Monday, March 29, 2010

New additions.



A new penthouse block is just visible here as a floating plane of stainless steel above an elaborate and heavily ornamented C19th facade. The building to the left is the Michael Wing, the main entrance to the Hofburg from the centre of Vienna and Loos House is out of shot to the right, with the result that an incredibly sensitive environment in which to incorporate contemporary architecture is created.

Museums Quarter.



Sharp contemporary detailing.

Baroque Grotesque.



Keystone grotesque on the facade of the Aula or great hall of the original complex of university buildings, which is now the Austrian Academy of Sciences. This was also where Beethoven's Seventh Symphony was premiered.

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Dominikanerkirche



The early baroque facade of the Dominikanerkirche. Built in the Roman-Lombardic style it is based, in regards to its composition, on the basilica churches of Rome; such as Il Gesu or Sant'Ignazio.
The ornamentation however is firmly in expectation of the exuberance of the baroque and incorporates plenty of wonderfully pointless merry cherubs as well as swags and garlands of flowers and fruit.

Michaelerkirche


The Michaelerkirche opposite the Hofburg at dusk. This is a C13th medieval structure which was given new Baroque clothing during the C18th; this gothic/classical hybrid is a common occurrence in Vienna and achieves the desired effect without the associated costs of a complete rebuild.


Shakespeare and Co.



Shakespeare and Company; is an English Bookshop on Strerngasse near the Judenplatz in what is considered to be the oldest part of Vienna; having been continually inhabited since 14BC.
I am not sure however what the 'co' stands for, maybe a reference to his original theatre troop, although it is more likely perhaps that it is an effort to make the establishment sound more British.


Contemporary additions.



Something which is of particular personal interest is how the Viennese work within existing historic buildings in order to integrate contemporary architecture; particularly in the historic centre.
Usually this is achieved by replacing or upgrading the existing roof structure with a light steel and glass addition which concedes to the original form and proportions but provides an interesting contrast through the use of contemporary materials and minimal detailing, creating a sense of lightness in comparison with the heavy, usually Baroque, masonry construction below.

Minorietenkirche Arcade.




Vienna 03.

Last Tuesday saw the first design studio with Prof. Alsop RA; of brightly coloured silts and blobs fame. Around 25 students crowded into a small studio space in his institute at the school of architecture. Although the course was heavily over subscribed everyone at the meeting was allowed to continue, which was a relief as despite my best efforts with the TUWiss on-line registration system all my efforts to secure a place had been in vain. Normally however it is the case that a few spaces are left on courses for foreign semester students; ten addition students however would usually pose a problem.

The project itself is a vision for Le Touquet, an elegant but fading seaside town on the northwest coast of France. It calls for ideas of any intervention that might provide a solution to make the town an exciting and unique place to visit, indeed nothing is ruled out from possibility of flooding the promenade to demolishing half the town, so long as it can be proved that it will be beneficial and ultimately shape Le Touquet into a desirable place.

The emphasis was therefore on the desirable and what can constitute this. Quite often architects are desperate to apply activity and function to an area whereas in contrast to this assumption the most pleasant spaces are often left bank and encourage activity rather than forcing it to occur, sitting and watching is actually far more popular in terms of numbers than beach volleyball or windsurfing. Perhaps the real reason people have traditionally been drawn towards the sea has been lost amid a confusing and distracting mist of amusement arcades and crazy golf, when actually all that is fundamentally desired is a sense of escape and space.

All of this took place after a frantic dash from the Arch. Theory school after a difficult three hour lecture with Prof. Jormakka dealing, coincidentally in regards to the above topic, with the body in space. This however this clash highlights one of the main problems with the organisational system, as institutes here have an annoying habit of scheduling lectures and tutorials so that they jar completely or overlap. This means that students have a real responsibility to organise their own timetabling and subjects often have to be dropped to make space for others.

On a very British topic the weather here has warmed up significantly and I have been taking advantage by going for a few runs mainly around the historic centre and the Prater. It also means that after three hour Practical reasoning lectures it is possible to wander into the centre and sit outside with a coffee/beer.


