Pub - Singular Objects of Architecture PDF
Pub - Singular Objects of Architecture PDF
Baudrillard, Jean.
[Objets singuliers. English]
The singular objects of architecture I Jean Ba udrillard and Jean
Nouvel; translated by Robert Bon onno.
p. em.
ISBN 0-8166-3912-4 (alk. paper)
1. Architecture-Philosophy. 2. Aesthetics. I. Nouvel,
Jean, 1945- n. Title.
NA2500.B3413 2002
nO'.1-dc21
2002008024
12 II 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Contents
Acknowledgments
I. First Interview
RadicaHty-Singular Objects in Architecture-Illusion,
Virtuality, Reality-A Destabilized Area?-Concept , Irresolution,
Vertigo-Creation and Forgetfulness-Values of Fu n ctionalism-Ne w York
or Utopia-Architecture: Between Nostalgia and Anticipation-(Always)
Seduction, Provocation, Secrets-The Metamorphosis of Architecture
The Aesthetics of M od e m ity-Cu lture-A Heroic Architectural Act?-Art,
Architecture, and Postmodernity-Visual Disappointment, Intellectual
DisaPP Oi ntment-The Aesthetics of Disappearance-Images of
Modernity-The Biology of the Visible-A New Hedonism?
vii
vfH [) Foreword
The authors would like to thank the Maison des Ecrivains and
the University of Paris VI-La Villette School of Architecture for
taking the initiative to sponsor a conference between architects
and philosophers. The project, titled Urban Passages, involved a
series of six encounters between writers and architects in 1997 and
1998, which made headlines both inside and outside the school.
The extended dialogue between Jean Baudrillard and Jean Nouvel
forms the basis of the present text. The five other pairs of par
ticipants were Paul Chemetov and Didier Daeninckx, Henri
Gaudin and Jean-Pierre Vernant, Philippe Sollers and Christian
de Portzamparc, Antoine Grumbach and Antoine Bailly, and
Henri Ciriani and Olivier Rolin. Helene Bleskine developed the
idee. for Urban Passages and organized the dialogues. We are
grateful for the opportunity to hold discussions of such quality,
since it is through speech that we communicate to others the
singularity of an encounter.
When it came time to publish the book, the authors reworked
their dialogue, focusing on a recurrent theme of the discussions:
singularity. This theme helped drive the discussions toward
their resolution or, we should say, toward their radical and nec
essary incompletion.
xv
I
First Interview
Radicality
Jean Baudrinard: We can't begin with nothing because, logically,
nothingness is the culmination of something. When I think
of radicality, I think of it more in terms of writing and the ory
than of architecture. I am more interested in the radicality of
space .. . . But it's possible that true radicality is the radicality
of nothingness. Is there a radical space that is also a void? The
question interests me because now, at last, I have an opportu
nity to gain insight into how we can fill a space, how we can
organize it by focusing on something other than its radical ex
tension-vertically or horizontally, that is--within a dimension
where anything is possible. Yet we still need to produce some
thing real.... The question I want to ask Jean Nouvel, since we
have to start somewhere, is very simple: "Is there such a thing as
architectural truthr'
eyes. So we can play with anything the eye can integrate through
sight, and we can fool the eye. Classical culture has often made
use of this kind of sleight of hand. In a building like the Cartier
Foundation, where I intentionally blend the real image and the
virtual image, it signifies that within a given plane, I no longer
know if I'm looking at the virtual image or the real image. If I
look at the facade, since it's bigger than the building, I can't tell
if I'm looking at the reflection of the sky or the sky through the
glass .... If I look at a tree through the three glass planes, I can
never determine if I'm looking at the tree through the glass, in
front of it, behind it, or the reflection of the tree. And when I
plant two trees in parallel, even accidentally, to the glass plane,
I can't tell if there's a second tree or if it's a real tree. These are
gimmicks, things we can put into our bag of tricks, our archi
tectural bag of tricks, and which we're never supposed to talk
about, but which, from time to time, must be talked about. These
are the means by which architecture creates a virtual space or a
mental space; it's a way of tricking the senses. But it's primarily
a way of preserving a destabilized area.
