^Luis Barragán, Yellow house in Monterrey, Mexico
The following article by Peter Wilson, Director of Bolles & Wilson Architects, is a review of Fiona McLachlan's book "Architectural Colour in the Professional Palette", published by Routledge.
Who might the audience be for a book called 'Architectural
Colour in the Professional Palette'? In
the opening pages Fiona McLachlan tells us that this book is a tool for
professionals. One suspects this may well be a market identified by the
publishers Routledge. In presenting a broad sweep of recent and already much
published polychromatic buildings it is insistently neoteric, more likely to
appeal to students wanting to make a speed start on current architectural
modes. The poor practitioner looking for
a colour for a current job might not make his or her deadline with this book in
hand. It is a question of format, a question Le Corbusier well understood in
marketing his pre-selected colour Keyboards for the wallpaper manufacturer
Salubra. I am fingering the full-page matt swaths now while writing and I must
confess salivating. Colour is an emotional issue, one that engages both
physiological and sensual encodings of memory and atmosphere. This is perhaps
why colour theory is so difficult to swallow. Having gagged on both Goethe and
Itten, my favourite appetizer is Joseph Albers 'Interaction of Colour', printed
in black and white with only a few full-page colour fields (glosssy like the
Routledge publication, not good for fingering).
For the student or the diligent practitioner Fiona
McLachlan's book is dense with informative reference, Pugin, Ruskin or Semper co-habitating here
harmoniously with those who rejected their eclecticism, Bauhaus theory (Itten and Albers) or non-objectivists
(Barnett Newman, Rothko, Bridget Riley). Curiously almost all colour theory
seems to emanate from middle European sources.
A particular contemporary strain of Anglo-Germanic propping underpins
the first of the eight exemplary practices scanned in these pages. Much of
Caruso StJohn's kudos derives from their belonging to the Semper camp. But who
was Gottfried Semper? And what tools do we need to revive such mid-nineteenth
century debates? Unfortunately Fiona Mclachlan's book does not take us deep
into the controversy of Semper's 1834 `Preliminary Remarks on Polychrome
Architecture and Sculpture in Antiquity' nor into his theory of Wandbekleidung (Wall Clothing) -
legitimizing the autonomy of the facade from tectonic or formal issues (a
reference long championed by Adam Caruso's ETH professorial predecessor, HansKolhoff).
Architectural Colour might not be a handbook, but it is
certainly a map of the author's role models. A few examples of her own
polychromic work stand well in their proximity. The texts read like eight
mini-monographs: the architectural horizon seen from an Anglo Saxon perspective
in the opening years of the 21st century. One can only agree with
this canonization of O'Donnel + Tuomey or Gigon/Guyer, but curiously we have to
wait to almost the end of the book for the high priests of polychromy,
Sauerbruch Hutton, who unlike many of the others, bite the bullet and choose
their own colours, 'Delicious'- as Louisa Hutton describes her hues,
'anti-decorative' as Kurt Forster might add. Little play is made of Sauerbruch
Hutton's Indian epiphany nor of other characters that colour the British
architectural scene. I am thinking here of Richard Rogers partner Mike Davis,
colour coded Red since the 1960's, a gift for a colour theorist, or JimStirling who John Tuomey once reported had a wardrobe full of his signature
tent size blue shirts. The Mexican Louis Barragan whom Fiona McLachlan describes as a South American architect, is
inexplicably underplayed. It was Barragan's pinks and yellows that Anni Albers
(wife of Joseph) introduced to MOMA, instigating a sensuous erosion of
functionalism, a significant paradigm shift on a not-that-distant architectural
horizon.
We are informed in the text that 'modern paint dries quickly
due to the alkyd used in the resin, but is more brittle and can crack over
time', hopefully this will not also be the fate of this book which records
where we were at in 2012. Taking in a larger timescale of colour theory we
would expect to encounter what Stephen Holl wants to activate, 'the
metaphysical properties of colour and light', which would lead us in the
direction of Merleau-Ponty asserting that 'colour is a modality of the
enveloping presence of the sensory field'. A possible explanation for Fiona McLachlan's
enigmatic sentence, 'Hermeneutic theory suggests that the design process is
imbued throughout with interpretation' - an invitation either to glance in the
direction of the German philosopher Hans Georg Gadamer, or a door opening to a
long forgotten emblematic status of colour: Red signalling the dignity of Mars,
Blue the piety and sincerity of Jupiter, green the felicity and pleasure of
Venus.
Admirable as this book is, it is limited by the ability of
language to evoke vivid experiential phenomena, an archaic art which the geisha
Sei Shonagon mastered around 1000 AD in her Pillow Book; 'for undergarments in
summer I like violet and white..... I also like clothing of brilliant silk and
garments that are white on one side and sombre red on the back.... for fans with yellow paper I like a red frame
and for fans with violet/purple paper I like a green frame... for women's
cloaks I like bright colours, the colour of a vine, a cherry tint, a plumb-tree
red shade ... all bright colours are
pretty.'
Peter Wilson. Münster- January 2013
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