The drive to create artificial intelligence, to fabricate life, is
difficult to separate from a deep desire to become divine masters of our world.
To make animate the inanimate implies total understanding and control. It is to
become powerful and god-like. And yet we must learn time and again that life
cannot be controlled or predicted. In fact the effort to own life definitively
destroys it. A caged bird is the ultimate degradation of our relationship with
natural world. It is a humiliating admission that we have forgotten how to
relate to the unpredictability life and other living things. Our caging or
arresting of animate form is an act of destruction, not creation. It is a
symptom of a necrophilous impulse. Like the mannequin it easily becomes an
empty mimicry of something that we think we understand but are unable to sense
or feel. When architecture is pursued only as a personification, or a flattened
representation of animation, it produces only a stillbirth, an imposter, a
thing that cannot possibly behave organically because it refuses to accept a
continuously adverse relationship with its environment. Such forms speak of
architectures insecurity.
In order to survive architecture cannot be reduced to an alienated
object. It must be understood as a silent canvas that embraces the dynamic
change of its natural environment. Our responsibility as designers is not to
fabricate an image of animation but to establish a background against which
animation, movement or change can be registered. Organic architecture may thus
be redefined not as a frozen moment of activity (a still life), but as evolving
relationship of space, materiality, function and experience.
Architecture
is alive because it is an environment ...not an animal or a
machine.
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