�'--./ -.. . -,-
'
A Destabilize d Area?
J.N. When you talk to a developer, the way a director talks to a
producer, he asks a ton of questions about the price per square
meter, the lot, can it be built on, will it shock the local bourgeoi
sie, a whole series of questions of this type. And then there are
those things that remain unsaid. There is always something un
said; that's part of the game. And what remains unsaid is, ethi
cally, something additional, something that doesn't run coun
ter to what is being sold or exchanged, doesn't interfere with
our notions of economics, but signifies something vital. That's
where the game is played. Because if an architectural object is
only the translation of some functionality, if it's only the result
of an economic situation, it can't have meaning."What's more,
there's a passage in one of your texts on New York that [ like very
much, where you say that the city embodies a form of architec
ture that is violent, brutal, immediate, which is the true form of
architecture, that you have no need for eco-architecture or gen-
First Interview [] 9
)
lB. p eCiSelY. It's a way of confronting it through the visible and
the-titvisible. I don't talk much about architecture, but in all my
books, the question lies just beneath the surface.. .. I fully agree
with this idea of invisibility. What I like very much in your work
is that we don't see it, things remain invisible, they know how to
make themselves invisible. When you stand in front of the build
ings, you see them, but they're invisible to the extent that they
effectively counteract that hegemonic visibility, the visibility
that dominates us, the visibility of the system, where everything
must be immediately visible and immediately interpretable. You
conceive space in such a way that architecture simultaneously
creates both place and nonplace, is also a nonplace in this sense,
and thus creates a kind of apparition. And it's a seductive space.
So I take back what I said earlier: Seduction isn't consensual. Ifs
dual. It must confront an object with the order of the real, the
visible order that surrounds it. If this duality doesn't exist-if
there's no interactivity, no context-seduction doesn't take place.
'A successful object, in the sense that it exists outside its own re
ality, is an object that creates a dualistic relation, a relation that
can emerge through diversion, contradiction, destabilization,
but which effectively brings the so-called reality of a world and
its radical illusion face-to-face.
J.B. Let's talk about radicality. Lefs talk about the kind of radi
cal exoticism of things that Segalen discusses, the estrangement
from a sense of identity that results in the creation of a form
10 [] First Interview
/_
J.B. When I refer to New York as the epicenter of the end of the
world, I'm referring to an apocalypse. At the same time, it's a
way of looking at it as a realized utopia. This is the paradox of
reality. We can dream about apocalypse, but it's a perspective,
something unrealizable, whose power lies in the fact that it isn't
realized. New York provides the kind of stupefaction charac
terized by a world that is already accomplished, an absolutely
apocalyptic world, but one that is replete in its verticality-and
in this sense, ultimately, it engenders a form of deception be
cause it is embodied, because ifs already there, and we can no
longer destroy it. It's indestructible. The fonn is played out, it's
outlived its own usefulness, it's been realized even beyond its
own limits. There's even a kind of liberation, a destructuring of
space that no longer serves as a limit to verticality or, as in other
places, horizontality. But does architecture still exist when space
has become infinitely indeterminate in every dimension?
Here, in France, we've got something different. We have a
monstrous object, something insuperable, something we are
unable to repeat Beaubourg. There's nothing better than New
York. Other things will happen, and we'll make the transition to
a different universe, one that's much more virtual; but within
its order, we'll never do better than that city, that architecture,
which is, at the same time, apocalyptic. Personally, I like this
completely ambiguous figure of the city, which is simultaneous
ly catastrophic and sublime, because it has assumed an almost
hieratic force.
J.N. And when you write, «As intellectuals we must work to save
that end-of-the-world utopia"?
the idea. We've got to get back inSi e- '� o around, to the other
side. Once again, perfection serves as a screen, a different type
of screen. Genius would consist in destabilizing this too-perfect
Image.
