ANTOINE PREDOCK: architecture and time
Transcription
ANTOINE PREDOCK: architecture and time
BY WESLEY PULKKA | PHOTOS BY ROBERT RECK I ANTOINE PREDOCK: architecture and time Architect Antoine Predock works through a series of efforts before coming to a final architectural solution. In his studio, above, he works with his 1990 drawings of the Agadir Palm Bay Resort and Casino in Agadir, Morocco (left). nternationally renowned architect Antoine Predock moves through his life and work like a romantic time traveler, incorporating geology, geography, cultural artifacts, current events, weather patterns, astronomical cycles, personal experiences, and the history of architecture into each design. Though he maintains satellite studios in Los Angeles and Taipei, Taiwan, Predock has been living and working in New Mexico for more than 50 years. His 12th Street studio near downtown Albuquerque is a complex of interconnected rooms, a large patio, and outbuildings filled with computer workstations, an array of printers, three-dimensional replicating machines, a 20-member design team, a museum-quality collection of restored antique and classic motorcycles—all in running condition—and countless clay, plastic, balsa, and foam-core models, drawings, and collages. Predock’s physical surroundings reflect his complex romantic vision, reliance on intuition, and openly intellectual approach to collaborative and meticulous creativity. All these factors have made him, at a youthful 73, the recipient of countless architectural commissions, honors, and awards, including the prestigious American Institute of Architects 2006 Gold Medal for his lasting influence on the theory and practice of architecture, and the 2007 Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum’s Lifetime Achievement award. From his iconic La Luz Community project (1970) on Albuquerque’s West Side to the New School of Architecture + Planning Building on the University of New Mexico’s Albuquerque campus (1999–2007), Predock has shared his inspiration garnered from the desert. “New Mexico has formed my experience in an all-pervasive sense. I don’t think of New Mexico as a region. I think of it as a force that has entered my system, a force that is composed of many things,” Predock says. “Here, one is aimed toward the sky and at the same time remains rooted in the earth with a geological and cultural past. In Australian Aboriginal dreamtime, song lines traverse the land and describe the geography in a way that is totally rational and yet mystically poetic. Similarly, the elemental power of this place is inescapable. Lessons learned in the American Southwest apply anywhere in the world—my ‘regionalism’ is portable.” To Predock, the spirit of his work is the enigmatic quality of the desert. “You think you’ve got it; you think you understand,” he says. “Then you turn over a rock or crawl under a trendmagazineglobal.com Fall 2009/Winter 2010 » Trend 57 The collage allows us to focus our attention while embracing a new set of problems and challenges,” says Predock. “Following the cultural and geographical immersion, quick sketches will emerge, leading to the clay model, which becomes the actual building.” Predock’s love of choreographed movement explains a bit of his passion for motorcycles— he’s been riding since the 1960s. Here, his 1929 Indian Scout. larger rock and you discover other worlds, other realms within.” In a section cut from a highway, for example, a sectional diagram of the earth is revealed: At the bottom is pre-Cambrian granite, overlaid with limestone. In geologic time, other sedimentary strata such as sandstone and ocean-bottom fossils turn up. Then cultural artifacts emerge in just a fraction of an inch—compared with miles of geologic datum. In the Southwest, this cross section first offers traces of the Anasazi, followed closely by remnants of later cultures: the Spanish conquistadors, 1930s hubcaps, then beer cans, McDonald’s wrappers, and the residue of future tech- Predock creates great collages for each project, exploring the history of the site, its factors, its cultural roots, and current issues and events. Here, a collage prefaces the building of the Museum of Science and History in Tampa, Florida. nologies. For Predock, that cut is a poetic diagram of time and the impetus for an investigative process leading him to his creations. Predock began his studies in engineering at the University of New Mexico’s School of Architecture and Planning, which was just beginning to grow into the major component of the university that it is today. At the time, professor of architecture Don Schlegel was also teaching engineering and caught Predock’s attention with his absolute passion for architecture. Predock credits Schlegel with lighting the flame that moved him into architecture. Eventually, Predock left UNM, with Schlegel’s bless- ing, for more intensive studies at Columbia University’s graduate architecture program in New York. After that, he returned permanently to New