Thursday, March 25, 2010

Prague Exhibition.


An exhibition of Prague's contemporary architecture in the Prechtsaal at the School of Architecture.

Stephansdom tiles.



Some of the 230,000 or so glazed tiles that form the geometric patterns on the Stephansdom roof.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Prater.



I went for a run early this morning along the Hauptallee or central drive that spans the entire length of the Prater, the location of which is indicated by the light orange area on the above aerial view. It is conveniently close to central Vienna, shaded dark orange, and as such the drives, woods and meadows are well frequented by runners, cyclists, walkers and horse riders. It's current incarnation as a landscaped park can be traced to 1766, when Emperor Joseph II granted public access to what had previously been a royal hunting ground.

The word Prater is itself derived from the latin Pratum, which means meadow.

Vienna is ideal for running and it is a popular activity; particularly around the Prater and along the banks of the Danube Canal that skirts along the edge of Vienna's historic centre.


Monday, March 22, 2010

Karlsplatz Jugendstil.



Abstracted, floral Jugendstil motifs decorating one of the two steel framed and marble paneled pavilions designed by Otto Wagner in 1898 to mark the entrance to the Karlsplatz Stadtbahn Station. The station infrastructure was removed in 1981 to make way for the U-Bahn U2 line and the pavilions were originally destined for the same fate, however after a public outcry they were dismantled and reconstructed on top of the new underground station and now serve as a cafe and temporary exhibition space.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Stephansdom Roof.



Covered with 230,000 glazed tiles the roof of the Stephansdom is a striking composition. This is the best view of the double headed eagle mosaic, symbolic of the Hapsburg dynasty, which is located above the chancel. The original roof was destroyed by fire in 1945 during World War II and the roof was subsequently recreated; this time with a concealed steel frame. The pitch of the roof is steep enough to ensure that snow rarely settles and it is cleaned with rainwater.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Cafe Culture.



The weather was much warmer today than it has been recently, so locals and dare I say tourists, I am not entirely sure what I am classed as, took full advantage, spilling out onto any available spare bit of pavement to drink melange and eat Sachertorte; which coincidently was invented by Franz Sacher in 1832 and is one of Vienna's culinary specialities; as well as a heart attack on a plate. This is Cafe Mozart, located behind the Oper and opposite the Albertina gallery.

Jesuitenkirche Interior.



The Baroque pulpit and ceiling frescos by A. Pozzo, 1703, who was also buried in the church after his death in 1709. Fresco painting on this scale has always fascinated me, especially when one takes into consideration the artist was often painting on wet plaster or to give it the correct Italian terminology the Buon Fresco technique; indeed the word 'Fresco' means fresh in Italian. The contrasting method, the Secco, involves painting onto a dry plaster base and as a result is far less durable.

Topos in architectural theory.

This body of text represents some initial consideration relating to one of the four architectural theory units me and Paul are currently attending; entitled 'Topos in architectural theory'.

It deals, I think, with how we fundamentally perceive and engage with architecture as well as other 'art' forms such as dance, music, art or drama. Are they more than just objects? How do we define which are beautiful? Also is there a universal method that can be applied in order to understand them collectively?

TOPOS IN ARCHITECTURAL THEORY.

GOETHE ON ARCHITECTURE.

In his 1795 fragment on Baukunst, Goethe wrote. ‘One would think that architecture as a fine art works solely for the eyes. Instead, it should work primarily for the sense of mechanical motion in the human body – something to which scant attention is paid. When in dance we move according to definite rules, we experience a pleasant sensation. A similar sensation should be aroused by someone who is led blindfolded through a well-built house. This involves the difficult and complicated doctrine of proportions, which gives the building and its various parts their character.’

Considerations regarding the similarities and differences between architecture, dance and music.

It is first of all important to establish what Goethe is referring to when he is discussing ‘architecture’. One possible first reaction would be to instantly dismiss architecture as a static and fixed form and therefore in a separate category from music and dance; which can both be seen as fluid and organic and thus more human.