J.N. I don't want to torture you any longer, but I'd like to read
three other quotes: «Architecture consists in working against
a background of spatial deconstruction." And "All things are
16 [J First hrterview
the secret exists wherever people hide it. It's also possible in du
alistic, ambivalent relations, for at that moment something be
comes unintelligible once again, like some precious material.
Cultu re
J.B. Culture is everywhere. In any case, at this point in time, it's a
homologue of industry and technology. It's a mental technique,
a mental technology that was embellished through architectural
services, museums, et cetera. In the case of photography, I was
interested in this history at one point. . . . When Barthes spoke
about photography, he brought up the question of the "punc
tum:' Through this punctum, the photograph becomes an event
in our head, in our mental life, where it is something different, a
singular relation, an absolute singularity. This punctum, which,
according to Barthes, is a nonplace, nothing, the nothingness at
the heart of the photograph, disappeared, and in its place we con
structed a museum of photography. This death, which Barthes
said was the heart of the photograph, the photograph itself, the
symbolic power of the photograph, disappeared, it assumed the
shape of a monument or a museum, and this time a concrete
death materialized. This was a cultural operation, and that op
eration, yes, I am against it, emphatically, with no concessions,
without com promise.
We are stuck in an unlimited, metastatic development of
culture, which has heavily invested in architecture. But to what
extent can we judge it? Today it's very difficult to identify, in a
given building, what belongs to this secret, this singularity that
hasn't really disappeared. I think that as a fonn it is indestruc
tible but is increasingly consumed by culture. Is any voluntary,
conscious resistance possible? Yes. I think that each of us can
resist. But it would be difficult for such resistance to become
political. I don't get the impression there could be any organized
political resistance as such. It would always be an exception, and
whatever you do will always be "exceptional" in that sense.
A work of art is a singularity, and all these singularities can
First Interview [] Z1
J.N. I'd say that the search for limits and the pleasure of destruc
tion are part of both art and architecture. You were talking about
the idea of destruction as something that can be positive. This
search for a limit, this search for nothingness, almost nothing
ness, takes place within the search for something positive; that
is, we're looking for the essence of something. This search for
an essence reaches limits that are near the limits of perception
and the evacuation of the visible. We no longer experience plea
sure through the eye but through the mind. A white square on
a white background is a type of limit. James Turrel is a type of
limit. Does that mean it's worthless? In the case of James Turrel,
you enter a space, and it's monochromatic. Is it one step further
than Klein? Is that why you're fascinated? You know there's
nothing there, you feel there's nothing there, you can even pass
your hand through it, and you're fascinated by the object in a
way because it's the essence of something. Once he's given us the
keys to his game, he does the same thing with a square of blue
sky. He's currently working on the crater of a volcano, where,
when you lie down at the bottom of the crater, you can see the
perfect circle of the cosmos. All of these ideas are based on a
certain search for the limit of nothingness. So when you leave
the Venice Biennale, realizing that this search for nothingness
has ended in worthlessness, that's a critical judgment I can share
in 80 percent of the cases. However, the history of art has always
consisted of a majority of minor works.
J.B. This search for nothingness is, on the contrary, the aestheti
cized fact of wanting this nothingness to have an existence, a
24 [] First Inervlew
value, and even, at some point, a surplus value, without con
sidering the market, which soon takes control of it. It's the op
posite in one sense . . . . Duchamp's gesture was to reduce things
to insignificance. In a way, he's not responsible for what hap
pened afterward. So when other artists take possession of this
"nothingness" or, through this nothingness, take possession of
banality, waste, the world, the real world, and they transfigure
the banal reality of the world into an aesthetic object, ifs their
choice, and it's worthless in that sense, but it's also annoying,
because I would rather associate an aura with worthlessness,
with "nothingness:' This nothingness is in fact something. It's
what hasn't been aestheticized. It's what, one way or another,
can't be reduced to any form of aestheticization. Rather, it's this
highly focused strategy of nothingness and worthlessness that I
am opposed to. The difference between Warhol and the others,
who did the same thing-although it isn't the same thing-is
based on the fact that he takes an image and reduces it to noth
ing. He uses the technical medium to reveal the insignificance,
the lack of objectivity, the illusion of the image itself. And then
other artists make use of the technique to re-create an aesthetic
in other technological media, through science itself, through
scientific images. They reproduce the aesthetic. They do exactly
the opposite of what Warhol was able to do, they reaestheticize
the technique, while Warhol, through technique, revealed tech
nique itself as a radical illusion .
