The
ArcelorMittal Orbit, which goes by
the tag “public art”, at the site of the 2012 London Olympics in Stratford, London,
is drawing much criticism.
I
am not an architect and I have no idea how to interpret semi-literary
statements of architects about their creations. For example, the architects
Anish Kapoor and Cecil Balmond believe the structure “represents a radical
advance in the architectural field of combining sculptural and structural
engineering, and that it combines both stability and instability in a work that
visitors can engage with and experience via an incorporated spiral walkway.”
Now,
that is what I mean by semi-literary, and it is quasi-technical (though
carrying no meaning) to boot. Combining “both stability and instability” is
impossible in structural engineering, but the sentence does have a whiff of
being of literature, though not quite of a high order (cannot expect that from
architects, can we?). And, as a structural engineer let me tell you that any
tower that is merely 115 m tall and looks as ugly as this one cannot be a challenge
to structural engineering. Engineers have better aesthetic sense!
As
per the architect Kapoor, “one of the influences on his design for the tower
was the Tower of Babel, the sense of ‘building the impossible’”. A more
sophisticated explanation for the name is it represents a moving “electron
cloud.” Wow, this architect, I am sure, has read some popular physics books!
But, the electron cloud moving? I have to learn my physics more thoroughly. Let
me also give a more pie-in-the-sky explanation for the name offered by the
architect – “symbolised a continuous
journey, a creative representation of the ‘extraordinary physical and emotional
effort’ that Olympians undertake in their continuous drive to do better.”
Anyway,
the name Orbit just does not excite
me. Is the name only because there are a couple of lattices that give a vague
hint of a circle / ellipse? Check out the picture below and decide for
yourself. I can only guess, but for this piece let me go by its given name.
As
an aside, the main stadium for the Beijing Olympics acquired its nickname Bird’s Nest solely from its appearance.
No such immediate justification for Orbit.
The
Orbit represents the Olympic Games
only by the fact that it stands in the Olympic Park and not for any other
reason. Situate this anywhere else and it could as easily be said to represent
that area. This can only mean that it represents nothing.
That
gets me to a true structural engineering challenge and architectural
contextualization. The Eiffel Tower.
The architect-cum-designer was Gustav Eiffel.
Why
did I choose the Eiffel Tower to pick
on ArcelorMittal Orbit? Because the
mayor of London, Boris Johnson seems to have had his eyes set on replicating
something like the skyline defining tower in Paris, “built in 1889 as the
entrance arch to the 1889 World’s Fair.”
Look
at the pictures below. Do you see the arches? Wait for a few more paragraphs and see how the arches evolved, almost out of the blue.
Boris
Johnson was reportedly looking for a “stunning, ambitious, world-class art in
the Olympic Park.”
Then,
came in Lakshmi Mittal, with his wads of British currency (about 20 million in
all) and poor Boris could not say no. But, that was a digression.
The
main story lies in how the Paris tower was received by the cognoscenti and how
that compares to the Orbit’s
reception.
Below
are some select negative comments on the sculpture / structure (There are a few
positive comments too and if you are interested you could go to the Wikipedia page;
much of this post is from what is given at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ArcelorMittal_Orbit):
“We
are entering a new period of fascist gigantism. These are monuments to egos and
you couldn't find a more monumental ego than Boris."
"[L]ike an enormous wire-mesh fence that has got
hopelessly snagged round the bell of a giant french horn"
"[U]ndesired
intrusion by the few into the consciousness of the many"
"[T]housands
of naff eyesores"
"[C]atastrophic
collision between two cranes"
Now,
to be fair, even the Eiffel Tower had
its critics, and faced very severe criticisms at that. But before I give you a
hint at the criticisms, let us hear what Eiffel himself thought of his tower
and contextualized it:
“[N]ot
only the art of the modern engineer, but also the century of Industry and
Science in which we are living, and for which the way was prepared by the great
scientific movement of the eighteenth century and by the Revolution of 1789, to
which this monument will be built as an expression of France's gratitude.” No
electron clouds here! Below is the first effort at design. You do not see any arch but it materializes like magic in the final form!
“We,
writers, painters, sculptors, architects and passionate devotees of the hitherto
untouched beauty of Paris, protest with all our strength, with all our
indignation in the name of slighted French taste, against the erection…of this
useless and monstrous Eiffel Tower … To bring our arguments home, imagine for a
moment a giddy, ridiculous tower dominating Paris like a gigantic black
smokestack, crushing under its barbaric bulk Notre Dame, the Tour Saint-Jacques, the Louvre, the Dome of les Invalides, the Arc de Triomphe, all of our humiliated monuments will disappear
in this ghastly dream. And for twenty years … we shall see stretching like a
blot of ink the hateful shadow of the hateful column of bolted sheet metal.”
But,
Eiffel and his tower have had the last laugh.
Will
opinion about ArcelorMittal Orbit
also come around?
I
hope not.
Raghuram Ekambaram
2 comments:
Electron cloud? That is so archaic, right? They should have tried:
"Orbit of the Higgs Boson"
or simply called it:
"OMG! Hideous!"
:-)))
Thanks Arjun ... yes hideous, at least from my current perspective. I hope it does not change.
RE
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