However is it architectural form that Goethe is referring to here? It could be argued that rather than building form instead the concept of moving through, experiencing architecture and engaging with it spatially is being described.

‘A similar sensation should be aroused by someone who is led blindfolded through a well-built house’.

With this in mind it could be possible to start drawing similarities between the three disciplines not least because they offer a fully enveloping experience when both practiced and encountered. However it could be argued that to dismiss the visual element of architecture and focus solely on the spatial experience is to ignore one of the elemental components of architecture.

However if to begin we are to consider architecture an art of movement then it is possible to begin to establish similarities shared between architecture, dance and music based on their common foundation on an established series of rules, for example rhythm and notation in music, step and choreographed moves in dancing and finally form and proportion in architecture. Most people can learn and apply these functionally however what perhaps produces a truly authentic and beautiful ballet, building or fugue cannot be purely defined by rules. It is a sense of emotion and individual expression, which allows something that is apparently defined by strict convention to transcend to the level where it can become classified, often subconsciously, as beautiful.

In order to effectively practice these three artistic disciplines it can therefore be proposed that a series of rules must be understood in the first instance, which when applied with individual and emotive expression can produce work that can be classed as attractive. Interestingly although all of these disciplines can be seen as being defined by rigid framework these are not immediately on view when the work physically manifests itself, as they are subconsciously applied without apparent consideration; thus allowing a spontaneous and free creation to take place.

Another similarity is that could be proposed is that we move through buildings or perform music and dance in a linear way experiencing events, pauses, tempo changes and stops along a prescribed linear framework, However despite this, it could be contested that the actual experience will be different for each individual who engages with or perceives it, that is to say that a route taken through a building is always different and the performance of a symphony will always have individual characteristics; despite being an established work. This diversity or irrationality is typical of humanity and is why we strive to explain and contain our surroundings through rules in the first instance.

Whilst this analogy seems justifiable when applied to movement through a building it doesn’t apply however when we once again replace the experience of moving through buildings with the concept of building form and aesthetics. Buildings can not really be defined as linear, performance events like a piece of music or a dance, as although through their form they can expand and contract in all directions, they are ultimately defined and fixed. This difference is why it is essential to initially clarify the difference between the visual aesthetics and form of buildings in contrast to the psychical act of moving through the space, as it is apparent that both categories are not comparable.

Further differences can be traced when it is considered that music and dance are both disciplines that are expressed at different points by two separate artists; the creator and the performer. For example a dance can be created by a choreographer and then performed by a dancer and the same rule applies to music with composer and performer. This practice is of course negated if the creator is also the performer.

Architecture however is more difficult to clarify in this way. An architect can be defined as the creator of a building but how is it then ‘performed’? Possibly the builders who construct it or the people that use it could be argued as being this secondary artist but really there is no defined performer; except maybe the building itself perhaps. Architecture and the architect can therefore be placed in a category of the arts that is quite dissimilar from dance and music in terms of artistic creation and provision and maybe makes it more akin to painting or sculpture. The work is conceived and created by a singe process, it is then ‘frozen’ and can only be moved through as a static entity; we cannot walk through walls; yet. This is hardly surprising as architecture, painting and sculpture have in the past often been fused together, particularly during the medieval period through to the baroque. For example the architect and artist Michelangelo’s work includes outstanding examples of all three artistic disciplines; all of them static and unyielding.

So it can be speculated that whilst similarities can be defined between architecture, music and dance in terms of movement through space, linking architecture as an aesthetic discipline with a dance routine or a concert is more challenging.

