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- <text>
- <title>
- (1985) Design
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1985 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 6, 1986
- DESIGN
- BEST OF '85
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Breaking Out of the Box
- </p>
- <p>A year of renewed traditionalism, plus quirks and fantasy
- </p>
- <p> Not long ago it was generally supposed that one kind of building
- was suitable to almost every modern purpose. Corporate offices?
- Put up a plain box, a big one. A university? Put up a couple
- of plain boxes, medium size. A civic building? Another box,
- and make it bland.
- </p>
- <p> The renewed use of traditional architectural styles is a done
- deed, praised and damned but now mainly accommodated. A more
- significant traditionalist trend, however, may be the revival
- of the belief in appropriately expressive building types. A
- courthouse should not look like a Pizza Hut; a parking garage
- and a theater ought to be distinguishable.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, when Architect Frank Gehry was commissioned to
- design a campus for the Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, he had
- little direct formal precedent. Who knew how a downtown Roman
- Catholic campus in California was supposed to look? The small
- site is in a raggedy neighborhood; the budget was not great
- ($4.8 million); students and faculty yearned for a physical
- sense of community. Gehry's solution is a small miracle. Using
- his customary sorts of raw materials--galvanized steel, plywood
- and stucco--he has virtually invented a new form of late-20th
- century urban classicism, simultaneously gritty and dignified.
- </p>
- <p> Government buildings have a special obligation to express their
- public nature. Taft Architects, a partnership of three
- Houstonians, has met that obligation with its elegant Water
- Resources Building for the Houston exurb of The Woodlands, a
- structure that serves, for now, as the town hall. The columns
- and pediment are stucco and the "stone" is split-faced concrete
- block, but classic American civic form is evoked with a
- convincing freshness.
- </p>
- <p> Some argue that grand classicism must be reserved for public
- buildings. A refutation of that theory is the absolute beauty
- of Michael Graves' headquarters for the Humana corporation in
- Louisville. A dense collage of lush textures and elements,
- novel but never freakish, the highly sculptural tower conveys
- the joy of architectural invention. Not since the late 1950s
- and the monuments of the International Style has there been a
- high-rise as satisfying.
- </p>
- <p> About 1.7 million houses were completed in the U.S. this year,
- and a great many of them were homely--lousy craftsmanship,
- ill-used sites, confused, graceless. All of which makes a new
- Omaha development called West Fairacres Village especially
- promising. The architects, John Goldman and Daniel Solomon,
- have designed housing the old-fashioned way, comfortably dense,
- with a pleasantly irregular street grid and just enough
- stylistic variation. The basic model is an adapted Craftsman
- bungalow, circa 1920, but a buyer of a one-store house can mix
- and match from among four brick porches and four compatible
- timber gable ends.
- </p>
- <p> In an era when so much manufactured children's fantasy is
- anodyne or idiotic, the Philadelphia Zoo's new Treehouse seems
- particularly fetching. A team of architects, engineers,
- sculptors and tinkerers spent four years turning an 1877
- antelope shed into a vivid little natural-history funhouse,
- designing the scores of objects from scratch. A giant honeycomb
- smells of honey; from dark corners come recorded frog croaks and
- bird songs. The science is implicit: there is not a sign or
- label in the place.
- </p>
- <p> Out in the capital of exuberant quirkiness, San Francisco
- municipal authorities agreed on a set of laws meant to codify
- the city's piquant urban character. The Downtown Plan, a
- radical and ambitious zoning scheme, will protect dozens of fine
- older buildings from demolition, severely restrict the amount
- and bulk of new high-rise construction and virtually outlaw the
- modernist office block.
- </p>
- <p> Modernist furniture is another matter entirely: the
- stripped-down, functional aesthetic is alive and well.
- Particularly when it comes to chairs, the charms of rococo
- revivalism and campy ca-ca shapes tend to pall quickly. Aeons
- Magi's lithe Tonietta chair is subtle as can be. What could
- have been another exercise in thoughtless angularity is redeemed
- by the slight, supple art nouveau curvature of the aluminum legs
- and the natural give of the leather seat and back.
- </p>
- <p> With a few prominent exceptions, design in the computer industry
- has tended to be an afterthought, a matter of fashioning
- inoffensive shells for cathode-ray tubes. Larry Vollum, a
- recent California State University graduate, won the first
- Burroughs design competition with an approach of a deeper sort.
- His MUSE prototype, a small computer grafted onto a versatile
- high-tech music stand, is the equivalent of a word processor for
- composers, performers, students and teachers. It enables them
- to add, change or erase notes and chords at will, add rhythm
- accompaniment, and play back part or all of a composition.
- </p>
- <p> Personal computers use floppy disks. FACPACs, a line of disk
- storage boxes devised by Worrell Design of Minneapolis, are
- handsome, simple and effective. The lever that fans out and
- displays ten or twelve disks inside is incorporated into the
- recessed logo.
- </p>
- <p> Artist Eiko Ishioka's stylized, otherworldly scenery for Paul
- Schrader's film Mishima was remarkable, a sort of reductivist
- baroque that seemed peculiarly Japanese. Despite the dazzling
- sets, critics generally found the movie a failure. Design, it
- turns out, cannot do everything.
- </p>
- <p>-- By Kurt Andersen
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-