Mexico. Through his studies, Predock was inspired by the projects of Frank Lloyd Wright and worked during the summer of 1958 in Texas with Charles Adams, a Wright associate. From Adams, Predock learned to pursue details born of larger ones. Predock was also inspired by architects Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier and wished he’d learned more about Alvar Aalto. Louis Kahn became a focus and, eventually, along with Wright, Predock’s strongest influence. But, he says, nothing would have happened without Schlegel’s early inspiration. While studying at Columbia, Predock became a student of dance greats Jennifer Masley, Merce Cunningham, Yvonne Rainer, and later Anna Halprin. Through the profound experience of witnessing and participating with bodies moving in space, Predock learned to see his buildings as pro- cessional events, or choreographic events that become an accumulation of both perceptual and experiential vantage points. Predock’s love of choreographed movement explains a bit of his passion for motorcycles, too. He has ridden bikes since the 1960s and has been known to take trial runs aboard full-bore racing bikes on the highway. Predock owns, among many other wonderful machines, a 1929 Indian Scout that is nearly identical to one highly modified by New Zealander Burt Munro, who set the unbroken 1967 world record for an Indian motorcycle on the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. Predock has a photograph hanging in his studio of another Bonneville record attempt, which shows the rider lying prone on the motorcycle at top speed with his legs outstretched behind him to reduce wind drag. “Architecture is a fascinating journey toward the unexpected. It is a ride—a physical ride, and an intellectual ride. I like to think about machines and technology in relation to landscape and architecture,” Predock said during a discussion of his design of the Nelson Fine Arts Center on the Arizona State University campus in Tempe. “The idea of a motorcycle in the landscape confirms a kind of closure for me, a technological, experiential closure.” It is that collapse of time and compression of cultural history in Predock’s work that makes his buildings instant classics no matter how modern, contemporary, or Mesa del Sol reflects the community it was built to serve in Albuquerque. 58 Trend » Fall 2009/Winter 2010 trendmagazineglobal.com trendmagazineglobal.com Fall 2009/Winter 2010 » Trend 59 “Lessons learned in the American Southwest apply anywhere in the world— my ‘regionalism’ is portable.” 60 Trend » Fall 2009/Winter 2010 trendmagazineglobal.com the raw material with which they interact. Two of Predock’s latest projects are the World Mammoth and Permafrost Museum in Yakutsk, Republic of Sakha, part of the Russian Federation; and the National Palace Museum branch in Chiayi, Taiwan. An excerpt from Predock’s Mammoth and Permafrost Museum proposal explains, “The museum is a landscape abstraction from myths of Sakha cultures and their spiritual predecessors. The building expresses the seasonal cracking and shifting of the ground plane that continually reawakens the memory of previous epochs beneath. The silhouette of the building suggests the sheer power and bulk of the mammoth and marks the vast Siberian landscape with an iconic and lasting symbol.” Predock’s museum design includes transparent walls and ceilings that appear to be made of ice, referring both interior and exterior to the environment of the mammoths, the permafrost that preserves COURTESY OF ANTOINE PREDOCK ARCHITECT PC (3) futuristic they might appear at first glance. To begin architectural designs, Predock creates a great collage to illustrate the history of the site, its cultural roots, and current events. Predock and his team consider the topography, geology, climate, political history, and every other aspect of the site. “The collage allows us to focus our attention while embracing a new set of problems and challenges,” he says. “Following the cultural and geographical immersion, quick sketches will emerge, leading to the clay model, which becomes the actual building.” Predock explains that when he and his team are working on projects—he asserts the importance of the collaborative component in his work—they remind themselves that the project is a timeless encounter with another place, not just a little piece of land. All the readings accumulated and assimilated there, even those imagined in the past or the future, collapse in time and become BOTTOM: KIRK GITTINGS Predock designed the New School of Architecture + Planning at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, providing spaces for classrooms, lectures, and events—and inspiration for architectural students. Top: A long walkway across water leads into the Palace Museum in Chiayi, Taiwan. Above and right: Drawings and ideas for the New School of Architecture + Planning at UNM. Predock recently designed the World Mammoth and Permafrost Museum in Yakutsk, Republic of Sakha, part of the Russian Federation, to suggest the sheer power and bulk of the mammoth and to mark the vast Siberian landscape with an iconic, lasting symbol. 62 Trend » Fall 2009/Winter 2010 trendmagazineglobal.com Predock is fascinated with the sudden and long-term cultural changes that might completely alter the use of a building, such as ancient pagan Greek and Roman temples being converted to Christian churches virtually overnight. ceived as a building that would not only provide space for classrooms, lectures, and related events but also provide inspiration for architecture students. Predock believes students can be engaged and actively learn from the intrinsic qualities of the spaces in which they work. His UNM building features solar apertures that align with equinox and solstice events throughout the year. With its exposed infrastructure and built-in cosmic clock, the building might COURTESY OF ANTOINE PREDOCK ARCHITECT PC The Logjam House, in Rio Blanco, Colorado, rises from a grove of ponderosas, providing shelter and referring to the future when the trees are gone and will appear to have sprung new life. their remains, and the crystalline glaciers that led to their demise. In the design of the Palace Museum, Predock amplifies the meeting of water and land with a long walkway across water leading into the building. And the structure itself seems to rise from the morning mists in its symbolic linking of the Mountain of Longevity and the Sea of Happiness. Predock is fascinated with the sudden and long-term cultural changes that might completely alter the use of a building, such as ancient pagan Greek and Roman temples being converted to Christian churches virtually overnight. “Once a structure is built, one loses control over how it may be used sometime in the future,” he explains. “If designed well enough, one hopes a building will retain enough of its original content and aura to maintain its original presence.” Predock takes those initial design parameters very seriously. The New School of Architecture + Planning at UNM was con- also teach future architects to collapse time and compress cultures as they spend creative hours within its walls. Predock is married to sculptor and painter Constance DeJong, whose work echoes, in the broadest sense, Predock’s penchant for romantic monumentality and time transcendence. DeJong sculpts in a variety of metals and in sizes described as reductive minimalist. She enjoys an austerity of form with a deadpan presentation. Her ambitious, architectonic works are often lit from within by carefully placed polished surfaces. That radiant inner glow beckons viewers to suspend thoughts of scale and place, and even the consideration of overall design. She wants the viewer to surrender to the fleeting yet timeless moment that allows one to fill the occupied space, no matter how grand or diminutive, with a contemplative silence. DeJong’s sculpture and chemical “paintings” on metal integrate organic and geometric patterns, shapes, and lines in a way that activates the viewer’s eye, lending the work, though physically static, a sense of movement. In a 2003 interview with Gus Blaisdell for his book Constance DeJong Metal, the artist described meditation as a conduit to reality. She said her meditations are neither spiritual nor religious. She finds the practice to be a way to see through the nonstop fiction of one’s thoughts to what is actually occurring. Both DeJong and Predock seek a truth in their chosen art forms and approach creativity with a strong sense of integrity and respect for the entire process. To assimilate their work, the artists truly embrace the tactile and visceral experiences inherent in their methods. “When I am involved in making something, an object, the making has a quality of innocence,” says Predock. “The gestural aspect of, say, making a clay model has an affinity to one’s handwriting with the presumed innocence of one’s signature. That signature is part of the physiology of making something. In my case, whether it is a painting, a clay model, or a collage, it becomes the beginning, the source of the project. My process remains connected to spirit through the body and to the personal space that the body defines. “The trick,” he continues, “is to get through the thicket of what [Louis] Kahn called ‘the measurable in the making of a building’ to come out the other side so the built work expresses that initial physical and spiritual impulse.” Predock’s complex philosophies and his treatment of time are both fleeting and expansive. That roar you hear fading into the background? That’s Predock as he accelerates toward his 1950 Vincent Black Shadow’s top speed of over 150 miles per hour, hugging the gas tank as he goes. It’s just another wind-in-the-hair ride through desert microclimates, geological time, enervating hairpin turns, and long straightaways for New Mexico’s favorite “regional” architect. Ride on Antoine, ride on. R trendmagazineglobal.com Fall 2009/Winter 2010 » Trend 63