At this point then it also worth attempting to address what we are actually relating too when we perceive a building we find beautiful or when we hear a moving piece of music. Indeed the whole concept of how we emotionally relate to our surroundings whether it is music, a building or a dance is a puzzle. Why for instance do we find a piece of music sad or perhaps a building particularly uplifting? A piece of music is not inherently ‘sad’ in itself as all it fundamentally consists of physically is a linear progression of varying tones; it cannot feel or express emotion as a basic entity. Human expression is needed through the performer for music to transcend to an emotional level. This suggests that our conscious perception is an elementary part of how different art forms or indeed any object are emotionally defined ultimately and again links us back to how established rules are emotionally projected by the creator and then the performer. It can be argued therefore that we are subconsciously programmed to apply different emotions to certain situations, places, movements or sounds. We often find large spaces uplifting and inspiring, whilst small, cramped spaces are often associated with feelings of oppression and depression.

The philosopher Maurice Merleau Ponty has attempted to clarify this concept by suggested that our bodies actually act as a central reference point. The point 0,0 on graph could perhaps be used as a metaphor, from which threads of perception extend out in order to establish and analyse our surroundings through a combination of mind and matter; which Ponty defined as ‘flesh’. Everything around us is therefore ‘non-existent’ without us first existing as the zero point of perception and attributing an emotion or feeling to a situation or object through ourselves. We have the ability to personally inhabit a place, dance or musical performance and attribute a personal meaning to it, which itself can be based on a number of factors such as personal knowledge, situation, emotional state and characteristics in the subject matter.

Therefore the question that can be arrived at here is not so much what we are trying to engage with, as that is a secondary consideration. Instead perhaps we should trying to address how we actually fundamentally engage with and attribute feeling and emotion to our surroundings as a collective whole.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Amalienbad.



I went for a swim early this morning in the Jugendstill Amalienbad (1923-26), designed by Otto Nadel and Karl Schmalhofer. When built the baths were the largest of their kind in Europe, able to accommodate 1300 people. As well as the galleried main pool, which spanned by a retractable glass roof, there are smaller baths, sauna's and pools for therapeutic purposes. The interior is embellished with geometric mosaic designs and everything from the shower fittings to the changing booths are original and beautifully detailed.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Sketchbook.

My apologies for the lull in sketchbook updates recently. This is attributed to both of the special water based rendering pens that I use drying up with the result it is impossible to add any definition to the basic ink drawings. Naturally the university stationer seems to stock every pen known to mankind; except the type required. However a friend is graciously buying and sending a few over.

We have continued with our Architecture and Theory Lectures this week from Prof's. Kulhmann and Jormakka. The later is a very interesting character. A Finnish architect and philosopher, a lethal combination, he has written numerous books and is internationally well-known and regarded. Mercifully he lectures mainly in English; so it is just about possible to begin to comprehend considerations linking architecture to Kantian Deontology or The Unified Theory of Beauty.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Chorvereinigung St Augustin.

I was lucky enough to be able to sing Schubert's 'Deutsche Mass' on Sunday morning with the Chorverinigung St Augustin to a packed Jesuitenkirche, with listeners standing in the aisles and crowded around the narthex. The performances attract an audience from across the city and from much further afield often, so I was told, just to hear the music. It was a fantastic experience to sing a mass composed in Vienna, in its intended liturgical context and accompanied by a correctly configured wind ensemble; with which the setting was originally scored.

What is remarkable is that this happens every sunday, excluding July and August and costs the choir nearly 4000 euros for each mass; primarily in hiring the professional orchestra. These costs then have to be recouped from donations after the service and CD sales. I was also informed that currently, apart from the Stephansdom, it is the only Church in central Vienna that performs a sung mass with full choir and orchestra every Sunday.

The informality of the ensemble is also refreshing with no hierarchical processions or robes, which initially seems at odds with the ornate and opulent setting. After a one hour rehearsal choir members simply file into the area in front of the high altar, sing at the appropriate intervals and then dissipate with the rest of the congregation.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Cafe Diglas.



Cafe Diglas; another of Vienna's numerous coffee houses and one of the oldest; founded in 1875.

Dr Karl Lueger Kirche - Zentralfriedhof


The Dr Karl Lueger Kirche sits in the centre of the Zentralfriedhof. It was built in 1907-1910 in an 'angular' type of neoclassicism with influences of Jugendstill; the result being that it almost seems to preempt the art deco style. Max Hegele, who was a pupil of Otto Wagner, designed the building in honor of Vienna's mayor.

