The Architecture of Analogy
The Architecture of Analogy
The Architecture of Analogy
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C McEwan 2013 School-Cemetery [montage] Left: Fagnano Olona School, Right San Cataldo Cemetery, Both
drawings by Rossi.
One place to situate the theme of autonomy in architecture is in Emil Kaufmanns discussion in the 1930s on the work
of Enlightenment architect Claude-Nicolas Ledoux. Kaufmann emphasised formal aspects such as: cubic masses, bare
walls, frameless apertures, and flat roofs. For Kaufmann, the isolation of parts, their dialogue as either repetitive or
oppositional elements, represented a formal autonomy. Autonomy re-emerged in the 1970s when architects challenged
pseudo-scientific and technologically-driven projects, such as: Kenzo Tanges 1960 project for Tokyo Bay with its
raised roadways from which residential units could endlessly aggregate, Buckminster Fullers 1962 domed geodesic
smog shield over midtown Manhattan, Archigrams pop-image megastructures like the 1964 Plug-in City, Paolo Soleris
anamorphic urbanism, and in Italy, Archizooms anarchic No-stop City, a continuous urban structure without
architecture. In projects like these, formal issues are replaced by statistical analyses, technological optimism, and the
potentially infinitely extendable, open-form. This path of development is opposed by those architects who follow the
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theme of autonomy in architecture. In recent years, autonomy has been discussed once again in texts by Pier Vittorio
Aureli, Michael Hays, Reinhold Martin, and Anthony Vidler. [1]
The introduction of historical critique into the discipline of architecture is a characteristic the theme of autonomy.
However, it is complicated by two general positions that refer to the argument about what kind of historical critique is
appropriate. One kind of critique proposes an ideological critique of the history of architecture. An examination of all the
contributing factors around architectural form, such as the social, cultural, economic and political, in order to understand
how architecture is produced through power. The other kind of critique proposes a typological critique of the history of
architecture and its formation as the city. An examination of typological-form in order to understand the processes,
principles and formal operations that underline the production of form. In particular, the relationship between the form of
the individual building as it relates to the wider collective realm of the city, and the history of architecture. It is important
to say that both attitudes are independent of one another, but share a commitment to the repositioning of the I of
architecture to the us of the city. Whether through understanding the form and role of architecture within the city as a
product of social, cultural, economic and political concern. Or as much for architecture as a product of the historical,
urban and typological structure of the city itself. Again, both positions prioritise the collective mind over the individual.
There is a problematic overlap in these positions because architecture supports social, cultural, economic and political
aspects and is their concrete manifestation. Thus, architectural form cannot be considered as a single, isolated event
because it is bounded by both the material and immaterial reality in which it exists. However, what the theme of
autonomy can do, is open a discussion on what it means to view architecture as autonomous. Thus autonomy refers to
notions of separation, resistance, opposition, confrontation, and critical distance, which can be instrumentalised by the
architect through the production of images, and texts, aswell as buildings. It is worthwhile to note a few specific
examples in the recent history of architecture.
Manfredo Tafuri, in Architecture and Utopia bleakly surmised architecture to be an instrument of capitalist
development used by regimes of power, thinking it useless to propose purely architectural alternatives. However, he said
that it is the conflict of things that is important, insisting on the productivity inherent in separation. In Critical
Architecture Michael Hays writes that architecture is an instrument of culture, and also is autonomous form. The former
view emphasises culture as the content of built form, and depends on social, economic, political and technological
processes. The latter concerns the formal operations of architecture, how buildings are composed, and how architectural
form is viewed as part of a continuing historical project. Aureli develops an autonomy thesis in The Possibility of an
Absolute Architecture, in which he articulates an engagement with the city through confrontation. Aureli writes that it is
the condition of architectural form to separate and be separated. In this act of separation, architecture reveals the
essence of the city, and the essence of itself as political form. For Aureli, it is the process of separation inherent to
architectural form that the political is manifest.
