Seleccione los Idiomas

English (United States)简体中文(中国)EspañolFrench (Fr)Japanese (JP)Russian (CIS)GermanHinduArabicKorean

Sign up for our email newsletter today!

Búsqueda

Archivo

Patrocinador

Acontecimientos

No events

Tienda

Carrito de la compra

VirtueMart
Your Cart is currently empty.

MaD Utopia

There are no translations available.

Yansong Beijing

Look out, world. Ma Yansong’s designs envision a bold future

Whether Ma Yansong of MAD Architects acquired his utopian vision as a student at Yale, as an apprentice in Zaha Hadid’s London office, or by virtue of his rural Chinese origins is difficult to say—he often points to pictures of himself, smiling with delight and quipping, “The face of a real peasant!”

But the ambition and fantasy of his utopian visions that have spilled over into “sculptural objects” and functional designs (including, among others, a goldfish tank) have brought him to the attention of the world well before his fortieth birthday. As the creator of an entire program of design projects known as MAD 2050, Ma shares with all utopian designers an aspiration to render immanent what is transcendent. But the transcendence to which MAD designs aspire is that of artistic status.

Since any pleasing design is bound to be comprised of artistic elements, what is to prevent a design from being a work of art? After all, it may have the same aesthetic elements considered indispensable to a work of art. Ma Yansong is quick to acknowledge such features of his Range Rover or his Nike X Marc Newson trainers. Their artistic elements may be formal or even conceptual. They may be more sophisticated than much of the acknowledged art one finds in a gallery.

But traditionally, one fundamental criterion for determining whether an object can be a work of art has to do with function. In a relevant sense, an object is a work of art to the degree that it is functionless, except insofar as its “function” is purely aesthetic.Ma Yansong Portrait

Clearly, architectural design is functional by definition. Although we often applaud the architect who skillfully integrates form and function—perhaps because we intuit that some of such designs draw closer to art by appearing to subordinate function to form— the fact is that if buildings were not intrinsically functional, they would not be buildings. And to the degree that they are functional, they are less than fully constituted works of art no matter how much creative talent they may entail.

It is precisely the condition of mutual exclusivity between art and architecture that Ma Yansong’s utopian project addresses. In its implicit perception of function as the fulcrum of tension between art and architecture, the utopianism of MAD 2050 resides.

For millennia, architecture has not only been acutely conscious of its situation (in the sense of its placement or location) but has often successfully integrated situation with its own design aesthetic. Duchamp’s invention, or “discovery,” of the ready-made, which moves a common manufactured object to a space for viewing art, takes this idea even further by nullifying the conventional functionality of an object and reassigning to it a purely aesthetic character. By integrating situation as an aesthetic constitutor, the ready-made similarly destroys the distinction between the “artistic space” (traditionally, the space within the frame of a painting or within the periphery of a sculpture) and “reality”; it transforms all reality, including that which the spectators inhabit, into a constituent of the fictive artistic space.

In this regard, it is worth noting that 2050’s Floating Island Over the Central Business District is not only a discrete structure or, for that matter, a discrete complex; it is both a discrete structure and, simultaneously, it subsumes all structures around it. Overtly, 2050’s Floating Island component subsumes the Beijing Central Business District through a variety of formal means. Of these, notable is the decentralization of its structural and spatial composition that sets the eye of the spectator on no fixed course but causes it to dart around the work in an ever-changing and unpredictable path—a feature reinforced by the structure’s reflective skin, whose pronounced highlights would be set in flux by the movement of the sun and by the play of artificial lights within and without.

2050 will never be built in our lifetimes, but maybe it will.

This decentralization of composition, a device invented in 20th-century abstract painting, generates a chaotic movement that draws the eye too irresistibly for it to rest on the conventional structures below. We are aware of their presence, but we no longer see the structures below in the same way, much as we no longer see the stars during a fireworks display.

A second formal tension of MAD 2050 is that of its inverse horizontality and its extreme vertical upward movement. To say that, contrary to almost all architectural structures, it is wider at the top than at the bottom is more obvious than to recognize that its elevated horizontal mass seems to draw everything upward from the ground in order to sustain it. This is the same movement of the formal character of the mushroom cloud of a nuclear blast.

