex, he has laid down
- still more grids to play with: the 12-ft. modules of white steel
- scaffolding, structural columns set 24 ft. apart, decorative
- columns 48 ft. apart. He lets these various grids overlap and
- collide, creating quirky niches and three-dimensional geometric
- cat's cradles everywhere. Inside, the experience of
- architectural structure is nearly kinetic: as you enter, a fake
- beam shoots past at eye level and simply stops in midair,
- cleanly cut off, while a fake column stops 10 ft. short of the
- floor, stalactite-like. Eisenman is relentless. His precisely
- orchestrated riot of pattern and angles continues even with the
- placement of fluorescent light fixtures in the basement, even
- in the arrangement of gravel on the roof.
- </p>
- <p> What is the point of all this highly wrought architectural
- scribbling and juxtapositioning? Why, in a single glimpse, is
- there brick, tinted glass, clear glass, white glass, white metal
- panels, white steel, white stone, concrete and red stone?
- Because to pull off such an improbable collage is a virtuoso
- feat -- Eisenman is like a chess master playing several games
- at once while standing on his head. Because the dense, dense
- eclecticism of material and form prevents the place from seeming
- too slick and self-serious. And because Eisenman remains rather
- perverse. The four painting and sculpture galleries, for
- instance, amorphous and oddly shaped, could tend to confound
- picture hanging. "I don't want to say they're not problematic,"
- admits Robert Stearns, the Wexner Center's very game director.
- </p>
- <p> Now that postmodernism has abandoned its original sense of
- humor in favor of just-so classicism, it is Eisenman who is
- left to build in the architectural jokes: the disintegrating
- ersatz archway and cartoony castellated brick towers around the
- perimeter of Wexner (alluding to an old armory on the site that
- was razed in 1958); the curious floor-to-chest-height windows
- in the top-floor offices; the short, folly stairway that goes
- nowhere; or the boatlike carbuncle on top of the building with
- no practical function whatsoever.
- </p>
- <p> And Eisenman has finally allowed himself to learn the most
- enduring lesson of his old postmodern nemeses: the necessity of
- fitting in with nearby buildings, even the motley, uninspiring
- ones. Wexner, tucked between off-white masonry buildings, is
- clad partly in white limestone, and for all its
- coming-apart-at-the-seams wildness, the building is actually
- rather low-key, never overwhelming its campus. "We're on the
- short list for a new building at Yale," says Eisenman, the
- contextualist-come-lately. The location, he says nonchalantly,
- as if he had not spent the past 20 years ranting against any
- hint of historical style, "seems to call for a neo-Georgian
- classical box or something." Kinder and gentler, indeed.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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