Here the term "worthlessness" is ambivalent, ambiguous.
It can refer to the best or the worst. Personally, I assign great
importance to worthlessness in the sense of nothingness, in
the sense that, if we achieve this art of disappearance, we've
achieved art, whereas all the strategy used to manage most of
the stuff we're shown-where there's usually nothing to see in
any event-serves precisely to convert that worthlessness into
spectacle, into aesthetic, into market value, into a form of com
plete unconsciousness, the collective syndrome of aestheticiza
tion known as culture. We can't say it's all the same, but the ex
ceptions can only be moments. For me, Duchamp is one of them;
Warhol is another. But there are other singularities, Francis
First Iiterview [] 25
IN. Couldn't we say that the twentieth century has seen a surfeit
of art? Because during the century, any artist who managed to
define a formal field has become a great artist? All it takes is a
bit of ash on a leaf. All it takes is the ability to experience some
thing with respect to the ash, to contextualize it, distance it, and
the concept appears . . . . The artist who has succeeded in find
ing his field has become identifiable, gets noticed, has a market
value, et cetera. This has been a century of gigantic exploration:
exploration of the real, exploration of sensations, of everything
around us, a search for sensation. Some succeeded; others didn't.
All of this was then mixed up with meaning and with conceptual
art. When Laurence Wiener hangs a sentence in space without
touching it, wh atever happens, happens as part of the relation
between the sentence and the space. It's not a big deal, but it's
a field in and of itself. We've lived through this gigantic explo
ration. Everyone can find their value system, has experienced
events, facts, modes, and interactions that sometimes resulted
in arte povera, or pop art, or conceptual art, et cetera. But all
that exploration kept getting extended further, and everyone is
looking for whatever they can grab. Does this mean that all this
exploration is part of that "worthlessness"?
themselves. By the way, that's what I meant when I said that ((art
is worthless."
dramatic. That is, the most authentic things, the truest, will be
found in the cities of the South, where they are made out of ne
cessity, but also in connection with a culture that's very much
alive. These aren't objects that are parachuted in , inauthentic
objects that correspond to some architectural convention. The
problem of the worthlessness of architecture presents itself with
at least the same acuity as in the field of art, but certainly not on
the same basis.
I mages of Modernity
J.N. Do you still have a positive outlook on modernity?
J.N. You did, and you're going to jump when I tell you because
it's something you wrote, and it's not nihilist at all. In fact, it's
rather optimistic, since you talk about modernity as the "activ
ism of well-being:'
J.B. You're forgetting that we're still looking inside the genetic
code, trying to decode genes, et cetera. We want to make those
kinds of things visible, but there's no mechanism. Whether the
research takes place in the field of biology or genetics, the fantasy
is the same . . . . I don't know if it's the culmination of modernity
or an excrescence. Maybe this effort to get at the analytic heart
of things, this desire to reveal the interior of matter itself, until
we reach those particles that, at times, are completely invisible,
will eventually lead us to immateriality or, in any case, to some
thing that can no longer be represented: particles, molecules, et
cetera. Practically speaking, in biology, for us, it's pretty much
the same thing, except that we've transposed to the human all
our efforts at microanalysis, fractalization, et cetera. . In a way, . .
it's modernity that has reduced itself to its most basic elements,
ultimately culminating in an algebra of the invisible.