By extension, it is equally a fact that MAD 2050 transmutes or transfigures a formal feature of destruction into a hopeful construction. At least symbolically, the destructive vision of the end of civilization becomes thereby the constructive evocation of a more progressive utopian culture.

This social utopianism extends to the MAD 2050 conversion of Tiananmen Square, which presents a vast green space of trees with underground complexes for libraries and other institutions of high culture under the assumption that original function of the square’s design—to accommodate military parades and the like—will have been superceded by the nation’s social and political evolution. Instead of a tower at the center, Ma has created a “negative space,” a system of clearings in the trees that become visible only from the air as the Chinese characters for “China.” As Ma states, “By 2050, a mature and democratic China will emerge and spaces for massive political gathering and troop procession like Red Square may no longer be necessary.”

But perhaps the most potent tension of the conversion has to do with events that occurred there in recent history—events that, at least in one sense, arose from opposing ideas of the site’s function and remain so vivid in living memory that there is no need to speak of them. Who can say what would become of MAD designs if suddenly their author were to find himself in a China that would finally embrace his fantasies? Ma himself seems hopeful. Says the designer, “2050 will never be built in our lifetimes, but maybe it will."

Puntos culminantes

NBBJ 19 Julio 2010, 09.03 Designista
NBBJ
There are no translations available. Dalian Stadium & AsiaWorld-Expo NBBJ is familiar with China, as the global firm has been working there for the past two decades. Most recently, NBBJ, responsible for such US proj
Read More 4912 Hits 0 Ratings
Dr. Steven Nash 01 Noviembre 2009, 16.00 Curators
Dr. Steven Nash
There are no translations available. Executive Director, Palm Springs Art Museum When the Palm Springs Art Museum’s longtime executive director, Janice Lyle, retired two years ago, the institution was in the middle of
Read More 2970 Hits 0 Ratings
Adam Weinberg 27 Noviembre 2009, 16.00 Curators
Adam Weinberg
There are no translations available. Alice Pratt Brown Director, Whitney Museum of American Art Career Highlights Adam D. Weinberg has been the Alice Pratt Brown Director of the Whitney Museum since October 2003. From 19
Read More 2161 Hits 0 Ratings
Always Armani 05 Abril 2007, 16.00 Designers
Always Armani
There are no translations available. His designs are classic, chic, and innately elegant. Giorgio Armani speaks out about the fine lines of furniture design Giorgio Armani has been called a design colonialist. Known for m
Read More 383 Hits 0 Ratings
Slade Architecture & Mattel 19 Julio 2010, 08.55 Designista
Slade Architecture & Mattel
There are no translations available. Barbie Shanghai Since Mattel, Inc. introduced Barbie in 1959, her popularity has never wavered. She was a toy on which girls worldwide could pin their hopes and imaginations. With he
Read More 3290 Hits 0 Ratings
Palatable Panache 22 Junio 2006, 16.00 Chefs & Wine Makers
Palatable Panache
There are no translations available. FROM TABLEWARE TO PREPARATION, THERE’S MORE TO MAKING A GREAT MEAL THAN A DASH OF SALT While the kitchen will always be the chef’s domain, any appreciator of fine cuisine knows tha
Read More 387 Hits 0 Ratings
The Singing Sax of Ronnie Laws 06 Mayo 2010, 14.22 Lars Carlson Musicista
The Singing Sax of Ronnie Laws
There are no translations available. Ask saxophone player Ronnie Laws about the thrill of having a sax created in his name, and there’s no hesitation. “A signature instrument is like a high-profile athlete having his o
Read More 4311 Hits 0 Ratings
Arnold L. Lehman 27 Noviembre 2009, 16.00 Curators
Arnold L. Lehman
There are no translations available. Director, Brooklyn Museum Career Highlights Since joining the Brooklyn Museum in 1997, Dr. Arnold Lehman has transformed the nearly 200-year-old museum by prioritizing the visitor exp
Read More 2148 Hits 0 Ratings
Website Designed and Maintained by: Ben Giroux Design
Get Started at: BenGirouxDesign.com