In the work of Aldo Rossi the autonomy of form produced critical distance between the legacy of modern functionalist
architecture and its critique, of which Rossi was a key proponent. To outline an example, we can refer to two projects
undertaken in the early 1970s. A school at Fagnano Olona, and a cemetery outside Modena. Both projects share a
precisely defined bi-lateral plan-form. Extending perpendicular from this axis are wings which arrange classrooms in the
school, and graves in the cemetery. Either end of this central axis is marked by a circular and a square element. At the
school, the circular element is a library which enters into the courtyard, and the square element is a gym hall. At the
cemetery, the former is a conical grave and the latter, a monument to the war dead. Both plans refers to the axially
arranged institutions of prisons, hospitals and asylums. In so doing, function is superseded by autonomous form, and the
history of architecture is collapsed into a single building.
By way of conclusion it is illuminating to recall the political category of agonism posited by Chantal Mouffe in her book
On the Political. We can think once again of the I/us relationship of the opening paragraphs, and more particularly the
interrelated, we/they relationship. For Mouffe, the agonist principle develops from the idea of the political as a space of
permanent conflict and antagonism, and hence a constancy of the we/they opposition. In antagonism there is no shared
ground in the we/they opposition, so opponents are enemies. While in agonism, there is recognition of the legitimacy of
the opponent, so enemy becomes adversary. Remembering that autonomy refers to notions of separation, resistance,
opposition, confrontation, and critical distance, we could say that a crucial meaning of autonomy in architecture is to
constantly produce a form of agonism through the production of images, texts, and buildings.
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[1] See for example: Aureli, Pier V. The Possibility of an Absolute Architecture (MIT Press, 2011), Aureli, Pier V.
The Project of Autonomy: Politics and Architecture Within and Against Capitalism, Reprint 2012 (Princeton
Architectural Press, 2008), Hays, K. Michael. Architectures Desire (MIT Press, 2009),
Martin, Reinhold. Utopias Ghost: Architecture and Postmodernism, Again (University of Minnesota Press, 2010),
Vidler, Anthony, Histories of the Immediate Present: Inventing Architectural Modernism (MIT Press, 2008).
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McEwan C (2013) AE Foundation Locus, Study montage with plan by Palladio [Montage with photographs and CAD
drawing]
One of the premises of the AE Foundation is to understand the history of architecture as central to the education and
practice of the architect. Undertaken within the framework of the AE Foundation Graduate Programme, the project
opposite is for a school in the Lochee part of Dundee. The typological approach has been to distinguish three volumes
that articulate three conditions of the site. The tower fronts the street edge and contains the entrance, administration,
dining, gym hall, and a nursery. Classrooms are arranged around a courtyard which opens into the school grounds.
Between the courtyard and tower is a rectangular volume which holds a library and an art studio. In order to leave and
to arrive at the classrooms, children (and teachers) must always pass through the art and library spaces. The spaces of
creativity and of knowledge.
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McEwan C (2013) AE Foundation Locus, Site plan and long section through entrance [CAD line drawing]
For further information about the AE Foundation, an open and independent forum for the discussion and exposition of
architecture, see http://aefoundation.co.uk/
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A thesis that starts with an image. A collage by the author, titled Three Propositions. Fragments of images are cut out
and pasted onto cartridge paper which has been coated with a layer of white chalk, over which marks have been made
using pencil and the long side of the chalk. At its centre is Aldo Rossis Analogical City, itself a collage that uses
photocopies. Rossis image is around two metres square and consists of projects by Rossi, his collaborators and his
references, drawn in a mixture of projection techniques: orthographic, oblique, perspective. So we get plan, elevation,
perspective, and oblique sharing the same space and with equal authority. Rossi has drawn a figure, which, in my collage
is displaced vertically and overlaps onto Canalettos vedute painting of an alternative Venice, which Rossi used to
illustrate his concept of the Analogical City.
Canalettos painting depicts three buildings by Palladio as if they were composed in an actual cityscape. They are not.
The bridge is unbuilt and the buildings either side are in Vicenza. Rossi says that an imaginary Venice is built on top of
the real one. The painting is aligned with Sebastiano Serlios 1010 square grid which is at the start of his Renaissance
treatise in Book I On Geometry. In Book II On Perspective, Serlio illustrates the technique of perspective using the
theatre sets that Vitruvius described in De Architettura: Tragic, Satyric, and Comical. I have cut out the one Serlio
draws without the set, leaving only a gridded pattern and the outline of where the walls of the set would be, and placed it
underneath the Analogical City image. On the oblique is another part of Serlios theatre, the semicircular seating.
