Preview

The Glass Pavillion

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
323 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Glass Pavillion
Chelsea R. Roush
September 17th, 2010
Assignment 2
The Glass Pavilion In the summer of 1913, Bruno Taut architect and urban planner began work on the experimental glass pavilion. He proposed to build this for the upcoming Werkbund exhibit in Cologne, Germany. Taut was known for his theoretical work and was seeking new artistic spirit. Pioneering the way, the Glass Pavilion is one of the earliest architectural examples of Expressionism. The Glass Pavilion was a collaborative project, done with the help of expressionist poet Paul Scheerbart. He was able to provide Taut with a strategy for the pavilion along with much of the formal inspiration. His published work previous to the pavilion mainly focusing on the burdens of constricting rationality and inhuman seriousness. With his work on the Glass Pavilion he used words like utopian, visionary, floating, gleaming, and mobile, also paired with a modern political and social agenda. Scheerbart’s belief summed up, was the idea that glass architecture is simple and it will bring a new culture. Visitors commenting on its unearthly, unreal building proved his analysis, and the stirring of profound emotions encountered while there. Many experiences evoked sensory responses, and psychic and visceral reflexes.
The Pavilion was built without any real function, more of a provocative installation than a pragmatic solution. It was primarily built to create vivid experiences from water, light, stairs, colored tiles and motion pictures projected onto the lower floor. In Paul Scheerbart’s excerpt he discusses the importance of glass architecture and how the Earth would change greatly if brick architecture was replaced by glass architecture. Though some dismissed the pavilion as an impossible ideal, many more gave positive feedback. Although the possibility of using glass on everything would greatly change the world, it is not functional or imaginable. Taut’s intensions were to provoke the desire for change in

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Throughout the memoir, Jeannette Walls and her siblings’ view of the Glass Castle is a symbol of hope. It is the bright light in their future that allows them to continue living life with a better outlook on what is to come. Showing how much they desire…

    • 652 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Glass pavilion’s unique rooftop, which is made of glasses, from large to small pieces, end up as a sharp-angled at the top of the…

    • 578 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Aesthetically speaking, the building retains a sort of timeless charm. Gropius was one of the first architects to stand for the concept of honesty in material within his designs (Pascucci). Deriving from the core values of modernism and functionalism, he began the design guided by new philosophy. With this in mind, he implemented the iconic glass…

    • 480 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    With three floors of captivating pieces, I felt the layout and setting of the exhibition was extremely effective, as the pure white walls and ceilings enhanced the vividness of the colours of the glass. The set-up of the lighting in the exhibition created really interesting shadows and reflected coloured points of light on the white walls, which seemed an extension of the pieces themselves, adding to the overall vibrancy in the room.…

    • 1655 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    Around each rectangular panel are bands of opalescent cabochons set like jewels in mounts. At the top and base of each window, blue and mottled white panels appear like clouds against the sky. The precision and regularity of these panels and cabochons present a marvelous foil for the brilliant, jewel-like tones of the central panels which explode in a burst of rich colors. Except the frame there are five main pieces of glass, each piece is mad up by many small pieces. The grass on the bottom right is Fluorescent green which have strong contrast with the the blue and pink flowers. The large pieces that make up the ground and sky are green and brown. Each piece has it’s unique colors. Even in one pice the color changed from top to bottom. Looking infant of it the hollyhock window with its large Bowers appears somber and dark, hinting that evening shadows lurk beyond the glassy surface. Those background let the white and red shins gracefully and quietly. Compare to the the peony window with its molded pink and white opalescent blooms and flowering tree which is spacious and full of movement and activity, the hollyhocks is beautiful in it’s own way, tranquil and peaceful. Like the fairy under the moon. As an image, it’s pleasure to look at. I believe that people who went to…

    • 574 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Kahn’s buildings, such as the Yale Art Gallery, expressively impacted those confronted them due to his design and wisdom of space and light which worked through the building, similar to Richards medical labs as he combined visual captivating spaces that differed under the renewing light during different intervals of the day. The implication of his works abled Kahn to explore the notions he had about renovating the concept of modern architecture that to him required the ‘monumental and spiritual’ essences of prehistoric buildings. From the ideas discussed above, about his works and in relation to his Medical Labs in Philadelphia to modernism as a whole, it is evident that Kahn was successful in his hopes of reinventing…

    • 1519 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Glass Castle

    • 2757 Words
    • 12 Pages

    A. Jeannette Walls, in her memoir The Glass Castle, demonstrates Erikson’s eight stages of development. Through the carefully recounted stories of her childhood and adolescence, we are able to trace her development from one stage to the next. While Walls struggles through some of the early developmental stages, she inevitably succeeds and has positive outcomes through adulthood. The memoir itself is not only the proof that she is successful and productive in middle adulthood, but the memoir may also have been part of her healing process. Writing is often a release and in writing her memoir and remembering her history, she may have been able to come to terms with her sad past. The memoir embodies both the proof that she has successfully graduated through Erickson’s stages of development while also being the reason that she is able to do so.…

