{"title":"Salvador Dalí in Rem Koolhaas’ Delirious New York","authors":"Simon Weir","doi":"10.1080/13602365.2022.2106580","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The penultimate chapter of Rem Koolhaas’ Delirious New York (1978) begins with: ‘In the mid-thirties both Salvador Dali and Le Corbusier — they hate each other — visit New York for the first time’. Koolhaas inventively rewrites Dalí’s ‘paranoid critical method’, then announces in the part ‘Combat’ that Le Corbusier is diagnosed paranoid, followed in ‘Otherwordliness’, by the claim that architecture is inevitably the result of paranoid critical activity, and concrete is described as the method’s purest embodiment. Anyone familiar with Dalí’s writings would recognise Koolhaas’ choice of Le Corbusier as an opponent. In the 1920s, Dalí wrote admiringly of Le Corbusier, but in the 1950s Dalí wrote about Le Corbusier so critically that by the 60s it turned comically vicious. Dali advocated light, soft, and curved buildings, and found Le Corbusier’s concrete architecture horribly heavy, materially and metaphorically. When Koolhaas introduces the antagonism between Dalí and Le Corbusier in Delirious New York, no mention is made of Dalí’s remarks about concrete. Instead, concrete is Koolhaas’ choice as the exemplar of the paranoid critical method. Dalí wrote about his surrealist creative process — the paranoiac-critical method — in the 1930s, amid two theories of paranoia: constructionalist and anti-constructionalist. Dalí, along with Jacques Lacan, was resolutely anti-constructionalist. Neither of these terms has any currency in contemporary theories of paranoia, but Surrealism valued the mythos of the mad artist and these two theories of paranoia had artistic practices associated with them. By avoiding Dalí’s disdain for Le Corbusier’s concrete architecture, Koolhaas’ theory for an architectural surrealism of paranoid critical activity extends Dalí’s anti-constructionalist method into a distinctly new architectural surrealism.","PeriodicalId":44236,"journal":{"name":"METU Journal of the Faculty of Architecture","volume":"6 1","pages":"398 - 419"},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2022-04-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"METU Journal of the Faculty of Architecture","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/13602365.2022.2106580","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ARCHITECTURE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The penultimate chapter of Rem Koolhaas’ Delirious New York (1978) begins with: ‘In the mid-thirties both Salvador Dali and Le Corbusier — they hate each other — visit New York for the first time’. Koolhaas inventively rewrites Dalí’s ‘paranoid critical method’, then announces in the part ‘Combat’ that Le Corbusier is diagnosed paranoid, followed in ‘Otherwordliness’, by the claim that architecture is inevitably the result of paranoid critical activity, and concrete is described as the method’s purest embodiment. Anyone familiar with Dalí’s writings would recognise Koolhaas’ choice of Le Corbusier as an opponent. In the 1920s, Dalí wrote admiringly of Le Corbusier, but in the 1950s Dalí wrote about Le Corbusier so critically that by the 60s it turned comically vicious. Dali advocated light, soft, and curved buildings, and found Le Corbusier’s concrete architecture horribly heavy, materially and metaphorically. When Koolhaas introduces the antagonism between Dalí and Le Corbusier in Delirious New York, no mention is made of Dalí’s remarks about concrete. Instead, concrete is Koolhaas’ choice as the exemplar of the paranoid critical method. Dalí wrote about his surrealist creative process — the paranoiac-critical method — in the 1930s, amid two theories of paranoia: constructionalist and anti-constructionalist. Dalí, along with Jacques Lacan, was resolutely anti-constructionalist. Neither of these terms has any currency in contemporary theories of paranoia, but Surrealism valued the mythos of the mad artist and these two theories of paranoia had artistic practices associated with them. By avoiding Dalí’s disdain for Le Corbusier’s concrete architecture, Koolhaas’ theory for an architectural surrealism of paranoid critical activity extends Dalí’s anti-constructionalist method into a distinctly new architectural surrealism.
期刊介绍:
METU JOURNAL OF THE FACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE is a biannual refereed publication of the Middle East Technical University published every June and December, and offers a comprehensive range of articles contributing to the development of knowledge in man-environment relations, design and planning. METU JFA accepts submissions in English or Turkish, and assumes that the manuscripts received by the Journal have not been published previously or that are not under consideration for publication elsewhere. The Editorial Board claims no responsibility for the opinions expressed in the published manuscripts. METU JFA invites theory, research and history papers on the following fields and related interdisciplinary topics: architecture and urbanism, planning and design, restoration and preservation, buildings and building systems technologies and design, product design and technologies. Prospective manuscripts for publication in these fields may constitute; 1. Original theoretical papers; 2. Original research papers; 3. Documents and critical expositions; 4. Applied studies related to professional practice; 5. Educational works, commentaries and reviews; 6. Book reviews Manuscripts, in English or Turkish, have to be approved by the Editorial Board, which are then forwarded to Referees before acceptance for publication. The Board claims no responsibility for the opinions expressed in the published manuscripts. It is assumed that the manuscripts received by the Journal are not sent to other journals for publication purposes and have not been previously published elsewhere.