The relatively stark, but beautifully crafted interior is balanced by this expansive dome featuring a sun burst pattern in gold and royal blue.

Zentralfriedhof - Vienna's Central Cemetery.



We visited Vienna's Zentralfriendhof yesterday in fittingly bleak and blustery conditions. Opened in 1874 the burial ground is truly vast, almost as large in area as central Vienna, and contains nearly three million graves. Schubert, Brahm's, Strauss' I and II as well as Beethoven are buried here, most have been moved from other cemeteries and neatly placed in a cosy huddle half way down the central garden of worthies. The site contains designated areas for the Catholic, Jewish, Protestant and Russian Orthodox faiths each with their own specific character.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Vienna 02.

University has officially started this week and last weeks frantic running around seems to be paying dividends. Austria is not a country in which you can study and fit the archetypal stereotype of a relaxed student as the lack of timetabling, schedules or indeed any structure whatsoever means that responsibility for organising your time is a personal concern.

We have so far managed to secure places on several Architecture and Theory courses, a Design Studio or Entwerfen and possibly a graphic design course; although at the introductory lecture the flamboyant and rather egotistical lecturer stated that he only wanted 30 of the most talented students out of 100 attendees and that anyone deemed unworthy would have to 'out', which we assumed meant 'leave the course'; so it might not be worth pursuing that option.

Having something constructive to do unfortunately means less time for sketching and wandering around Vienna; which I would rather be doing all day, everyday. However it does mean that you feel less like a tourist and more like you actually inhabit the city and use it practically.

Rehearsal's with the Jesuitenkircke choir have also been progressing well with another mass, this time 'The German Mass' by Schubert, on Sunday and general rehearsals for the Messiah by Handel (in English amusingly) which will be performed at a concert in May. These have prompted me to consider the English language in more depth than I have previously, mainly because each rehearsal consists of me attempting to offer advice to the German speaking choir on the finer points of English grammar and singing such as rolling 'r' sounds and emphasised vowels.


Thursday, March 11, 2010

Karlskirche Angel.



The New Testament Angel; one of a pair flanking the entrance portico at the Karlskirche, Vienna.

Viennese Fiaker.


Two very cold, bored horses, complete with ear warmers, waiting in the snow outside the Stephansdom in Central Vienna.

Secession Building Exhibition Hall.



The Secession Building's evenly lit main exhibition space. Personally I can appreciate contemporary art if there is some semblance of craft and/or evidence of time and effort spent working on the piece. This installation however seemed to lack both of those qualities regardless of how hard I tried to engage with it; perhaps that was the point.

Beethoven Frieze.



Finally managed to find the time to visit the Secession building yesterday after lectures to see the Beethoven Friezes by Gustav Klimt. Tucked away in a basement underneath the main exhibition space, which was starkly vacant except for a pile of posters and a lump of rock, the frieze was rather radical when it was unveiled in 1902 for the 14th Secession exhibition. Painted directly onto the plaster walls using light materials, it was originally only intended to be a temporary installation. Amongst the figures shown here are depictions of Lust, Death and Gluttony. Interestingly the other major exhibit in the building was a working swingers club which first had to be navigated in order to reach the frieze; although it wasn't actually 'in use' when I visited.
Image from www.artgalleryartist.com.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Lectures.



Attended the first lectures of the semester this morning at the Institute of Architectural Theory; they were in 'Practical reasoning and philosophy in Architecture' and 'Architecture and the fame complex'. The theory school is located in a quiet courtyard in the centre of a grand baroque building which was previously a private residence.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

KLEINES CAFE.


I have been visiting this coffee house for the occasional melange and some sketching; alone and with others as both are common practice in Vienna. It is owned by the actor Hanno Poschl, whoever he is, and draws a pleasant bunch of artists, students and typical Viennese odd bods with giant mustaches. Internally, as the name suggests, it is rather challenged in terms of size but does foster a genuinely alternative and creative atmosphere.

