A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Undulating grounds, undisciplined bodies: the Soviet Rationalists and the Kinaesthesis of revolutionary crowds
In the turbulent political conditions of early modernity, the urban mass crowd emerged as a social phenomenon which presented demanding challenges to the arts: to innovate spatial formulations, graphic compositions and even aesthetic principles drawing on this new collectivity for legitimacy. Comparing the work of the Soviet Rationalist architects to the theatrical methods and productions by the Soviet revolutionary director V. E. Meyerhold, this paper probes the arts' responses to this crowd design problem. It discerns a spatial logic of ground-and-body: designers shaped theatrical sets and building surfaces to choreograph group ensembles as events, and to forge an alternative conception of space from the varying intensities of kinaesthetic bodily rhythms. Accordingly, the paper reflects on the nature of collective consciousness thereby evoked, and its distinct difference from another modernist state of consciousness: the paranoid individualism of panoptic inspection. It ventures to speculate that the Rationalists' architecture (and Meyerhold's theatre) effectively restores inter-subjectivity from its idealist discourse as an inquiry into other minds, to a problem of other bodies where subjectivity unfolds between emotional states at the body's expressive surface: the domain of generative spatial-design.
Undulating grounds, undisciplined bodies: the Soviet Rationalists and the Kinaesthesis of revolutionary crowds
In the turbulent political conditions of early modernity, the urban mass crowd emerged as a social phenomenon which presented demanding challenges to the arts: to innovate spatial formulations, graphic compositions and even aesthetic principles drawing on this new collectivity for legitimacy. Comparing the work of the Soviet Rationalist architects to the theatrical methods and productions by the Soviet revolutionary director V. E. Meyerhold, this paper probes the arts' responses to this crowd design problem. It discerns a spatial logic of ground-and-body: designers shaped theatrical sets and building surfaces to choreograph group ensembles as events, and to forge an alternative conception of space from the varying intensities of kinaesthetic bodily rhythms. Accordingly, the paper reflects on the nature of collective consciousness thereby evoked, and its distinct difference from another modernist state of consciousness: the paranoid individualism of panoptic inspection. It ventures to speculate that the Rationalists' architecture (and Meyerhold's theatre) effectively restores inter-subjectivity from its idealist discourse as an inquiry into other minds, to a problem of other bodies where subjectivity unfolds between emotional states at the body's expressive surface: the domain of generative spatial-design.
Undulating grounds, undisciplined bodies: the Soviet Rationalists and the Kinaesthesis of revolutionary crowds
Ziada, Hazem (author)
The Journal of Architecture ; 18 ; 591-617
2013-08-01
27 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
British Library Online Contents | 2013
|British Library Online Contents | 2013
|The anti-rationalists and the rationalists
TIBKAT | 2000
|TIBKAT | 1973
|