The Writings of Aldo van Eyck, 1947-1998.
The Child, the City and the Artist.
Vincent Ligtelijn and Francis Strauven, eds.
Two Volumes (illustrated) + DVD in slipcase.
SUN, Amsterdam. 2008 238 pages and 744 pages.
“Modern architecture has been harping continually on what is different in our time
to such an extent even that it has lost touch with what is not different, with what is
always essentially the same.” Aldo van Eyck
By the time a young Amsterdam architect named Aldo van Eyck began work on
his commission for a Municipal Orphanage in 1955, the sails of modern architecture
originally filled with the excitement of change and invention were solidly in the
doldrums. The masters remained — Wright, Aalto, Mies, Le Corbusier — but as
idiosyncratic artists on their personal trajectories, no longer prophets of a new world.
And the dumbed-down glass box had begun its inexorable take over while an
attenuated and dandified cocktail modernism dominated the press in the work of
Ed Stone, SOM, Yamasaki and Philip Johnson, who had just given his “Seven Crutches
of Modern Architecture” lecture, targeting history, drawing, and structure as
irrelevant back-benchers while calling Wright “the most important architect of the
19th C.” The ebullient adolescence of the avant-garde had dissipated into a torpid
adulthood of formal style.
van Eyck was raised an intellectual idealist and he early on developed a passion for
aspects of philosophy, art, and architecture that expressed paradoxes of the human
condition, resisting neat singular resolutions. He was a world citizen with an early
childhood in the Netherlands, a later upbringing in London, schooling in Switzerland,
and a family cultural heritage in Surinam. In his lifelong pursuit of a viable living
modernism, he was no reclusive bookworm—he was in the trenches, both as a
practicing architect and a confidant of the likes of Arp, Rietveld, van Doesburg,
Braque, Léger, Brancusi and Tristan Tzara; “the great gang” as he referred to them.
Out of this exposure, he believed the avant-garde offered more than merely a change
in artistic style. He felt its most significant contribution to Western artistic/scientific
culture was its stance that the relationship between Mankind and Nature was coequal
and non-hierarchical. Modern art — and by extension, architecture — expressed,
as Mondrian put it, an “equivalence of the dissimilar” where opposite “pure relations,”
are uncovered, balanced and ultimately “…reveal the reality that is behind visible
things…” (Klee).
As Lefaivre & Tzonis remark in their book on van Eyck, the Orphanage, as it became
known, should have received little attention, but upon publication became wildly
popular among architects, probably because it successfully integrated architectural
opposites previously considered irreconcilable. It mixed Palladian classical composition
with anti-classical principles of avant-garde art (De Stijl) and non-Western
vernacular (Dogon villages). To this blend, van Eyck added a constant concern of
all Team 10 members — what they referred to as the Architecture of Community.
Borrowing a phrase from the philosopher Martin Buber, he called it “the in-between.”
This attitude, as Lefaivre says, “…placed the emphasis on buildings as means for
creating relations between people rather than as goals in themselves.” Inspired by
the surrealist poet Louis Aragon, van Eyck felt that “ordinary forgotten everyday
areas” in the city should be elevated to “privileged places of poetic experience
and social life.” This led him towards architectural models that included contradiction
in meaning and a strategy of cellular aggregate space so that however large the
development, the smaller scale was always represented. Kasbah and Labyrinth were
among his favorite descriptions; they implied anti-hierarchical arrangements,
timeless and mythological spaces, and even chaos, which to van Eyck allowed
for discovery.
This was an anti-elitist, anarchic approach in which every space in the building/city
had the full status of architecture or planning, no matter how ordinary or mundane;
an attitude in direct opposition to the Miesian doctrine that so carefully distinguished
between “building” and “architecture.” From this stance, Modern buildings and
urban design were meaningless and barren. Le Corbusier’s urban concepts of
“functional city,” “heart of the city,” and urban “core” were unable to accommodate
human paradox and remained shackled to large-scale space plans ignoring the
essential role of time. “The material slum has gone,” he said, “... but what has replaced
it? Just mile upon mile of organized nowhere, and nobody feeling he is somebody
living somewhere.”
In his writings, collected for the first time in this handsome two-volume set (with a
DVD of a lecture), van Eyck invokes the viewpoint of a child throughout; a child
filled with wonder, delight and humor, naturally rebellious and irrational. Certainly a
child’s point of view was far from the canon of modernist theory, marginalized into
near oblivion, yet van Eyck chose it as a primary point of view from which to theorize
about space; so much so that he titled his own 1962 collection of essays, The Child,
the City and the Artist. A typical observation is that after a snowstorm, it is the child
who temporarily becomes “Lord of the City”; architects, he thought, should provide
“something for the child more permanent than snow.” In fact, one of van Eyck’s major
vehicles for exploration was his set of designs for over 700 playgrounds built in
and around Amsterdam over a 30 year period.
After the Orphanage and the Sculpture Pavilion at Arnhem, van Eyck’s most
significant influence was through two other architects: his colleague Louis Kahn,
and his former student, Herman Hertzberger, both powerful teachers and designers
in their own rights. Kahn and van Eyck had a long-term dialogue and both of van Eyck’s
early buildings (and Hertzberger’s) reflect Kahn’s masonry tectonic of the time,
particularly in pre-cast concrete and concrete block. When Kahn made his drawing/
statement about the city, he described it simply as a place where a child could
decide what he wanted to be. And both Hertzberger and Kahn embraced van Eyck’s
anthropological, anti-hierarchical and non-Western viewpoint in their building
and teaching. This non-Western lens (from visiting Dogon villages in West Africa)
disclosed dramatic limitations and omissions in modern movement ideals, in
particular the detrimental consequences of universal space. As he liked to say,
“Whatever Space and Time mean [referring to Giedion’s title], Place and Occasion
mean more. For Space in the image of man is Place, and Time in the image of man
is Occasion.”
van Eyck was a prolific writer and speaker. He co-edited the Dutch architectural
journal, Forum from 1959-1963, was a member of CIAM, founder of Team 10, and
remained a tireless teacher, practitioner, scholar and thinker all his life. These
volumes collect the entirety of his articles, major talks and writings which prior to
this, were often near-impossible to obtain. To architects seeking connections
between meaning and form, these thoughts of Aldo van Eyck manage to be both
provoking and inspiring, while avoiding academic pedantry. Like Louis Kahn, he
believed that only essential timeless aspects of architecture could provide the traction
needed to move forward. He was committed to working within the frame of
rational modernism, expanding it to include the irrational, spiritual and dualistic
facets of human existence; merging left and right brains, as it were. This was, and
remains today, a heroic and quixotic goal, given the cultural forces that determine
architectural form. Yet, despite this and the lack of commissions throughout his
long career, van Eyck never relinquished the idea that architecture had the power to
both engage us more closely with, and enlarge our understanding of the world we
live in. Buildings, he said, should be “icons of joy, affection and optimism.” And in
the few works he was able to build, they were.