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Louis Kahn: The Importance of a Drawing

door Michael Merrill

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"'The importance of a drawing is immense, because it is the architect's language.' Louis Kahn to his master class, 1967." --Page 2. Louis I. Kahn (1901-1974) was one of the most significant architects of the twentieth century and his influence is present today in ways both profound and subtle. Unlike previous publications on Kahn, which have focused on his built work and which considered the drawings foremost as illustrations of these, this is the first in-depth study of drawings as primary sources of insight into Kahn's architecture and creative imagination. By offering a spectrum of close readings of drawings by Kahn and his associates in a series of incisive and richly illustrated essays, this book is at once an intimate artistic portrait of this important architect and a provocative and timely contribution to the current discourse on representation in architecture. For architects and students of architecture, Kahn's lasting significance is not only in the buildings he built, but in how he designed them. Based on unprecedented archival research, engagingly presented by a group of eminent scholars and architects, and lavishly illustrated with over 600 highest quality reproductions, 'The Importance of a Drawing' is destined to become a standard work in the literature on Louis Kahn.… (meer)
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Lars Müller Publishers produce books about architecture, design, and contemporary art that are works of art themselves. They have published a number of books on Louis Kahn, pointing out “Louis Kahn is one of the most renowned practitioners of international modernism, on a par with Le Corbusier and Mies van der Rohe in the extent of his influence on subsequent generations of architects.”

This latest book from Lars Müller focuses on Kahn’s architectural sketches and drawings, and the relationship between the evolution of his designs and the finished buildings. There are approximately 40,000 drawings in Louis Kahn’s archives, most of them being floor plans. Michael Merrill, the editor, as well as other architect-contributors, had a rich repository of material on which to base their reflections about Kahn’s work and add their own understanding about it. A number of direct quotes by Kahn are also included and discussed.

The book is divided into eight sections, and includes such topics as composition, influences, recurring themes, and the redrawing process. Comparisons between early sketches at a site and finished drawings are particularly revealing - what was important to him when he began the project? What perspectives did he emphasize? What conditions did he overlook?

One architect in the book opined that Kahn’s work represents “a rapprochement between ourselves, what we build, and nature.” His drawings, we learn, are “grounded in the natural geometry of the human body in relationship to earth, cosmos, and to others.”

Many of the buildings he created consisted of a series of segments, of methodical succession of spaces, that indicated, according to another observer in the book, “relationships between an immediate, human-scaled action-space, a next-larger communal space, and an even larger spatial field. . . . This composite view of space [revealed] a fluid, human ‘experience-space’. . . shifting its point of reference back and forth between the two. . . .”

As part of this emphasis, Kahn always endeavored to make outside light an integral part of his designs, while also utilizing repetition of line and shape and geometric precision. He was particularly fond of the square, and how its use could lend itself to architectural creativity. He called use of the square a “non-choice.”

Of course, there are those, like Friedensreich Hundertwasser, the Austrian architect, who countered that the straight line and the square don’t reflect nature or the human body at all, saying:

“Any modern architecture in which the straight line or the geometric circle have been employed for only a second - and were it only in spirit - must be rejected. Not to mention the design, drawing-board and model-building work which has become not only pathologically sterile, but absurd. The straight line is godless and immoral. The straight line is not a creative line, it is a duplicating line, an imitating line. In it, God and the human spirit are less at home than the comfort-craving brainless intoxicated and unformed masses.”

Similarly, the renown Iraqi female architect Zaha Hadid, who tried to replicate the decidedly non-straight lines of natural landscapes in her work, wrote, “The world is not a rectangle. You don’t go into a park and say: ‘My God, we don’t have any corners.’”

Even Frank Lloyd Wright, whose work, like Kahn’s, is full of geometric architectural elements and who also endeavored to marry the work with the site it would occupy, transformed his buildings - both the exteriors and interiors - into works of art by emphasizing the artistic, rather than mathematical, aspects of such spaces. This is quite a contrast to the brutalist style for which Kahn is known, in which revelation of the materials, weight, and assembly of his buildings are part of the overall effect.

Since mainstream architecture has been and continues to be more influenced by architects like Kahn, it is illuminating to understand the process by which he worked out his ideas. Kahn, at the time of his death in 1974, was lauded as one of the most important architects of the twentieth century. He was awarded the AIA Gold Medal and the RIBA Gold Medal.

This book, as the introduction avers, affords us insights both into Kahn’s built and theoretical work, showing how a project would change over time, offering many useful lessons for current students of architecture. Kahn was often quoted as saying “A building is a struggle, not a miracle.” The material in this latest exploration of Kahn’s work helps us understand what he meant.

Discussion: Kahn’s background is so interesting. He was born in 1901 into a poor Jewish family in the Russian Empire, and was originally named Itze-Leib Schmuilowsky. At age 3, he was badly burned on his face, and he carried the scars with him for the rest of his life. One of his biographers, Carter Wiseman, writes that his father thought he would have been better-off had he died from the accident.

The family emigrated to the United States in 1906, so the father could avoid forced conscription into the military. Living in Philadelphia’s Jewish ghetto, they remained poor throughout Lewis’s childhood, and at times the family barely had enough food. In 1915, his father arranged for their names to be Americanized, and Itze-Leib became Louis Kahn.

I have often wondered whether the circumstances of Kahn’s early life increased the appeal for him of order and predictability. He favored basic geometrical shapes, which are historically considered to be indicators of perfection and not subject to the vicissitudes of human existence. He would progress from the square (his "non-choice," as indicated above) and other simple geometric forms to the addition of an authentic material, and on to a succession of spaces employing those elements, softened and reflected by natural light. But always, the underlying certainty afforded by his geometric building blocks remained evident.

Additionally, as Wiseman points out, Kahn purposely left scratches and flaws on his finished buildings. Perhaps this was his way of validating his own appearance and value in spite of his scars. The visual language of his art and architecture is fascinating.

There is so much to learn from books on architecture. After all, our living spaces define us as much as we define them. As Jane Jacobs and other “city sociologists” have pointed out, cities are integrated systems, the arrangements of which contribute to the culture, sensibilities, and time management of those who inhabit them. How a building’s form and function are made to fit with one another, and the linkages between indoor and outdoor areas - both important considerations to Kahn - contribute to one’s weltanschauung just as much as the fields encompassing a farm and the mountains and valleys surrounding hamlets. It matters, and understanding just how it does enriches our appreciation of our environment.

Evaluation: This book is not only visually beautiful, but has a trove of insights into the creative process of design. It would make a lovely coffee table book to peruse at leisure, or a source of insights into “the thoughtful making of spaces.” ( )
  nbmars | Dec 20, 2021 |
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"'The importance of a drawing is immense, because it is the architect's language.' Louis Kahn to his master class, 1967." --Page 2. Louis I. Kahn (1901-1974) was one of the most significant architects of the twentieth century and his influence is present today in ways both profound and subtle. Unlike previous publications on Kahn, which have focused on his built work and which considered the drawings foremost as illustrations of these, this is the first in-depth study of drawings as primary sources of insight into Kahn's architecture and creative imagination. By offering a spectrum of close readings of drawings by Kahn and his associates in a series of incisive and richly illustrated essays, this book is at once an intimate artistic portrait of this important architect and a provocative and timely contribution to the current discourse on representation in architecture. For architects and students of architecture, Kahn's lasting significance is not only in the buildings he built, but in how he designed them. Based on unprecedented archival research, engagingly presented by a group of eminent scholars and architects, and lavishly illustrated with over 600 highest quality reproductions, 'The Importance of a Drawing' is destined to become a standard work in the literature on Louis Kahn.

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