On top of this and aligned with the seating is a notebook extract by Rossi. To the left of the Analogical City is Jacques
Lacans diagram of the image-screen from the chapter What is a Picture in The Four Fundamental Concepts of
Psycho-Analysis. Following the diagram, Lacan says the screen is the locus of mediation. As Freud has said,
memories are projected onto this screen as images, where they are superimposed on one another. Images are thus built
on top of other images. Rossi says the city is the locus of collective memory, and I place Lacans diagram between
Serlios geometric grid, and Rossis Analogical City. It directs the view toward another of Rossis notebook extracts in
which he writes about collage in architecture, the construction of the city by parts, and the Analogical City as a
compositional system that uses existing elements in new combinations, like the Canaletto painting.
The two quotations at the bottom of the collage, in their juxtaposition constitute a narrative framework:
Forgetting Architecture comes to mind as a more appropriate title for this book, since while I may talk about a school,
a cemetery, a theatre, it is more correct to say that I talk about life, death, imagination.
Aldo Rossi A Scientific Autobiography 1981, p. 78.
I would define the concept of type as something that is permanent and complex, a logical principle that is prior to form
and that constitutes it.
Aldo Rossi, The Architecture of the City 1966, p. 40.
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Antonio Canaletto, Jacques Lacan, sebastiano serlio, Sigmund Freud
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Forgetting Fundamentals
Posted in Discourse, PhD by Cameron McEwan on September 19, 2012
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McEwan C (2012) AE Foundation Forgetting Fundamentals Montage Panel. [From top: Basilica
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by Vitruvius, illustrated by Cesariano (1521), Holl (1980) study of H-Type building, Serlio
(c1537) centralised plan (left); Schematised plans of eleven of Palladios villas (c1570) via
Wittkower, Piranesi (1761) study of Roman ruins with temple]
Established in May 2011, the AE Foundation provides an open independent forum for the discussion of architecture.
The Foundation brings together an international community of practitioners, academics and graduates who wish to
pursue architecture seriously with a view to contributing to and disseminating architectural knowledge and understanding.
To, promote the significance of the discipline, to encourage scholarship and foster an active architectural culture, in
partnership with individuals in practice and academia and to be a centre par excellence for intelligent dialogue and
debate in architectural theory, history and practice based in Scotland.
One such discussion was undertaken during the Spring months of this year, 2012, under the general question: can we
talk about fundamentals in architecture? Our exchange was at times flippant, at times philosophical, and at times biting of
each others position. Some of us decided to formalise our thoughts in short essays. What follows is a summary. An
extended version of the essay can be found on the AE Foundation website.
I started with Aldo Rossis rumination on the alternative title for his book A Scientific Autobiography,
Forgetting Architecture comes to mind as a more appropriate title for this book, since while I may talk about a
school, a cemetery, a theatre, it is more correct to say that I talk about life, death, imagination.
It links the building types: school, cemetery, theatre; with their conceptual analogues: life, death, imagination. In this
space of association type in architecture is both material and idea. In a theory of types, we can view the process of
architectural history unfolding, treatise to treatise, manual to manual, and manifesto to manifesto. That is, from Vitruvius,
De architectura, Serlio and Palladios books during the Renaissance, to Durands manual which codifies buildings,
Venturis manifesto, and the pamphlets of Holl. In Rafael Moneos 1978 essay On Typology, republished in a 2004
edition of El Croquis he writes that typology raises the question of the nature of the architectural work itself. In my view,
it is therefore legitimate to postulate type as one place to begin a discussion about fundamentals in architecture.
For the first part, type is a way of thinking in groups, which is, analysis through classification. In architecture, the most
common theories of classification by type have been according to use: national monuments, town halls, prisons, banks,
warehouses, factories, as can be seen in Nikolaus Pevsners 1976 A History of Building Types; and according to form:
centralised plan, linear arrangement, courtyard. Aldo Rossi tell us that the former understanding is limiting because the
use of a building is independent from its form. Buildings evolve over time, so a warehouse becomes an apartment block,
an apartment block becomes an office block, an office block becomes a brothel. Or as, for example, Atelier Bow-Wow
show us in Made in Tokyo, all of these can be contained as a hybrid, so that above the warehouse is an apartment
block, which is below an office, and the building terminates with a penthouse brothel.
Rossis quote, I would define the concept of type as something that is permanent and complex, a logical principle that is
prior to form and that constitutes it, is significant for its location within The Architecture of the City. It mediates
between a quotation by the Enlightenment architectural theorists Antoine Chrysthome Quatremre de Quincy and JeanNicolas-Louis Durand. Both Quatremre de Quincy and Durand acknowledged, in different ways the relationship of
memory and history in the idea of type. Quatremre de Quincy linked type with that which is archaic, elemental and
primitive, and we could say to memory. Free from this metaphysical speculation, Durands technical understanding
geometrised history. And as Rossi has said, history is the material of architecture. Thus in the adjacency of each quote
we get the opposition between the conceptual and the material once more. Rossis quote then, mediates between the
permanent and complex, which is archaic and elemental, something prior to form; and of the logical principle,
which is that constituted by a reading of history.
And of forgetting, Rossi writes,
In order to be significant, architecture must be forgotten, or must present only an image for reverence which
subsequently becomes confounded with memories.
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Freud tells us that in forgetting, we commit something to the unconscious, where it is worked over during regression,
which is an impulse to the archaic; and then to surface again when remembered, only now transformed, and reverent.
The type is worked over within the collective history of architecture, to be transformed by a kind of temporal and formal
regression.
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McEwan C (2012) AE Foundation Forgetting Fundamentals Montage Panel 2. [From top: Durand (1805)
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Elements of Building, from the Prcis, Rossi (1970) Gallaratese elevation, plan, photograph, Canal side tenement
in Milan, Quatremre de Quincy (c1832) study for a gateway]
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McEwan, C (2012) After Geddes The Valley Section [pencil and chalk on paper]
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Fagnano Olona Elementary School is defined by its courtyard plan-form and axially-arranged accommodation. Within
the courtyard, wide steps lead to the double height gymnasium, from which one can look toward the cylindrical library
with its glazed roof. We can read this analogically and equate the gymnasium with fitness and physical health; opposite
the library which is for knowledge; between these are the square and steps which is where the life of a city unfolds. The
school is thus a city in microcosm.
The city is where Aldo Rossis thesis begins. He developed a theory of types in The Architecture of the City, which
was a theory for the building forms that repeated and endured most in the history of architecture and the city. Out of this
evolved his concept of the Analogical City, a conceptual framework for transposing collective types and individual
monuments from architectural history to be repositioned alongside the most anonymous elements of the city. Mixed, like
Canalettos vedute and Freuds composite dream-image.
McEwan, C. (2012) Aldo Rossi in His Study [Sketch studies with pencil, chalk and india ink on layout paper]
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participants develop a clear position on their own practice in the context of a broader appreciation of shared concerns
for architecture; and Locus, which offers the opportunity to design a building in a specific location. The building chosen
to study in Model provides the building type to design in Locus. Each year, a new question is asked, which will be
returned to in all of the work undertaken. This year is the question of size: what size should a building be?
This post is about term one Model, which concludes with an Open Review this Saturday 5th of May after a talk and
presentation by architect Raphael Zuber and Christoph Gantenbein on Friday night. The building selected to study is
Aldo Rossis school at Fagnano Olona, a small town, 40 km northwest of Milan. Designed in 1972, Rossi had built only
the Segrate town square in 1965 and the Gallaratese housing block in 1970, completing the school at Fagnano Olona in
1976. Thus, it is considered one of Rossis early works.
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The significance of Rossis work is in its associative links and typological investigation. Fagnano Olona is no different. A
de Chirico clock and chimney mix with the pergola as a reference to the archetypal hut. The courtyard is a typological
form, a town square, its steps like an amphitheatre. The library which looks like a baptistry. At Fagnano Olona my
interest is in the clarity of composition and investigation of repetition and variation.
Although Rossi is often attacked for dismissing human scale, studying Fagnano Olona in detail reveals the opposite.
From the over-scaled square windows which contain four smaller-sized square windows within, to the subtle difference
in corridor width, the modest teaching/learning spaces and in particular I was struck by the ledge at the entrance
vestibule where children can sit and shelter from the rain, peering, and thinking about that strange chimney, framed by a
large square window.