J.B. These are elements that are "elsewhere" in the sense that
they are no longer perceptible, no longer part of perception or
representation. But they are not «elsewhere" in the sense that
they come from another place, in the sense that they might
really represent another form, which we would have to deal with
12 [] First Interview
A N e w He donism?
J.N. We can have a more optimistic vision of things . . . especially
once we manage to dominate matter in such a way that it enables
us to resolve practical problems, problems tied to certain kinds
of pleasure, even if the initial pleasure is perverted by excess . . . .
The wireless telephone is a good example. You can call anywhere
in the world from any other point in the world, just as it's pos
sible today to press on a piece of glass and make it transparent
or opaque and feel your hand warm up on contact. Everything
takes place over a surface of a few millimeters. . . . Such techno
logical innovations are heading in the direction of new sensations
and added comfort, in the direction of new forms of pleasure.
So maybe the situation isn't as desperate as all that!
31
38 [] Suonll intemew
J.B. Yet in its flexibility, Beaubourg did reflect its original intent.
J.N. No, it hasn't played its role; the building is static. Maybe it
will happen one day. . . . But no one wanted to play with that
flexibility; it was too dangerous, too spontaneous. Everything
has been reframed, resealed. Imagine a building with large win
dows built in 1930. The same thing would have happened then,
assuming there was a large flat roof with a bea uti ful belvedere.
Of course, its status as an urban artifact remains. Beaubourg
functions as a cathedral, with its buttresses, a nave, a «piazza."
It's a call to the public to come inside, to consume the views of
Paris and the art. A call to consumption.
J.B. Yes, it's also a draft of air pulling things along in its wake.
And locally it's still a kind of hole, an air inlet. . . . As for shelter
ing or provoking culture, I'm skeptical. . . . How can you recap
ture the subversiveness that the space seemed to call forth as it
was originally designed?
J.N. Can the institution accept subversion? Can it pla n the un
known, the unforeseeable? Can it, within a space as open as this,
provide artists with the conditions for something th at is over
sized, an interference; can it agree to not set limits? Architecture
is one thing; human life another. What good is an arch itecture
that is out of step with contemporary life?
Secand IJrterview [J 41
J.B. But this mutation, as you call it, is often part of a cultural
plan. In fact, what we call "cultural" is ultimately only a bunch
of polymorphous or, who knows, perverse activities !
J.B. The large urban spaces that have sprung into existence with
out any preliminary planning, like New York's Lower East Side
or Soho, have been taken over by the middle class over the past
twenty years, often artists, who have changed the lifestyle and
appearance of those neighborhoods: is that rehabilitation or
mutation? It's easy to see that this kind of mutation is most often
accompanied by a gentrification of the neighborhood, which was
also the case in Salvador da Bahia, in Brazil. They saved the fa
cades, but behind those facades, everything changed.
J.N. Look at Paris, for example. This city has been characterized
by what I call "embalming:' This consists in preserving a series
of facades that have some historic value and building new struc
tures behind them-this happened in Rue Quincampoix, and
in the Marais, near Saint-Paul. It's obvious that this served only
one purpose: to get rid of the poor who lived there and replace
them with people who had the means to pay. We're well outside
the framework of rehabilitation when we radically change usage
and move in the direction of greater space, increased pleasure,
the conquest of new qualities. Embalming is the opposite. We
break up small apartments, cut the windows in two with new
floors, et cetera. New York isn't exactly the same. There the indus
trial spaces were turned into dream apartments, unique spaces
three hundred square meters in size. You can live in a building
thaes thirty meters deep. Once you have goo d lighting at either
end, you can accept the fact that there are darker areas in the
center, contrary to the hygienic theories favored by modernity.