    • 2757 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Glass Castle

    • 4823 Words
    • 20 Pages

    Jeannette was sitting in a taxi, when she saw her homeless mother cover in rags, searching through the garbage. Jeannette was felt ashamed of her mother and ended up going back to her home on Park Avenue. Jeannette feels guilty that she is the reason her parents are homeless and she is being spoiled with all these luxuries however, her mother and father reject all of Jeannette’s offers. The only way she can get a hold of her mother is if she called up a friend of hers. The next day Jeanette and her mother met up at a local restaurant for lunch. Jeannette informed her mother that she is worried about her. In all seriousness, her mother asks for an electrolysis treatment and that she should also accept her parents as they are because that is who they were and they were never going to change. This part of the book introduces Jeannette as an adult and her mother who is homeless. I don’t blame Jeannette for feeling ashamed, she is living on Park Avenue yet her parents are living on the street. Her mother’s comments toward Jeannette prove that she is very happy the way she is and doesn’t want to change.…

    • 4823 Words
    • 20 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Glass Castle

    • 772 Words
    • 4 Pages

    “I was your cure. You were my disease. I was saving you, but you were killing me” (Unknown). In the novel The Glass castle written by written by Jeannette Walls, the middle child, the caretaker of the family, and also her father’s favorite. She brings him hope, joy and is the only one who really believes in him. Without her, Rex might just be an alcoholic more than he is now. Jeanette starts growing up realizing what is bad and what is good which helps her make better decisions in life. Over the course of the novel Jeannette gradually begins to distance herself farther and farther away from her beloved father.…

    • 772 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    City of Glass is a novel written by Paul Auster in 1985, and its one of the stories included in the series of novels The New York Trilogy (1987). One of the essential themes that recur in many of Austers works is the search for identity and personal meaning, and this is exactly one of the main elements of City of Glass. It deals with this detective writer, who descends into madness when he becomes a private investigator himself by mistake. In the following essay, I will focus on the characters and the very twisted point of view, which is a big part of the whole novel. Besides that, I will concentrate on the themes that are dealt with in the story.…

    • 1556 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Paul Goldberger stated, “Interior space will almost always provoke a greater emotional response than the building’s façade.” An individual would better understand the concept of the architectural design by experiencing, feeling, and seeing the space from within. Through this, space creates an emotional aspect within a person. Since different people experience the space, no two people perceive a certain space the same way. A person’s perception varies based on the impact and impression given by the space. Each and every individual who enters the space would have their own opinion on the emotional element their surroundings stipulate. Space can make you feel small, big, restricted, confortable, welcome, isolated, warm, cold, and so on. Although everyone experiences spatial impressions, not everyone is consciously grasped by it. It creates various emotions that only you can interpret. Royal Ontario museum’s space can be interpreted in several ways. Some people feel awkward and restricted with the space the irregular form creates. They find the crystal structure a way to waste of space. However, some people find its unusual space quite interesting. The massing of the structure allows the natural light to come in making the space look larger than it is. Adding to that, the light that comes from the window creates an “ascending” feeling; at the same time provides an overlooking view of the street. Frank Ching’s Architecture, Form, Space & Order thoroughly explained how placing windows in the corners established to capture a desirable view or brighten a darker corner of the…

    • 793 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Robert Venturi’s early design; the Vanna Venturi House, has been a reference for contemporary architecture. His domestic masterpiece challenged the definition of modern architecture.1 It seems the Vanna Venturi House contradicted many of the rules that modern architects were expected to follow. This essay will discuss the architectural qualities of the Vanna Venturi House and the precedents which influenced its design.…

    • 1346 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Installation Art

    • 469 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Although Installation Art has many qualities that it can be associated with, I believe that one which stands true above most is the fact that it Installation Art often casts the spectator as the protagonist. As we have seen throughout the semester, many different artist’s have employed their own ideas of what makes art Installation Art, yet from my own vantage point, it is only Installation Art if we create something for the spectator to walk into and ‘do’ something within the piece itself, as opposed to viewing it from a more museum like way, in order to create a more ‘authentic’ form of art. Lucas Samaras’s creation of ‘Room’, is a direct example of my thoughts on this characteristic of Installation Art. He wished to accommodate the viewer in his work. In this piece, he wished that the space of the piece become “a wholly immersive environment in which the space existed for the viewer to activate as an engaged and absorbed participant” (Bishop, 27). Installations should be geared toward first hand, real experiences by the viewer, and not illustrate simply a situation. Samaras’ ‘Room’ created this by having the items in the piece ‘fluid’, and not ‘glued-down’. ‘Room’, was a conglomeration of the artist’s own personal belongings reconstructed to mimic his own bedroom, in which the viewer could walk in, sit down on, and actually interact with the items, which, according to Samaras, created the ‘authentic’ quality of the art itself. As we view the characterstic of Installation Art as the spectator casted as the protagonist, we can now realize that, once again…

    • 469 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Kaufmann Jr., Edgar, Frank Lloyd Wright: Plasticity, Continuity, and Ornament. The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Vol. 37, No. 1. (Mar., 1978), p. 34-39.…

    • 1082 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The following sentence, written by the Chilean architect Alejandro Aravena, who was part of the jury that awarded the Pritzker Prize to Wang Shu, makes us understand the feelings that this building produces on its visitors: "One does not visit the building; one is hit by the building. [...] Being 'hit' by a building happens very rarely in architecture, because that kind of impact belongs more to the music or cinema, where the experience of a work can be extremely emotional to the point of altering the mood in a profoundly positive…

    • 2065 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics