Welcome to the Game Grid

With rare exceptions, I’m not a big fan of modern architecture (or perhaps “post-modern” is the more appropriate term). Neither is Lileks, who I’ve quoted on this subject before. He and I are light-years apart politically speaking, but I think we share the same philosophy when it comes to buildings:

I have quaint notions about architecture. Context may not be king, but it’s not the king’s fool, either. Symmetry keeps a building from flying apart into a heaped-up mess, and helps the brain make sense of what it’s seeing. The occasional dose of historicity — and I don’t mean publicity photos etched into the glass like trapped ghosts — binds a building to the era that preceded its conception.

The above quote comes from today’s Bleat, in which James dissects the new Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis. Wish I had the observational prowess to describe architectural mishaps like this:

And then there’s the face. Can’t build a new Euro-style cultural complex without inadvertent anthropomorphizing. Here we have the face of a fellow whose wife dragged him to the Guthrie, and it’s the middle of the third act, and he really, really has to use the bathroom… it’s like they modeled him on the Boss level of Tron.

Griping about the asymmetrical, inelegant, cancerous carbuncles of post-modernist public spaces and referencing Tron? There’s got to be some kind of award for blogging like that…

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2 comments on “Welcome to the Game Grid

  1. Steven Broschinsky

    Well, speaking as one of the culturally elite I think that it safe to say that neither of you can possibly understand this modern architecture. It is far too great for your wee tiny little minds. Snort, Giggle. It does make me want to see Tron very badly though. Greetings Program.
    Not that I want to start sounding like the proverbial stereotypical Jewish mother but, You never call, you never write, I could be dead in the street and you wouldn’t know.

  2. jason

    Who are you calling program, Program? 🙂
    I could make the usual excuses — work, life, blah blah blah — but what good would it do? Besides, the phone works both ways, my friend. Still, I am very glad to “hear” your voice in these parts…