But what's happening in this case is more than a rehabilitation;
it's also a mutation, and that mutation initiates a real shift in
the way we understand a place aesthetically. In such spaces, a
table, three chairs, and a bed are sufficient to create a poetics of
space that differs from what it was when it was saturated with
merchandise and machinery.
fuL . . ." The evolution of the city in the twentieth century is sup
posed to have resulted in violent upheaval. Yet we've witnessed
an architectural caste that has clung to the twentieth-century
city, the reconstruction of the European city; they still want
to build streets and squares as they did before . . . . But they're
streets and squares devoid of meaning.
lB. Only in the vision you've just given of the city to come, the
city is no longer a form in the process of becoming; it's an ex
tended network. That's fine, you can define it as you have, but
that urban life is no longer the life of the city but: its infinite
possibility: a virtual urban life, like playing on the keyboard of
the city as if it were a kind of screen. I saw it as the end of archi
tecture . . . by pushing the concept to its limit and primarily by
using the photograph as a point of departure. This is reflected
in the idea that the great majority of images are no longer the
48 [] Secold Interview
lB. When you walk around the Guggenheim, you realize that
the building is, as far as its lines are concerned, illogical. But
when you see the interior spaces, they are almost completely
conventional. In any case there is no relation between those
spaces and the building's ideality.
J.B. Within that architectural space, does the possibility still exist
for the architect to make his mark?
J.N. Fortunately, all the conditions aren't in place yet for eliminat
ing architecture. Within the evolution of the city there will always
be a marginal place left for a handful of aesthetes-aesthetes in
their own life and in their behavior-within highly privileged
environments. What I wonder most about is what those cities
will become . . . . In the near future, they won't be anything like
what we're familiar with today. If the South is going to develop
and catch up to the level of the cities of the North, using the
same methods, it's going to take generations, and I don't see
where the money is going to come from. No, I think there we're
going to witness a true mutation.
J.N. Yes, but then this would be a result. Unfortunately it's not
through architecture that we're going to change the world!
What Utopia ?
J .B. Yes, that's true, but I'm an idealist, I still believe we can
change the world through architecture. . . . It's utopian for all
intents and purposes, yes. Utopian architecture was ultimately
a realized architecture. But in the future, doesn't the trend risk
moving in the opposite direction? Isn't there some danger that
architecture may become a tool of discrimination?
J.B. This year, in Buenos Aires, I spoke about the future of archi
tecture. Yes, I believe in its future even though, as you mention,
it won't necessarily be architectural, for the simple reason that
we haven't yet designed the building to end all buildings, we
haven't yet created the city to end all cities, a thought to end all
thoughts. So as long as this utopia remains unrealized, there's
hope, we must go on. We have to recognize that everything
that's happening now on the technological side is dizzying, the
modification of the species, and so forth . . . . However, in twenty
years we will have succeeded in making the transition from sexu
ality without procreation to procreation without sexuality.
J.B. You get the feeling that the desire for omnipotence that drives
architectur�look at large government projects, for example
J.N. It's been a long time since architects thought they were gods!
Their only fear is that someone is going to snatch that dream
away. Architecture is simply the art of necessity. Three-quarters
of the time, aside from the necessity of use and custom, there is
no architectur�r it's sculpture, commemoration.
J.B. And what about your projects for the Universal Exposition
in Germany? We have a pretty good script about the work: the
living work, the dead work, the spectral work. The spectral is
self-perpetuating, like life; death is scattered among all the vir
tual productive forms. Some thought went into that project.
will sponsor set design . . . . We're inside the subject. We'll have
to provide subtitles.
J.B. And what about the center of the city? Is there any stated
political or urban plan that's been expressly implemented?
IN. Yes, before the fall of the Wall . . . But at the scale of the
neighborhood, Berlin has shown a great deal of good sense in
the way it has dealt with vegetation and water. The Germans
are more fastidious than we are in working out microstrategies
for innovation and management of the city on the day-to-day
level.
J.B. Which is very different from Frankfurt and the other cities.
Moreover, in 1968, when the same movements were under way
in both Germany and France, there were more communities in
Germany, but there were also larger apartments with common
kitchens, and living was easier. In France we never succeeded;
the big apartments were too expensive. By the way, it seems that
the windows in the GaIeries Lafayette . . .
