Feature Article

Demolition Man

John Silber lectures ambitious architects: Stop building for posterity, and start pleasing the masses.

By Rachel Levitt

Architecture of the Absurd By John Silber (Quantuck Lane Press, 128 pages, $27.50) Good art doesn’t snub mass appeal, and needs no theoretical posturing to be appreciated. That’s former Boston University president Silber’s argument in this self-indulgent screed against imaginative architecture. By his logic, Shakespeare is super (he made money, right?), but Beckett is bad (his boldness came “in the absence of purposeful innovation”). And boo to unique design: Frank Gehry (MIT’s Stata Center) and Steven Holl (MIT’s Simmons Hall) are, to Silber, architectural hubris run amok. These buildings are so ugly! Clearly, the boards were suckered by some kind of architectural con game! Marbled throughout is a fascist doctrine: “The people are right, until they’re wrong.” Consider Daniel Libeskind’s fanciful (and ultimately doomed) World Trade Center replacement, the Freedom Tower, which received massive popular support. Silber says the public simply didn’t know what was good for it—but does that mean its replacement, an unremarkable glass tower, is better? “[T]he marketplace is not known for its elevated taste,” he sniffs. If that’s so, this book should find a huge audience.

Originally published in Boston magazine, November 2007
 

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review
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 6, 2007 at 6:49 PM
COMMENT:
I think there are some points to be found in this review but what is most obvioous is how incoherent the writing is. Further, the author of the review might comment on the recent MIT lawsuit about the Stata Center she seems to like. And yes, I don't come without predjudice. I am the publisher of John Silber's reasonably presented argument.
architecture as literature
Posted by alan | Nov. 7, 2007 at 6:40 PM
COMMENT:
There are presently three books in the bookstores titled END GAME. Beckett's, to my eyes, the best of the three. I am sure there are three pieces of architecture on similar sites to the Stata Center with similar programs, but with very dissimilar things to say. Marketplace will decide which END GAME sells best? For me, Gehry's Stata Center is the end of a repetition of private-fantasies. With such talent, oh, what he could-have-said.
Silber is on the crest of the wave
Posted by Nikos | Nov. 8, 2007 at 1:13 PM
COMMENT:
John Silber is merely the latest, highly prestigious thinker who has diagnosed contemporary Starchitects as impostors. My friends and I have been writing and lecturing about this topic for years -- see some online articles on 2Blowhards.com. My own book "Anti-Architecture and Deconstruction" caused such a sensation when it was first released in 2004 that it was dropped by one of the nation's leading architectural bookstores. Now time has finally come for all of this deception to be exposed as such. Best wishes.

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