The Tree of Life - Klimt.



Gustav Klimts 'Tree of Life' frieze in the Austrian Symbolist style; composed between 1905 and 1909. Image taken from www.arthistoryarchive.com

The MAK.

Yesterday we paid a visit to the MAK which has a diverse but manageable collection of objects relating to the applied arts including furniture, painting, stained glass and architecture. The C20 to 21st Architecture gallery contains models and sketches by Zaha Hadid, Frank Gehry. There were also some notable Jugendstill works including the 'Tree of Life' frieze by Gustav Klimt and a collection of friezes and furniture by Charles Rennie Mackintosh and his wife Margaret MacDonald.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Sketchbook 06.



The Goldman & Salatsch Building also known locally as the Loos House was constructed in 1910 as a mixed use development and sits on Michaelerplatz opposite the Hofburg; then still the Imperial seat of the Hapburgs.
It caused quite a stir at the time of its construction with its architect, Adolf Loos choosing to strip the building of un-necessary ornament; instead focusing on function and form making it one of the forerunners of the modern style. Despite this the building is still beautifully and richly detailed using bronze, marble, faceted glass and gold, which can be referenced back to Loos' appreciation of the decorative arts and particularly items with a functional beauty. He is also responsible for Cafe Museum 1899, The American Bar 1908 and the Rufter House 1922; all were located in Vienna.

Loos himself was colourful and slightly tragic character contracting syphilis in the brothels of Vienna by 21 after failing to complete his architectural studies. He spent time in America before returning to Vienna to great acclaim becoming part of the Viennese intelligentsia and establishing himself as the preferred architect of Vienna's social elite.
However he was diagnosed with cancer in 1918 with the result that his stomach, appendix and part of his intestine had to be removed; meaning that for the rest of his life he could only digest ham and cream. Through this period and before he had had several unhappy marriages and as he reached fifty he was almost completely deaf. At the time of his death aged 62 in 1933 he was completely penniless.

Sketchbook 05.

Antwerp Tower Competition - Justification.

This concept is derived from the form and ‘stone frame’ of the completed tower and attempts to balance and compliment this existing condition as well as offering a contrast through abstraction and materiality. It allows the unfinished tower to be retained in its entirety with the addition of the new structure presenting a continuation of an ongoing process. No building can ever be fully completed.

The new tower is composed from three timber-framed elements that slot inside each other, creating a tiered effect in an abstracted interpretation of the completed tower. The choice of material is an acknowledgement of the considerable amount of timber used in Cathedral building, which, instead of being expressed, is usually concealed behind stonework.

The wooden frames would be constructed from colossal engineered timber beams. Building a structure on this scale out of timber would present a major construction challenge emulating the original feat of engineering undertaken to build the completed tower at the end of the Middle Ages.

Banners could be hung from the new tower providing it with a secondary function as a setting to display large scale, contemporary art works on a spiritual theme.

Antwerp Tower Competition.


This ideas competition presents the possibly of 'completing' the west front of Antwerp Cathedral. The above image depicts my possibly over conservative solution.

Vienna.

Vienna is genuinely a beautiful city; architecturally, socially and artistically. The scale and detail of the buildings is exaggerated beyond anything that can be experienced in the UK and it is great just to wander around the centre of the city at different times of the day sketching and taking photographs.

Culturally and socially there is always something happening including concerts, exhibition openings, presentations, lectures, parties, street entertainment et cetera. So far, as University is due to start next week, we've managed to experience some of each.

I have also managed to join the Choral Society of St Augustine, many of whom are students at the University of Music. The choir sings mass every Sunday at the Baroque Jesuitenkirche in central Vienna as well as special concerts. Whilst being great musically it has also been been socially beneficial allowing me to meet people from a range of different backgrounds who know Vienna incredibly well; having lived here all their lives.