J.B. You seem to think that w rit ing takes place without con
straints. It's true that I have fewer than you, but as a writer, think�
er, or researcher, I 'm dependent on a system, for example, an edi
torial system, that is becoming increasingly incomprehen sible.
J.N. The essenti al thing is that you, you can write a book that
may be forgotten for thirty years if no one wants to publ ish your
work, but it still exists, whereas a building in a drawing doesn't
exist. . . . A manuscript, even when it's locked in a drawer, exists.
A filmmaker who only writes treatments or an architect who
only constr ucts drawings accompl ishes nothing.
J.B. In that sense, the book is a prehistoric product! It's true that
the book is not delivered to the reader or listener in real time, it
only exists somewhere. But within a real-time hegemonic cul
ture, the book exists for no more than a few weeks. That's the
price we pay: it simply disappears.
Transparency
Li ght as Matter
Disappearance
J.N. What interests me ab out transparency is the idea of evapo
ration. Ever since man became man, he has fou gh t against fate,
against the elements, against matter. He started off building
stone by stone, then ma de windows with small pieces of oiled
p ap er, then learned how to do other things. There is a kind of
architectural "Darwinism" at work, which is an evolutionary
process thro ugh which m an attempts to cover the maximum
amount of space, the largest surface, insul ate the most but
with the least amount of material, without lo oking like he did
64 [1 5ectntI iaterview
IN. Yes, because it's very flexible in the way it can he used; you
can do whatever you want with it. Because of this architectural
Darwinism, glass has acquired a number of qualities; it lends
itself well to the interplay of materials because it's the only ma
terial that allows you to visually program a building by giving it
different looks. One of the trends in architecture today is to cap
ture everything that can affect this awareness of the moment.
We're also trying to capture variations of time, the seasons, the
movements of visitors, and all of that is part of the architectural
composition. There's also the idea of fragility, which is conveyed
by the glass or by transparency-in the sense of a more living,
more poignant reality. Even though, ever since banks started
using glass for protection, transparency has taken quite a hit.
J.B. At least we still have the idea. In fact, like many others, the
word "transparency" has undergone considerable semantic evo
lution. Previously it stood for a kind of absolute ideal. We could
believe in the transparency of our social relationships or our
relation to power. Now it's turning into a form of terror.
5ean4 lnterview [] 65
J.N. Yes, now it's become a pretext, and this didn't just begin
today. Stained-glass windows were also used to similar effect.
The Sainte-Chapelle was there long before we were! But if we
consider that architecture involves creating a poetics of sorts,
an instantaneous metaphysics, then transparency assumes a dif
ferent meaning. You have the idea of the solid and the ephem
eral. The concept of perennity still remains the characteristic
of architecture that is most often acknowledged. Consider a
pyramid. . . .
J.B. I.e Corbusier's Villa Savoy has never been as lovely. Ifs been
perfectly maintained and is more beautiful now than it was origi
nally, more mature. I'd go as far as to say that our architectural
heritage has been enriched. Look at the Oriental influence in
Frank lloyd Wright, wood and brick. Consider the destiny that
would have had. . . . At the time, the avant-garde in architecture
was involved with organic forms, made with ephemeral materi
als that weren't destined to last, like Las Vegas. For me, since I've
known the city for thirty years, it's been a real massacre.
Sin g ularity
J.N. Speaking of which, I very much liked what you said about
our expectations of architects: that they are the ones still creat
ing "singular objects:'
J.N. For more than twenty years, I've been defending the notion
of the object's ((hyperspecificity," contrary to all the typological,
ideological, and dogmatic information that it comprises.
J.B. Take the Louvre Pyramid. At one point there was a move
ment to prevent its construction, because it was ugly. Then
everyone calmed down.
J.N. It became widely accepted through use. But to me, it's not an
example of a singular object.
J.N. Pure event, "I perceive architecture as pure event," you said.