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McEwan C (2012) The Architecture of Analogy PhD Seminar Work in Progress [photograph
Dundee School of Architecture and Duncan of Jordanstone School of Art run a Seminar series in which one (or two)
PhD Candidates present their work in progress. It runs fortnightly at lunchtime, and last week was my turn.
The timing was good. I delivered a lecture to Year 3, two weeks before, which allowed me, first to consolidate my
thinking on how to introduce Rossi (in broad terms); and then, Year 3 were subjected to a minor speculative foray
They may or may not have known this.
The second half of that lecture was on Rossis Analogical City Panel from 1976. An enigmatic montage of Rossi
projects, superimposed with projects of his references, condensed, into a single image. The PhD Seminar started from
here and I visually de-condensed the image, speaking about Rossis conversation with Palladio, via Canaletto and
locating some of the primary urban types. The panel was published in Lotus International number 13, where Rossi
writes of the relationship between reality and imagination, or in his words, the dialectics of the concrete. Imagination as
a concrete thing.
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McEwan C (2012) The Architecture of Analogy PhD Seminar Work in Progress [photograph
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McEwan C (2012) After Architect Aldo Rossi A Scientific Autobiography [Mixed media chalk charcoal india ink on
gessoed fabriano
Something between remembering and forgetting? The dialectic that exists in memory, I mean the mis-
In The Architecture of the City architect Aldo Rossi says that the past is being partly experienced in the present. With
Paris and the thesis of sociologist Maurice Halbwachs on Collective Memory in mind Rossi writes, the actual
configuration of a large city can be seen as the confrontation of the initiatives of different parties, personalities, and
governments. In this way various different plans are superimposed, synthesised, forgotten, so that the Paris of today is
like a composite photograph, one that might be obtained by reproducing the Paris of Louis XIV, Louis XV, Napoleon I,
Baron Haussmann in a single image. Forgotten. This passage brings to mind one by psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud
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who in, Civilisation and Its Discontents uses the city of Rome as an analogy to illustrate the accumulation and
preservation of material in ones unconscious. Freud writes that in mental life nothing that has once existed is ever lost.
He asks us to imagine Rome to be like the unconscious, a psychical entity with a similarly long, rich past, in which
nothing that ever took shape has passed away, and in which all previous phases of development exist beside the most
recent.
And back to Rossi. He concludes A Scientific Autobiography by re-drawing twelve projects. His selection dates from
1962 to 1980, and each are signed summer, estate 1980. These fragments exist alongside one another in the present.
In my investigation of this, each of Rossis twelve projects are superimposed. Like in Freuds Rome, a composite image
is built. Starting with Gallaratese (1970) in Milan, then Segrate (1965), Modena (1979), Venice (1980) and others,
each project is drawn, and then painted over. Drawn then painted over, and the process is repeated for each. Rossis
twelve projects exist in a single image, superimposed. The present image partly experienced by the previous one, or two
or three. The drawing sits somewhere between remembering and forgetting. A kind of mis-remembering.
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Cameron McEwan The Architecture of Analogy PhD Seminar 12 March 2012 [poster
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The drawings of Italian architect Aldo Rossi condense critical reflections on his own projects with studies of his
architectural and everyday references, in a dense combination of lines and images. His buildings are a complex mixture
of building typologies, and historical critique. Rossis writings are a similar hybrid of visual/textual references and
reflections. Aldo Rossis drawings, buildings and writings are the result of an analogical thinking process. The aim of this
PhD is to articulate a more precise way of understanding the deeply enigmatic processes of Aldo Rossis analogical
thinking and practice.
This seminar presents current work in progress. It will first outline the scope of the PhD and then focus discussion on
Rossis Theory of Types via Freuds Dream-work.
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Summary
The Architecture of Analogy is the title of my recently completed PhD thesis on the architectural production of Aldo
Rossi, the development of which is recorded in this Blog. The purpose in revisiting Rossi is to re-engage with
architecture as a discipline with its own body of knowledge and re-learn how architecture negotiates its formal condition
and its social role. It is to these latter points that The Architecture of Analogy will now turn.
Cameron McEwan May 2014
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