The Viennese are also far more relaxed and the pace of life both socially and professionally is generally slower. People spend time talking to each other over drinks in smokey coffee houses, there's no ban on smoking here, and over lunch in bars and restaurants.

However this can present a problem coming from a society that wants everything done instantly; as we have particularly experienced this week trying to organise lectures and timetables.

The Austrian University system is in complete opposition to what is practiced in the UK. The school of architecture for example has just under 2000 students at masters level, compared to just under 50 at Portsmouth. There is no central office to co-ordinate the actions of five institutes that organise their own timetables and then ask students to sign up to the courses themselves over an internet system, that has a frustrating tendency of not working, on a first come, first served basis.

This can be seen as beneficial on one hand because it gives the student freedom of choice and flexibility, however on the other hand it means architecture students have no set period of study and can end up reading architecture for up to ten years; which would be expensive in England.

The system would perhaps be more efficient if there was a central co-ordinator who knew what was happening in each institute, however as this does not exist we have had to go to each studio in an attempt to organise our own timetable; with some institutes being more accommodating than others!

Despite all the 'hassle' it is a normal aspect of studying in Vienna, according to Austrian students and as such is an important experience to have.


Thursday, March 4, 2010

X Projects by Arbeitsgruppe 4 at the Az W.



An opening evening was held last night at the Architecture Museum, Vienna for an exhibition featuring work by the progressive modernists Arbeitsgruppe (Working Group) 4. Characterised by the strong use of expressed geometric forms and an honest, innovative approach to the use of materials their work is relatively unknown outside of Austria. They were involved with CIAM during the 1950's and 60's and as such had strong links with and shared many of the same architectural aspirations as the English Brutalists, Peter and Alison Smithson, who were responsible for Robin Hood Gardens in London and parts of Bath University.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Secession Building.



Around the corner from the Architecture School is the Secession Building or the 'Golden Cabbage' as it is also affectionately referred too. It was built as an architectural manifesto and exhibition hall in 1897 by Joseph Olbrich to house works in the Secession or Jugendstil style; a branch of Art Noveau.

Karlskirche Frescos.

Karlskirche Frescos.

Karlskirche Frescos.



The dome of the Karlskirche next to the School of Architecture rises up to a external height of 70m and is internally covered in frescos over an area of 1,256m2. They have just been restored over a period of four years and the temporary platform and lift installed to allow this to happen has also been open for visitors. The painting themselves were executed in amazing detail by Johann Michael Rottmayr in c1736. The platform will be permanently removed in the next couple of months.

Holocaust Memorial.


This memorial to the 65,000 Austrian Jews murdered in the holocaust, is located in the heart of the old Jewish quarter of Vienna in Judenplatz and is by the British sculptor Rachel Whiteread.
It is a steel and concrete construction formed from cast stacks of books, the spines facing inwards so their titles are hidden. Symbolic associations can be made with Judaism as a religion of books and also that the individual stories contained within the stacks can never be read. The memorial is discomforting, also slightly frustrating especially as the clearly apparent 'entrance' is in fact cast into the whole and cannot be opened.


Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Jugendstil.



Located on a bridge spanning the Hoher Market. Designed by Franz Matsch in 1911, every hour moving figures process across the clock face.

Jugendstil.


Karlsplatz Pavilions. These structures flank the underground station opposite the Karlskirche and were built by Otto Wagner at the turn of the C19th. They are finely crafted in their detail using materials that could be mass produced; such as cast iron.

Monday, March 1, 2010

School of Architecture.



Studio space.

School of Architecture.



Models.

School of Architecture.



Library.

University and the Karlskirche - morning.

Entwerfenvorstellung (Design Studio) Presentations.



This morning we attended the Enterfenvorstellung Presentations in the Prechitsaal of the School of Architecture. Around 30 studios presented their plans for the semester, in German, over seven hours. Students then sign up for one or two of these on the TUWiss, an on-line registration system, on a first come basis from a set time in the evening. Essentially this means students organise their own programme, in complete contrast to the UK where generally a set schedule of study is provided.

Sketchbook 04.