J.B. I'm interested in the things that shock me. I was writing
about architecture as pure event, beyond beauty and ugliness.
J.N. But you contrast the "singular" with the "neutral" and the
"global."
J.N. And with respect to the neutral, you were kind enough to
add: "We don't need architects for that!"
Desti n y a nd Becoming
J.B. Ah, yes! When I said that we have too many ideas. I say the
same thing about philosophers, as well. . . . You have to differ
entiate thought from ideas. I don't recommend that they not
think; I advise them against having too many ideas.
Another Ki nd of Wisdom
J.B. Look, I don't want to make a mystery of spontaneity. In fact,
we should abdicate to serendipity.
J.N. Serendipity?
J.N. But I'm a big fan of the sport! I've been practicing serendipi
ty all my life without knowing it.
J.8. The important thing is to have looked. Even if you miss what
you were initially looking fOf, the direction of the research itself
shifts, and something else is discovered. . . . The concept is pri
marily applied to the sciences, but it's also the name of a store in
London, where you can find all sorts of things, except whatever
it is you're looking for. The word comes from the Sanskrit. It's
a beautiful way of saying "wisdom." It has been anchored in sa
cred Indian literature for centuries.
IN. It's true of literature, painting, music. The great works, the
great books, are universal. They affect people from all cultures
and all levels of education.
Secand Ilterview [] 75
J.B. Yes, but to the extent that these artists are able to create with
out giving in to the farce of art, art history, or aesthetic codes. So
ifs possible, ultimately. It's as if the architect were able to build
without first reviewing the field of architecture, its history, and
everything that is constructed. The ability to create a vacuum is
undoubtedly the prerequisite for any act of authentic creation.
If you don't create a vacuum, you'll never achieve singularity.
You may produce remarkable things, but the heritage you have
to deal with is such that you'll have to pass through a whole
genetics of accumulation.
J.N. Yes, but that doesn't rule out a strategy to flush out . . .
J.B. Not just anyone has the means to make his mark on a build
ing, but anyone can write a bad article. Facility, in this case, is
dangerous.
J.N. No, but many people are under the illusion that depth,
thought, comes about through omnipresent decoration. Decora
tion is used to palliate this absence of intent, the incoherence
76 [] Secand Ilterview
Inadmissi bl e Complicity
J.N. Is that what you mean when you write, "Ultimately, we exist
in a society where the concept of architecture is no longer pos
sible, the architect no longer has any freedom" ?
J.B. Well, that you have the right to fulfill yourself in the name of
this freedom. Simply put, at some point in time, you no longer
Secold Interview [] 79
know who you are. Ies a surgical operation. The history of your
identity helps set the trap. The sexes find their sexual identity,
and nothing more is shared between them, they exist in their
own bubble. Alterity? Freedom is charged with a heavy load of
remorse. And the liberation of people, in the historical sense of
the term, is also a fantastic deception. There is always an element
of the unthinkable that won't have been evacuated. So there's a
kind of remorse because of whaes transpired. We're free-so
what? Everything begins at the point where, in reality, we have
the impression that something was supposed to be ful£ll ed.
Take the idea that the individual becomes free-every man
for himself, of course. At that point there is a terrible betrayal
toward . . . something like the species, I don't know what else
to say about it. Everyone dr�ams of individual emancipation,
and yet there remains a kind of collective remorse about it. This
surfaces in the form of self-hatred, deadly experimentation,
fratricidal warfare . . . a morbid state of affairs. There is even
a final requirement that this state of affairs itself be questioned.
Liberation is too good to be true. So you look for a destiny, an
J.N. The architect is not free himself. . . . And men are not free
with respect to architecture. Architecture is always a response to
a question that wasn't asked. Most of the time, we are asked to
handle contingencies, and if while handling these needs, we can
J.N. Regardless of the future form our civilization takes, there will
always be a place for architecture, there will always be a particular
80 [] SecOIll lntemew