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Theories of Meaning in Architecture
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  • Theories of Meaning in

    Architecture

  • Semiology: the science of

    signs Signifier/Signified

    Context/Metaphor

    Langue/Parole

    from Charles Jencks Semiology and Architecture in Charles Jencks andGeorge Baird, eds. Meaning in Architecture, 1969

  • Signifier/SignifiedThe signifier is a representation for an idea or thought

    which is signified. In language, the sound would be

    the signifier and the idea the signified, whereas in

    architecture, the form would be the signifier and the

    content the signified.

  • Context/MetaphorThere are two basic ways a sign achieves meaning -

    both through its relation to all other signs in a context

    or chain, and through the other signs for which it has

    become a metaphor by association, or similarity.

    The synonyms for context are chain, opposition,

    syntagm, metonymy, contiguiity3 relations, contrast: for

    metaphor they are association, connotation, similarity,

    correlation, paradigmatic or systemic plane.

  • The Semiological Triangle

  • Langue/ParoleAll the signs in a society taken together constitute the

    langue or total resource. Each selection from this

    totality, each individual act, is the parole. Thus the

    langue is collective and not easily modifiable, whereas

    the parole is individual and malleable.

  • System and

    Syntagm from

    Roland Barthes,

    Elements of

    Semiology,1964

  • Sign systems, by Charles Jencks

  • The Doric Order as System and Syntagm

  • From Roland Barthes, Mythologies, 1958

  • Metaphor: Personification of the Orders by John Shute

    after Vitruvius

  • John Simpson, The Queens Gallery, 2002

  • Metonymy: The Semiotics of the Tassel

    Alan Powers, Building Design, May 2002

    On one level, tassels are functional. Something is needed to deal with the

    end of a cord or rope, to prevent the end from fraying, and a tassel is a

    formalisation of a knot with loose threads hanging below it. Visually, then,

    tassels are terminations, but their function is also to give weight to the end of

    the cord so that it hangs and swings in a controllable manner, emphasising

    the movement of the body. Figuratively, tassels mean a lot more than this.

    The cords to which they attach may themselves be essentially ceremonial, but

    in such cases not having a tassel would remove the cord from its symbolic

    function and return it to being a mere rope. This column and others like it are

    tassel-like appendages to the main function of a magazine. Tassels may be

    analogous to sexual organs, specially male ones, projecting and swinging as

    adjuncts to a larger entity. The ancients were more used to seeing these

    tassels in everyday life than we are, even in our liberated times. Female

    tassel dancers use them literally for a paradoxical mixture of emphasis and

    concealment.

  • The new Queen!s Gallery at Buckingham Palace has some fine bronze

    tassels hanging from the imitation cords that interlace its staircase. As

    conventionalised classical ornaments, they are a metonym not only for the

    architectural meaning of the gallery, but also for its position as a kind of richly-

    wrought, attention-drawing tassel at the end of Buckingham Palace. The

    project of enhancing the old gallery is tassel-like in its message of "thus far but

    no further! in respect of opening up the palace to public view. We are seeing

    some of the best bits, on condition that the cord itself does not unravel.

    The gallery emphasises the glamour of royalty, drawing us near to its

    nourishing and protective breast. The merchandise in the shop draws us

    even more intimately into a shared joke, with corgi-themed toys, dog-leads

    with crowns and other innocent fun. Like the accoutrements of military dress

    uniforms, which include epaulettes (shoulder tassels) and further tassel-work

    about the ceremonial sword, the gallery fits into a familiar symbolic system

    through which royalty has always been understood. There would be no more

    point in having an ornament-free Queen!s Gallery than there would be in

    having a non-cermonial monarchy, and for this reason alone, John Simpson!s

    design deserves to be hailed as a masterpiece of integrated semiotics, as well

    as being a clever piece of planning, an assembly of highly skilled

    craftsmanship and an agreeable place in which to view fine works of art.

  • Of course, the lure that the tassel has for some is for others a signal for

    repulsion, very probably as a result of puritanism, but they might consider the

    nature of the emotions they are experiencing. Monarchy has always operated

    through theatricality, even to the point of self-parody, and it is a mistake to

    attribute a love of tassel-work to a condition of decadence. It is of the

    essence of the thing, and carries attributes of priestly function, an area in

    which the language of textiles has always been important. Both priest and

    king are Dionysian by nature and function, not Apollonian, and that means

    tassels, both literal and figurative.

    The one thing monarchy cannot afford to be is normal, although it may affect

    the emotions in almost any other way. Republics can have their tassels too,

    but the Queen!s Gallery is clever because it responds to a quintessential

    tassel moment, when a sense of carnivalesque exaggeration is appropriate,

    something that classical revival architecture in the twentieth century too often

    lacked. The effect is enhanced by the miniaturisation of scale, for while

    speaking in the traditional language of ceremonial uniform, it creates a perfect

    illusion that the monarchy is both getting smaller and coming closer to us.

  • Pre-modern meaning

  • Historians reconstruct meaning: Erwin Panofsky

  • Porta Palio, Verona and

    Rustic Gate from Serlio

  • The European Gate from Peter Davidson and Alan

    Powers, Five Gates for England, 1996

  • Henri Labrouste,

    Bibliotheque Ste

    Genevive, Paris,

    1848

    Elevation and

    section

  • E. Gunnar Asplund, Stockholm City Library, 1930

  • E. Gunnar Asplund, Mercury in Stockholm City Library,

    1930

  • Everything in the world is a product of the formula

    (function times economy)

    All art is composition and therefore unfunctional

    All life is function and therefore inartistic

    Hannes Meyer 1928below: Trade Union College, Burnau, by Meyer & Wittwer, 1930

  • From Wiseman and Groves, Levi-Strauss for Beginners, 1997

  • Robert Venturi, Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture, 1966

  • Robert Venturi,

    Complexity and

    Contradiction in

    Architecture, 1966

  • From Venturi, Scott-Brown and Izenour, Learning from Las Vegas, 1972

  • Information/Heraldry from Learning from Las Vegas

  • 1977

  • Pruitt-Igoe: The symbolic death of

    Modern Architecture

  • Jencks on Mies van der Rohe: Killing the Father

  • Gay Eclectic - semiological anaylsis

  • Who lost the meaning of modernism?

    Above: Barcelona Pavilion, Mies van der Rohe, 1929. Left: drawing by

    architects, and right: as redrawn for The International Style, 1932

    Below: Tugendhat House, Brno, 1930

  • From Terence Riley and Barry

    Bergdoll, eds. Mies in Berlin, 2002

  • Walter Benjamin The Arcades Project

    History as a search for hidden meanings

  • Playing with meaning and history: Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities, 1974

  • Modern architecture reprocessed as formal information:

    Michael Graves, Benacerraf House addition, 1969

  • Formal content: Peter Eisenman House III for Robert Miller, Lakeville,

    Connecticut, 1971

  • Narrative restored: Daniel Libeskind on the Jewish Museum

  • Daniel Libeskind, Study for the Jewish Museum

  • Void-voided void, The Jewish Museum

  • The Jewish Museum, completed building, exterior

  • Narratived trivialised? Private Eye on Libeskind, 2002