Why is Rem Koolhaas the World's Most Controversial Architect?
Age has not tempered the Dutch architect, who at 67 continues to shake up the cultural landscape with his provocative designs
- By Nicolai Ouroussoff
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
Koolhaas was born in Rotterdam in 1944, during the Allied bombardment, and grew up in a family of cultured bohemians. A grandfather was an architect who built headquarter buildings for the Dutch airline KLM and the state social security administration; his father wrote magical realist novels and edited a leftist weekly paper. After the war, the family moved to Amsterdam, where Koolhaas spent afternoons playing in the rubble of the state archive building, which had been blown up by the resistance during the German occupation.
His first experience with a mega-city and all of its moral contradictions was as a boy in Jakarta, Indonesia, where his father ran a cultural institute under the revolutionary Sukarno, who had led the country’s struggle for independence. “I had never seen such poverty,” Koolhaas said. “And I almost instantly understood that it was impossible to pass judgment on what you saw. On some level you could only accept it as reality.”
Back in Amsterdam in his early 20s, Koolhaas avoided radical politics, joining a small group of Dutch Surrealist writers at the fringes of the European cultural scene. “There were two kinds of ’60s,” he said to me. “One was avant-garde, highly modernist— Antonioni, Yves Klein. The other was the Anglo-Saxon, hippie-ish, political side. I associated with the avant-garde tendency.” Koolhaas worked briefly as a journalist, writing a profile mocking a vision by the artist-architect Constant Nieuwenhuys for a post-capitalist paradise suspended hundreds of feet above the city on a huge steel frame. A later story satirized the Provos—a group of young Dutch anarchists whose actions (planning to disrupt a royal wedding with smoke bombs) were intended to goad the Dutch authorities. Koolhaas even co-wrote a screenplay for the raunchy B-movie king Russ Meyer. (The film was never made.)
By the time Koolhaas got to London’s Architectural Association, in the late 1960s, he had established himself as an audacious thinker with a wicked sense of humor. The drawings he produced for his final project, which are now owned by MoMA, were a brash sendup of Modernist utopias and their “afterbirths.” Dubbed “The Voluntary Prisoners of Architecture,” the project was modeled partly after the Berlin Wall, which Koolhaas described as a “masterpiece” of design that had transformed the western half of the city into an irresistible urban fantasy. Koolhaas’ tongue-in-cheek proposal for London carved a wide swath through the center to create a hedonistic zone that could “fully accommodate individual desires.” As the city’s inhabitants rushed to it, the rest of London would become a ruin. (Galleries and museums ask to borrow the Koolhaas drawings more often than anything else in MoMA’s architecture and design collections.)
Koolhaas’ book Delirious New York cemented his reputation as a provocateur. When Koolhaas wrote it, in the mid-1970s, New York City was in a spiral of violence and decay. Garbage was piling up on streets, slumlords were burning down abandoned tenements in the South Bronx to collect on insurance and the white middle class was fleeing to the suburbs. For most Americans, New York was a modern Sodom.
To Koolhaas, it was a potential urban paradise. With his new wife, the Dutch artist Madelon Vriesendorp, he saw a haven for outsiders and misfits. Manhattan’s generic grid, he argued, seemed capable of accommodating an intoxicating mix of human activities, from the most extreme private fantasy to the most marginal subculture. The book’s positive spin was underscored by the cover: an illustration by Vriesendorp of the Empire State and Chrysler buildings lying side by side in a post-coital slumber. “It was geared against this idea of New York as a hopeless case,” Koolhaas told me. “The more implausible it seemed to be defending it, the more exciting it was to write about.”
These early ideas began to coalesce into an urban strategy in a series of projects in and around Paris. In a 1991 competition for the expansion of the business district of La Défense, for instance, Koolhaas proposed demolishing everything but a few historic landmarks, a university campus and a cemetery; the rest would be replaced with a new Manhattan-style grid. The idea was to identify and protect what was most precious, then create the conditions for the urban chaos that he so loved to take hold.
More recently, Koolhaas has responded to what he termed “the excessive compulsion toward the spectacular” by pushing his heretical work to greater extremes. Architecturally, his recent designs can be either deliciously enigmatic or brutally direct. The distorted form of his CCTV building, for example—a kind of squared-off arch whose angled top cantilevers more than 500 feet above the ground—makes its meaning impossible to pin down. (Martin Filler condemned it in the New York Review of Books as an elaborate effort to impart a “bogus semblance of transparency” on what is essentially a propaganda arm of the Chinese government.) Seen from certain perspectives its form looks hulking and aggressive; from others it looks almost fragile, as if the whole thing were about to tip over—a magnificent emblem for uncertain times. By contrast, the Wyly Theatre in Dallas (2009) is a hyper-functional machine—a gigantic fly tower with movable stages and partitions encased inside an 11-story metal box.
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Comments (4)
With the Smithsonian's possible kind forbearance, I wanted to make a second comment related to Mr. Koolhaas. It may be somewhat understandable that a person throbbing with artistic sensibility would look at a sprawling third-world mega-city like Lagos, Nigeria and see it not as dysfunctional, but as colorfully thrivingly vibrantly alive, when what they are more likely seeing is a violent corrupt polluted incredibly overpopulated desperately poor human anthill, whose hustle and bustle is probably better explained by everyone understandably scrambling to sell or trade everything not nailed down in order to survive.
Posted by Thomas Michael Andres on October 8,2012 | 11:45 PM
"What was once called the public realm has become a place of frenzied consumerism monitored by the watchful eyes of thousands of surveillance cameras" Sounds like a good description of globalism itself.
Posted by Thomas Michael Andres on October 4,2012 | 11:35 PM
At least his design of the new Rothschild bank in the City of London is totally uninspiring. A pile of dull rectangular shapes. Suites well as an illustration for 'The Wall' by Roger Waters but is incompatible with the City, where you can hardly find a single straight line. This design could have been suitable for Canary Wharf but would have been lost there among much more interesting solutions. A revolution that ends up in boredom...
Posted by Mikhail on September 24,2012 | 11:42 AM
Why is Rem Koolhaas the most controversial architect in the world? Becasue he tries hard to be controversial. It's the old art school ploy to baffle them with b.s. Where as we once admired artists for thier skill and on the side they happened to be "quirky", now we admire artists becasue there work seems quirky, while they themselves are polished snake oil salesmen. Like the author who bends over backwards to praise the plywood and fake leather building in Lille France, while calling the refurbished center of Lille disneyland. Unbelievable that the most sustainable act of preservation of a humanscaled and non toxic environment is derided as disney, especially from an institution as noble as the Smithsonian Institution.
Posted by Daniel Morales on August 28,2012 | 09:02 PM